WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 19 2008

Channel: Consciousness and Healing

The Myth of Choice

Robert S. Vibert | 06.08.07 | 04:13 PM |
5
(1 rating)
Robert S. Vibert's picture

Each time we are faced with making a decision or choice about something, we may think that we have free will and are using our critical thought processes. That we do this is not surprising, as so much of our experience in the world contains choices. From lunch menus to driving routes to vacation spots, we are presented with countless choices to make.

It is also quite common to hear that we can be the master of our thoughts, emotions, and belief. Quite a number of people say this, including the positive thinking advocates. They tell us that all we must do is discipline ourselves with will power and positive thinking and our emotions and beliefs will come around. The recent movie "The Secret" is an obvious example of this line of thinking. The premise is that we can be in control of our mental process with practice and perseverance. How hard can it be?

Is it true that we can choose our emotions, our thoughts, our beliefs? Unfortunately, this concept is only partially true and only valid under certain circumstances. In reality, much of our thinking, our emotional responses and our beliefs are determined by the various factors that either contribute to their creation or impede their free choice.

Beliefs can be defined as the conviction of the truth concerning some statement (or collection of thoughts) or the reality of some being or phenomenon. However, no matter how strong our conviction is, these beliefs may not be true or even valid. Beliefs need to be verified to be true by objective validation.

Beliefs are not reality, but really only value judgments. However, this does not stop us from treating beliefs as if they were real. You may have heard the expression "Don't confuse me with the facts; I've made up my mind" which of course sounds like nothing more than a well-practiced set of thoughts. Often beliefs can be found just under the surface of our consciousness, ready to be blurted out without much thinking - statements like "I'm never on time" and "I'm not good enough!", "I'll never get well!", "No one likes me!" etc...

Where does a thought or belief come from?

There are a number of factors which contribute to the creation of thoughts and beliefs, and emotions related to these. Some of the more common factors are peer and family influences, cultural norms, and traumatic events. All of these have an impact upon us, and trigger the creation of thoughts and deeply embedded beliefs, which we can mistakenly think are our own. Although they are deeply embedded, they are not our own, as we did not consciously create them.

In fact, many of these thoughts and beliefs are passed down from generation to generation - you've probably heard people say "when you use that expression, you sound just like your father/mother". In this case we're not considering the verbal sound, but the way thoughts and concepts are expressed. And, of course they may also sound like their relatives - they have been subjected to a constant, repetitive indoctrination in the thoughts of their family and friends.

You can notice the same phenomenon when you travel to other countries, areas or regions. People from one part of the world can sound remarkably alike in their thinking. Their mind set will also be highly homogeneous, as not only do they hear each other repeating the same ideas and concepts, they share similar opinions, and these are reflected back to them by their local media. In my travels to close to 40 countries, this is usually one of the first observations that pops into my awareness.

Recent scientific studies have shown that our DNA is dynamic, adapting to the world we live in, and that the life experiences of our ancestors affected their DNA to an extent sufficient to carry down to future generations.

There are also a number of sages, from Carl Jung to Eckhart Tolle, who say that the thoughts in our heads may not all be ours anyway, as we tap into things like the collective unconscious.

So, it is easy to see how we may have no choice over where these thoughts and beliefs we carry around come from. At any one time, we carry around a complex collection of thoughts, emotions and beliefs that are at times interwoven and at times somewhat separate from each other. Generally speaking, it takes a lot of practice using objective mindfulness to distinguish thoughts from beliefs and notice the emotions attached to each.

There are also pre-verbal beliefs (the ones we have but cannot verbalize because we don't know what they are), but it is enough to start with being aware of the ones we can consciously identify.

Making choices when in pain

The other part of this equation is that whenever we are in pain, especially emotional pain, our capacity to think clearly and make clear choices is severely diminished. There are plenty of studies which show that the parts of our brains that react get the most blood flow when we are emotionally triggered, leaving our thinking brain parts with much less blood than normal.

In other words, we can't think straight when we are in a highly charged emotional state. If we can't think straight, then it is going to be darn hard to make informed choices. So when someone tells you that you can choose to feel or think differently, don't beat yourself up if you cannot.

It took me some time to reach this conclusion, as like most people, the onslaught of messages telling me to "get over it" or "move on" were hard to fight. Becoming aware of the societal programming and then watching myself revealed much about this whole puzzle of choices.

I now understand and accept why I found it difficult to listen to certain music -- it reminds me instantly of a certain heart-break. The same with certain locations; who wants to visit a place where they have associations with some pain from their past?

The concept of will-based change is based upon the notion that somehow you are going to simply and quickly overcome

  • the beliefs and thoughts that you inherited and were indoctrinated with for years,
  • the emotional pain that might be surfacing, and
  • whatever else might be influencing you at this moment.

What to do

Researchers have found that the first step in making informed, intelligent and resourceful choices is to heal any emotional wounds that surround a choice. If one examines the beliefs and thoughts which arise around a potential choice, the emotional wounds are often easy to spot. Once they have been healed, preferably using a quick and effective technique such as AER (Awareness, Expression, Resolution) it is far easier to examine the options, consider the consequences and make choices that serve us.

Then, without that emotional pain we are in much better shape to think clearly and rationally, by using the relevant parts of our brains to make mature, informed choices.

Copyright Robert S. Vibert May 2007, all rights reserved. First published on www.real-personal-growth.com

DiscoverDeclareShare

Member Comments:

Submitted by Jeffery DeCelles on July 2, 2007 - 5:03am.

Good Stuff! Links to Susan Blackmore and Richard Dawkins book, "The Meme Machine" laying out idea that self-replicating idea structures, "Memes" exist, analogous to genes in bio-physical systems.
Memes seem to be semi-autonomous, existing as associated sets, and may be symbiotic or parasitic to hosts,(us). They seem constrained by operative principles related to information theory, and evolutionary dynamics.
I suspect fruitful insights may lie in postulating their formal existence in an abstract super-space, related to morphogenetic fields, and/or Zero-point field.
The Dark matter/energy factor seems closely related. JED

Submitted by Bob Johnston on June 12, 2007 - 11:21am.

Hi Robert,

I'm baaack . . . to let you know I ran across the following on Wikipedia. Tho't you might be interested. Maybe Lawrence, too.

Beyond Belief: Science, Religion, Reason and Survival is an annual symposium which brings together a group of scientists and philosophers to explore questions and answers about human nature and society. The event was organized by The Science Network in association with the Crick-Jacobs Center.

The first annual event was held November 2006 in Salk Institute for Biological Studies located in La Jolla, California. Various questions were proposed by Roger Bingham at the beginning as a guide of what would be discussed. The following are some of those questions:

After two centuries could this be twilight for the Enlightenment project and the beginning of a new age of unreason?

Will faith and dogma trump rational inquiry, or will it be possible to reconcile religious and scientific worldviews?

Can evolutionary biology, anthropology and neuroscience help us to better understand how we construct beliefs, and experience empathy, fear and awe?

Can science help us create a new rational narrative as poetic and powerful as those that have traditionally sustained societies?

Can we treat religion as a natural phenomenon?

Can we be good without God? And if not God, then what?

Video from the conference is available for download on the official website, and numerous smaller video clips have been uploaded to YouTube and Google Video.

Best,

Bob

Submitted by Lawrence Carson on June 11, 2007 - 10:35pm.

Robert,

Your question "Where does a thought or belief come from?"

... is one of many such questions that I have been mulling around for a very long time.

We all know that everything is energy, quantum energy fluctuations. So to start, beliefs are energy forms that perpetuate themselves into the minds of man. But how does a new belief get started?

Geniuses who discover new and different things, concepts, and processes generally never take "full" credit for the new belief creations but rather take credit for announcing it first on this earth to other people. Ideas that others never preciously thought of, so others - rather than calling themselves dumb - prefer to call those that did a genius. :-)

I personally believe that "beliefs" exhibit all the functional elements of "Life". I currently believe that beliefs are a higher form of live that employ man as their protective host. And the means by which those beliefs protect and preserve themselves for centuries is to cause man to believe ... that man's identity is made up of "his" beliefs. That way beliefs have man protecting them ... one really sly and coy way of the mastering the marshal arts of self defense. But now back to your question.

Man - and/or other intelligent forms of life - create beliefs through the powerful process of "making meaning" out of experiential and/or empirical observations.

1st - First we become conscious of something we do not understand.

2nd - We relate the "new" observation to what we already know, trust, and value .. and from that "Contextual Perspective" ...

3rd - We ask ourselves the question "What does this "observation" mean about ___?"

Where the "______" (fill it in) will vary from person to person depending upon their frame of reference and their current state of evolution.

For instance:

a) Self focused: "What does that mean about my survival, my life, what I want,etc?" ... or ...

b) Other focused: What does that mean about you? .... or

c) Unification focused: "What does that mean about us?" .... or

d) Meta focused: "What does that mean about God, the universe, life, etc.?"

So - and in my current way of thinking - which is controlled by the belief programs resident on my Mind's Operating System - beliefs are created by how we connect the dots to what we want. They are values focused and driven, Like Self Survival. Show me a person that has a set of beliefs that do not support and defend his beliefs and I will show you a real sick puppy. :-)

And finally, since (according to what my beliefs are leading me or mis-leading me to think is) beliefs are self-sustaining energy forms ... and since they come from outside and after a person is born ... they are not of man ... they are from some other time-space place ... which thereby defines then as alien to who we are. So if we believe all that ... that would mean that Man plays host to Living Alien Beliefs that literally control how we think ... what we think... and when we think. Beliefs are to piano keys as thoughts are to music. Remove the keys ... no music ... remove those beliefs ... no thinking. Just infinite Silence and Peace of Mind! :-)

Guess why those that say that they have gone to the "Infinite Black Void" ...
... experienced such peaceful states of being. They literally were out of their mind and could not think. :-) All they knew was that they were infinitely Aware.

So much for free agency. So much for man's guilt ... and so much for man's intelligence. We really are brilliantly screwed up down here and refuse to think this way ... because .... our resident beliefs systems just won't let us think that way. It would be their death sentence. Besides, its "too far out" from "The Box" they have framed us all in.

Sleep well. :-)

Lawrence of Supai --- a far out place, 3,000 feet at the bottom of "The Grand Canyon" where the water is 1,000 years old, the Oxygen is of a different density ... and people are really different. :-)

Seeking to inspire the spirit of man ... to create a world of dignity ... peace ... and joy.

Submitted by Robert S. Vibert on June 12, 2007 - 2:59am.

Hi Lawrence,

Thanks for the thoughtful feedback. Now I need to give my beliefs a vacation, as you have stirred up so many more questions and opened so many windows into possibilities that they were trying so desperately to ignore. ;-)

Cheers

Robert

Submitted by Bob Johnston on June 9, 2007 - 2:13pm.

Robert, great job! You motivated me to dig out of my files some integral leadership workshop materials I developed on How Free is Free Will? back in the '70s. Some of my ideas on the subject are similar to yours. I'll post them one of these days and look forward to any feedback you may have for me. Best wishes, Bob

Submitted by Robert S. Vibert on June 12, 2007 - 2:57am.

Thanks for the feedback. I look forward to seeing your material when you post it.

Cheers!

Robert

Share This Page

User login