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2
The
Brain Wave Explanation.
More interesting than the well known
alpha waves generated by the brain in moments of relaxation, are the
slower theta waves, which are accompanied by vivid memories, free association,
sudden insights, creative inspiration, feeling of serenity and oneness
with the universe. It is a mysterious, elusive state, potentially highly
productive and enlightening; but experimenters have had a difficult
time studying it, and it is hard to maintain, since people tend to fall
asleep once they begin generate theta waves. One way of learning to
produce theta waves is to perfect the art of meditation. A study of
Zen monks conducted by Akira Kazamatsu and Tomio Hirai, in which the
monks' brain-waves were charted as they entered the meditative states,
indicated that the four meditative plateau's (from alpha to the more
sublime theta) "were parallel to the disciples' mental states,
and their years spent in Zen training." Those monks with over twenty
years of meditative experience generated the greatest amount of theta,
the monks were not asleep but mentally alert. However, since many of
us are unwilling to spend twenty years of mediation to learn to generate
theta waves, it's helpful to know that several recent studies (at Texas
A&M and the University at Colorado) have shown that floating increases
production of theta waves. Floaters quickly enter the theta state while
remaining awake, consciously aware of all the vivid imagery and creative
thoughts that pass through their minds, and after getting out of the
floatation environment, floaters continue to generate larger amounts
of creativity-promoting theta waves for up to three weeks.
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3
The
Left-Brain Right-Brain Explanation.
The two hemispheres or the neocortex
operate in fundamentally different modes. The left hemisphere excels
at detail, processing information that is small-scale, requiring fine
resolution: it operates analytically, by splitting or dissection. The
right hemisphere on the other hand, is good at putting all the pieces
together. It operates by pattern recognition - visually, intuitively
rapidly absorbing large scale information. Just as in the sunshine of
a bright day it is impossible to see the stars, so are the subtle contents
of the right hemisphere usually drowned out by the noisy chattering
of the dominant verbal/analytical left brain, whose qualities are the
more cultivated and valued in our culture. But recent research indicates
that floating increases right-brain (or minor hemisphere) function.
Floating turns off the external stimuli, plunges us into literal and
figurative darkness - then suddenly the entire universe of stars and
galaxies is spread out before our eyes. Or as brain researcher Dr. Thomas
Budzynski of the University of Colorado put it, "In a floatation
environment, the right hemisphere comes out and says, 'Whoopee".
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4
The
Three Brain Explanation.
In a series of seminal studies produced
over the last twenty-five years, Paul MacLean, chief brain researcher
at the National Institute for Mental Health (US), has produced convincing
evidence that the human brain has three separate physiological layers,
each corresponding to a stage in our evolutionary history. In this "Triune
Brain Theory," the most ancient layer is called the reptile brain,
and it controls basic self-preservative, reproductive and life sustaining
functions. Sitting atop the reptile, brain is the iambic system, which
MacLean had dubbed the visceral brain, because generates all our emotions.
The most recent part of the brain to develop is the "thinking cap"
of convoluted gray matter called neocortex, seat of our abstract, cognitive
functions; memory, intellect, language, and consciousness. While many
of these three separate brains have overlapping functions they are all
quite different in chemistry, structure, action, and style. Three brains
should be better than one, but unfortunately, due to a ruinous design
error, there is insufficient communication and coordination between
the neocortex and the two older levels. This lack of communication results
in a chronic dissociation between the higher and lower brains, which
MacLean calls schizaphysiology, and which we experience in the form
of conflicting drives - unconscious and conscious, savage and civilized,
lusty and loving, ritualistic and symbolic, rational and verbal. There
are times when the levels do act in harmony, as in peak experiences
when body and mind unite in exhilarating moments of vitality, when our
actions come effortlessly, spontaneously. But it's hard to predict when
these perfect moments will occur. Now there is evidence that suggests
that, due to heightened internal awareness and decreased physical arousal,
floating increases the vertical organisation of the brain, enhancing
communication and harmony between the separate levels. Floating, it
has been hypothesised, can provide us with peak experiences almost at
will.
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5
The
Neurochemical Explanation.
Neuroscientists have recently discovered
the brain is an endocrine organ that secretes numerous neurochemicals
which influence our behavior. Our brains secrete hormones that make
us happy, anxious, depressed, shy, sleepy, sexy. Each of us creates
different amounts of these various neurochemicals, and those who create,
for example, more endorphins - natural opiates - experience more pleasure
as a result of a given experience than those who create fewer endorphins.
Tests indicate that floating increased the secretion of endorphins at
the same time as it reduces the levels of a number of stress-related
neurochemicals, such as adrenaline, nordpinephrine, ACTH, and cortisol
- substances that can cause tension, anxiety, irritability, and are
related to ailments such as heart disease, hypertension and high levels
of cholesterol. One other neurochemical theory is the "return of
the womb" explanation. Since pregnant women produce up to eight
times the normal endorphin levels, the foetus experiences true prenatal
bliss. When a floater is suspended in the dense, warm solution, enclosed
in darkness, body pulsing rhythmically and brain umping out endorphins,
it's possible that subconscious memories are stirred and profoundly
deep associations called up. It is no coincidence that at least one
commercial float centre is named "The Womb Room."
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6
The
Biofeedback Explanation.
Because of biofeedback research (including
Johns Hopkin's researcher John Basmajian's conclusive study of subjects
consciously firing off single motor-unit neurons), we now know that
humans can learn to exercise conscious control over virtually every
cell in their bodies. Processes long thought to be involuntary, such
as the rhythm and amplitude of our brain waves, healing, blood pressure,
the rate or force of heart contractions, respiratory rate, smooth-muscle
tension, and the secretion of hormones and neurotransmitters are now
thought to be controllable. The way biofeedback machines work is by
enhancing concentration', by focusing on a single, subtle change in
the body, which is being amplified by the machine, we are able to shut
off our awareness of the external environment. This shutting-off of
external stimuli is exactly what the floatationenvironment does best
- almost as if in an "organic" biofeedback machine, in the
tank every physical sensation is magnified, and because there is no
possibility of outside distraction, we are able to relax deeply and
focus at will upon any part or system of the body.
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7
The
Homeostasis Explanation.
The human body has an exquisitely sensitive
self-monitoring and self-regulating system that is constantly working
to maintain the body in homeostasis - an optimal state of balance, harmony,
equilibrium and stability. Considered in these terms, we can define
stress as a disruption of our internal equilibrium, a disturbance of
our natural homeostasis. Research now indicates that many of floating's
most powerful effects come from its tendency to return the body to a
state of homeostasis. When we view the mind and body as a single system,
it becomes clear that external stimuli are constantly militating against
the system's equilibrium, every noise, every degree of temperature above
or below the body's optimal level, every encounter with other people,
everything we see and feel can disrupt our homeostasis. But when we
enter the tank, we abruptly stop making constant adjustments to outer
stimuli. Since there are no external threats, no pressures to adapt
to outside events, the system can devote all its energies to restoring
itself./ The normal state, of course, is health, vigour, enthusiasm,
and immense pleasure in being alive.
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©Michael
Hutchinson
"Floating
has become the nineties solution to stressful living"
- Cosmopolitan

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