I want to thank Dr. Paul Thompson of the UCLA Neuroimaging Center for his help in my effort. Than... more I want to thank Dr. Paul Thompson of the UCLA Neuroimaging Center for his help in my effort. Thank you, too, to Dr. David Goodman of the Newport Neuroscience Center for his contribution to my statements in neurology; also a word of thanks to Dr. Jonty Christie. My gratitude to Dr. Mike Makepeace, who was very helpful in improving the language in this book, as well as to my research assistant David Lassoff, who spent many hours verifying sometimes obscure references. Thank you to editor, Kathy Wyer, for her many hours of editorial help and also to Randy Malat, my editor for many years. Thanks go, as well, to Drs. Geoffrey Carr and Peter Prontzos for their valuable input. My thanks, finally, to editor Elizabeth Lyon, who really brought this book together, spending long hours refining it. My deepest appreciation to my wife, Dr. France Janov, who read and reread these chapters offering invaluable insight along the way. As director of clinical training at our center she has helped develop the theory and techniques of the Primal approach. Her additions and corrections to what I write are everywhere throughout this book. Finally, I want to thank my recently departed long-time colleague, neurologist Dr. Michael Holden, who nurtured my interest in neurology and taught me so much. Design of three levels of consciousness image on page 59 by Dr. France Janov. Recent brain research (cited later) has found that if we suffer a lack of love early in life, there are fewer key cells to help us think, concentrate, focus, and connect our thoughts with our feelings. Once we understand that hidden feelings drive much of our behavior, we will then understand how important it is to connect our thoughts with our feelings. Without connection, we cannot control the behavior or the physical symptoms that grow from such feelings. The Three Levels of Consciousness We basically have three brains in one: the brainstem, the limbic system, and the neocortex; each of these constitutes a level of consciousness, and each has its own memory system. We remember smells, sensations, even conversations, all on different levels of the brain, yet they are all connected.
I want to thank Dr. Paul Thompson of the UCLA Neuroimaging Center for his help in my effort. Than... more I want to thank Dr. Paul Thompson of the UCLA Neuroimaging Center for his help in my effort. Thank you, too, to Dr. David Goodman of the Newport Neuroscience Center for his contribution to my statements in neurology; also a word of thanks to Dr. Jonty Christie. My gratitude to Dr. Mike Makepeace, who was very helpful in improving the language in this book, as well as to my research assistant David Lassoff, who spent many hours verifying sometimes obscure references. Thank you to editor, Kathy Wyer, for her many hours of editorial help and also to Randy Malat, my editor for many years. Thanks go, as well, to Drs. Geoffrey Carr and Peter Prontzos for their valuable input. My thanks, finally, to editor Elizabeth Lyon, who really brought this book together, spending long hours refining it. My deepest appreciation to my wife, Dr. France Janov, who read and reread these chapters offering invaluable insight along the way. As director of clinical training at our center she has helped develop the theory and techniques of the Primal approach. Her additions and corrections to what I write are everywhere throughout this book. Finally, I want to thank my recently departed long-time colleague, neurologist Dr. Michael Holden, who nurtured my interest in neurology and taught me so much. Design of three levels of consciousness image on page 59 by Dr. France Janov. Recent brain research (cited later) has found that if we suffer a lack of love early in life, there are fewer key cells to help us think, concentrate, focus, and connect our thoughts with our feelings. Once we understand that hidden feelings drive much of our behavior, we will then understand how important it is to connect our thoughts with our feelings. Without connection, we cannot control the behavior or the physical symptoms that grow from such feelings. The Three Levels of Consciousness We basically have three brains in one: the brainstem, the limbic system, and the neocortex; each of these constitutes a level of consciousness, and each has its own memory system. We remember smells, sensations, even conversations, all on different levels of the brain, yet they are all connected.
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