Shashkes https://shashkes.com/ Bridging the gap between technology and bodies Sun, 21 Apr 2024 21:36:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 https://shashkes.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/cropped-freethemagic-shirt-headshot-2-32x32.jpg Shashkes https://shashkes.com/ 32 32 Mixed Reality: Surpassing Virtual Reality in Exposure Therapy https://shashkes.com/2024/04/21/mixed-reality-surpassing-virtual-reality-in-exposure-therapy/ https://shashkes.com/2024/04/21/mixed-reality-surpassing-virtual-reality-in-exposure-therapy/#respond Sun, 21 Apr 2024 21:31:48 +0000 https://shashkes.com/?p=333 Introduction Exposure therapy, a cornerstone in treating trauma and anxiety, traditionally utilizes virtual reality (VR) to confront patients with their fears in a controlled, immersive environment. However, mixed reality (MR) can actually be more beneficial as it blends real-world elements with virtual overlays. Understanding VR and MR At its core, VR immerses users in a […]

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Introduction
Exposure therapy, a cornerstone in treating trauma and anxiety, traditionally utilizes virtual reality (VR) to confront patients with their fears in a controlled, immersive environment. However, mixed reality (MR) can actually be more beneficial as it blends real-world elements with virtual overlays. Understanding VR and MR
At its core, VR immerses users in a completely fabricated digital environment, isolating them from the real world. This total sensory eclipse allows therapists to control every aspect of the environment, which can be crucial for initial exposure treatments. Conversely, MR introduces digital elements into the real-world view, maintaining the user's connection to their actual surroundings. This subtle yet profound difference sets the stage for a more grounded and potentially transformative therapeutic experience.

Theoretical Framework: Predictive Coding and Trauma
Predictive coding theory suggests that the brain continuously makes predictions about incoming sensory information based on past experiences. Trauma can profoundly influence the brain's cognitive processes, often establishing strong top-down biases that detach from bottom-up sensory information. This disconnection can be seen as a protective mechanism, where the few neurons take the brunt while the rest are protected from the traumatic perception. However if there isn’t an integration process to heal trauma these top down neurons which dissociated can lower the threshold of firing until even minor, non-threatening stimuli can activate them. This is because these neurons want to stay alive and require activation to do so but have no ability to change their prediction as they were dissociated.

Mixed Reality Is Better
In the context of trauma therapy, Mixed Reality can uniquely modify these predictions by merging real-time sensory data with traumatic memories. This allows for a dynamic reprogramming of traumatic responses, where the presence of actual sensory input serves to validate and activate the top down dissociated network while also connecting them to the bottom up current experiences.

Example in Childhood Trauma
In the context of childhood trauma, mixed reality (MR) can be extraordinarily effective by visually emphasizing the size difference between an adult and a child as experienced during the traumatic event. This application of MR allows patients to safely revisit traumatic memories within the context of their current environment. Imagine an MR scenario where an adult patient is presented with a virtual overlay that accurately represents the towering figure of an adult from their childhood perspective while overlaid on the real world. A figure that is 5 or 10 times as big as the adult overlays the current space. This visual manipulation helps the patient understand the significant size disparity that existed during their childhood trauma. This stark contrast between their past and current physical stature is made evident through MR, reinforcing the fact that as an adult, they now possess a larger body helping the dissociative bias update its knowledge about the current body.
Turn your trauma top down prediction function (black) into a narrow step function (green) that fits very specific conditions


Updating Trauma Biases To A Step Function
With Mixed Reality overlays a sharper differentiation between contexts that should trigger a trauma response and those that should not is possible. If I ever encounter an angry giant that is 5 to 10 my size grabbing me my childhood trauma response is indeed the best fitting prediction but for all other bottom up info a different top down predictions are actually a better fit and by using Mixed Reality overlays one can learn to increase the threshold of these top down trauma predictions by playing with the trigger threshold while being in a safe space (a professional might be necessary). Looking at the trigger in Mixed Reality and then looking at the background, looking at your body, feeling your feet on the ground can help a lot more than just looking at the trigger in Virtual Reality.

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This is What 40 Looks Like https://shashkes.com/2023/06/19/this-is-what-40-looks-like/ https://shashkes.com/2023/06/19/this-is-what-40-looks-like/#respond Mon, 19 Jun 2023 20:42:21 +0000 https://shashkes.com/?p=261 As someone who has struggled with suicidal ideation since my early teens, I never thought I'd make it to 40, let alone be excited about it. At 40, I feel more connected to my body, my sexuality, and my community than I ever have. This is a not safe for work blog post, filled with […]

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At 40, I feel more connected to my body, my sexuality, and my community than I ever have.

This is a not safe for work blog post, filled with sex positivity, psychedelics, nudity, and tips and tricks that I want to propagate to increase the realm of possibilities for those entering their 5th decade revolving around the sun. It will include my latest research on the clitoris.

Mobility - People who see me dance, climb, or punch now could never imagine the level of clumsiness and dissociation that I grew up with. Instead of sticking to one type of training, I keep switching it up. Novelty is key for the brain and body to keep learning and stay young. More than any type of system, I find teachers that inspire me and allow me to activate my mirror system by cultivating an empathetic connection with them. My newest passions are water dancing, where I am free from gravity and get to move in totally different ways as well as practice holding my breath, and water massage modalities, where I get to play with bodies, helping them relax, let go and increase their range of motion. If you visit the Bay Area, I can recommend Juliana, and for any acrobatic, mobility training outside of water, check out Shira Yaziv.



Psychedelics - Psychedelics have been a huge part of the healing path I've been on since my 30's, letting me examine the black boxes of trauma that were stored away in my brain. My use of psychedelics has benefited from close partners' and community support. I've never done psychedelics within a medical or ceremonial context. For me, psychedelics are a path inwards where only the most trusted people can join me to break down our biases and be in a childlike state again supporting our growth. Psychedelics have helped me realize the plurality in my brain and increase the synergy and harmony among 86 billion neurons that are organized in various layers of agency. My early 30's were fueled by large doses and deep dives that helped me build mindfulness pathways, connecting me to my breath, helping me accept my death and the beauty in nature. Lately, I've been using them more sparingly, microdosing when the occasion fits and taking slightly larger doses a few times a year if I feel stuck or have a specific intention to connect on a deeper level to someone or something. For more about the neuroscience of Psychedelics check out my lecture below.



Sexuality - Growing up Queer in the oppressive homophobic orthodox Jewish structure meant dealing with a lot of internalized shame, especially around masturbation. In the last few months, I've been focused on a systematic upgrade of my ability to access my own pleasure, and I'm delighted at the results. The book Pleasure Activism by Adrienne Maree Brown has helped me put my struggles to access self-pleasure into a larger societal context. Taking time to give myself a mid-day orgasm isn't self-indulgence, it's fighting 10000 years of patriarchy. It's the fastest, cheapest way to improve my health and well-being.


Polyamory - I've never been monogamous, and having deep intimate, loving, and sexual connections with multiple partners is a great way to increase novelty and growth in life. I would recommend having at least one partner that is significantly younger as a great anti-aging practice. I've recently fallen in love quite surprisingly with a new person and it's amazing to feel the new relationship energy, the excitement and growth that this new love is bringing into my life as I turn 40. It's also incredibly amazing to feel the support and compersion my existing loving partners, and bring in some of the new sexual creativity from this budding connection into established connections.

Clitoris - my path to orgasm - I've known that the clitoris is actually a complex organ for a while now but until recently I didn't fully understand its relationship to my pelvis or have a model around how it was connected to my orgasm. Besides the gland, which is the tip of the clit, most books will talk about, the clit has two other parts that are called crus, each going behind the pelvic bone. Each of these crus have a nerve ending that connects to it. I've always known that the doorway to my orgasm is somehow connected to contracting my thighs, but recently, I realized that I was actually indirectly stimulating the Posterior Femoral Cutaneous Nerve. I've learnt these nerve endings can be stimulated directly with external or internal touch or even by contracting muscles surrounding the clit. The imagery I have is of my clit being like a triangle and contracting both clit crus around the vaginal opening as if I'm trying to bring them together. Doing this greatly increases the ease and frequency that I'm able to orgasm. Orgasm contractions are around 0.8 hz (Source) so I have a theory that external stimulation at that frequency could induce an orgasm. More experiments to follow.

An annotated model of the clitoris from this 3D medical app.

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How to Navigate Psychedelics, Love and Attachment https://shashkes.com/2023/03/20/how-to-navigate-psychedelics-love-and-attachment/ https://shashkes.com/2023/03/20/how-to-navigate-psychedelics-love-and-attachment/#respond Mon, 20 Mar 2023 03:01:58 +0000 https://shashkes.com/?p=211 My first two posts were about birth and death so I think it's time to talk about what I want to maximize in between those two points. Love has many meaning and throughout my life it's meaning has changed for me too. My current definition of love is: Work being gifted to fulfill needs. Prerequisites […]

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birth and death so I think it's time to talk about what I want to maximize in between those two points. Love has many meaning and throughout my life it's meaning has changed for me too. My current definition of love is: Work being gifted to fulfill needs.

Prerequisites for love are the ability to identify needs and the ability to differentiate between gifting work and obligated work which are skills NVC focuses on.
 
 

This definition scales to self love, romantic love, child love and environmental love. In This definition love is not a binary yes or no, it is a quantity and a quality.

    A graph of my friends definitions of love. Except for Laura and Soorya there is little word compatibility so it’s important to first have an agreed definition

The Science

My definition of love is based on an inherent ability humans and many other forms of life have. Brains with enough complexity can mimic and mirror. This mimicking creates internal embodied models of others by activating our mirror system allowing us to understand other people’s needs.

Our brain has a very efficient way of storing data. We use the same neurons both for processing and understanding other people's movement and for creating our own movements. This makes a lot of computational sense because in general humans have similar bio mechanics. By mimicking someone we also get an internal snapshot of their
emotional state and of their intentions and goals. We can compare the external state we are witnessing with our internal sensations. We can use this to decipher people’s needs. When someone yawns we yawn and the need for sleep is communicated and even helps us sync rhythms. This is the basis of empathy and love. It is also the basis for abstract learning like language. Babies can learn sign language before they are verbal and quickly learn the association between body language and reward or punishment. 

Another important thing to understand is that our brain with its 86 billion neurons is organized in various hierarchies that have various levels of agency. Our brain can parallel process but we only have one output. We can only do one action at a time. This many to one function is gated by a part of our brain called the basal ganglia. The basal ganglia is constantly inhibiting motor output which means the motor command needs to be strong enough to overcome the inhibition. I imagine all the different possible motor outputs as sperm racing to enter the basal ganglia, it's a winner take all competition. Some parts of our brain are sending motor outputs optimizing for very specific conditions and needs that don’t always benefit us as a whole.

Think of an addiction pattern as an extreme example. Parts of the brain can hijack our behavior to optimize for a specific need without caring how it will affect the wider system. These addiction parts can overcome the basal ganglia threshold faster than other parts. To foster self love we need synergies and open communication between different parts of our brain. We need to slow down some of the fast automatic processes so that our frontal cortex can catch up and give us more options. When we slow down we can separate needs from unhealthy tactics and be more creative about fulfilling our needs.

The same happens when we embody someone else's needs. We create an internal model that becomes part of our own system and thus when we work to fulfill these needs our reward system is activated. This is why mindfulness and being aware of your own needs is the first step to maximizing love.

    I’m launching a biofeedback lamp with a card game specifically designed to utilize mindfulness to improve intimate connections: https://www.bringwisdomhome.com/

Self Love

Until my 30's if you asked me if I loved myself I would say yes 100%! I was a big fan of Ayn Rand with no lack of self esteem. Then, I took psychedelics and discovered all these parts in my system that I was shutting off, dysociating from and inhibiting. For many years I inhibited many needs as I had no healthy tactic to fulfil them. I shoved down my need for connection, to be seen, touched, understood. Even my basic need for food was under lock. Between being lactose intolerant to the pressure on females body's to be thin it seemed better to mute hunger sensations until they would scream and I would get hangry. I didn’t feel I was inhibiting anything. I didn't know these parts were there.

The T.V. character I looked up to was Data the android from Star Trek, who was always curious and kind but always separated from humans. I thought an actual sense of connection was an asymptote that could never be reached. I believed true understanding and a sense of oneness with others was a myth, like santa clause, an illusion to find hope in.

Psychedelics Break Down Prior Knowledge

My first explorations of psychedelics were with romantic and sexual partners that had a lot more psychedelic experience than me. Both of them were amazing guides offering me safety and tools to navigate this mysterious new way of being. On my first full dose the thin veil of disconnect from others that was the basis of my reality had disappeared. But with that, other substantial walls were gone too. The needs that were repressed over the years, the parts of me that I judged as weak, pathetic or unattainable from such an early age that I didn't even know existed, started coming up to the surface.

 
   

Understanding Our Trauma Parts - Attachment Theory

Attachment theory, developed in the mid -20th century by John Bowlby and Mary Ainsworth explains how early interactions between infants and their primary caregivers can shape the child's emotional and social development and affect their adult relationships where they can recreate the same dynamic with a caregiver. Attachment styles are typically classified into four categories:

  1. Infants with a secure attachment style tend to explore their environment freely when their caregiver is present, but become upset when the caregiver leaves. When the caregiver returns, the infant seeks comfort and is easily soothed.
  2. Infants with an anxious-preoccupied attachment style may become clingy and anxious when their caregiver leaves, and may have difficulty being soothed when the caregiver returns.
  3. Infants with an avoidant-dismissive attachment style may seem indifferent to their caregivers leaving and returning, and may avoid seeking comfort from their caregivers altogether.
  4. Infants with a fearful-avoidant attachment style may display a mixture of behaviours associated with both anxious-preoccupied and avoidant-dismissive attachment styles.
The theory is that Children who receive consistent, responsive care are more likely to develop a secure attachment style, they have a learnt belief that their needs will be cared for and the connection with their caregiver has taught them how to self regulate. In contrast, children who experience inconsistent or unresponsive care may develop insecure attachment styles as they learn to either repress their needs or learn that only needs that they over express might get met.

It's important to understand that these behaviors can be contextual and rather than putting a person into a box of one of these styles I recommend categorizing various behaviors each of us may have under different situations.

Through my teenage years and into my 20's I was mostly avoidant. Occasionally I would have episodic mental health crashes where I would go into fits of crying and shaking for 6 - 12 hours. I could rarely track down any logical reason and kept this mostly a secret except from one very close friend who had similar issues. When I started to have longer relationships in my 20's this was a challenge for my partners’ who had no clue what to do. I was in my early 30's when a partner who saw me in this state said it seemed to him like PTSD. The symptoms fit but it took some more deep diving into my hidden subconscious to find the attachment trauma that was behind them.

Loving Our Traumas

Loving our trauma parts When repressed parts which have suffered through trauma start reconnecting to the rest of the brain don’t expect them to be happy or collaborative.

It's been a long journey where psychedelics were a crucial part in helping me understand the needs of these repressed parts. Other tools were non-violent communication, somatic therapy and improv theatre. There were a lot of moments of dysregulation, tantrums, crying and fear. My father's willingness to support my healing had a huge effect on healing the attachment trauma.

I slowly began to be able to use my non violent communication 'Giraffe ears' to hear the needs of the trauma parts without getting sucked into emotional un-regulation or a complex narrative. It can be as simple as identifying I’m hungry or thirsty when suicidal ideation thoughts come up.

I’ve learnt that these parts deeply enjoy food if it doesn’t come at the expense of caged animals as they have a strong need for freedom. I've learnt to listen to the hunger signals and support these creative chefs in their food exploration. These parts are also hyper sensitive to touch and have a need for softness, comfort and body warmth. They are also incredibly curious with a deep need to understand the structural integrity of things.

Together with learning to identify the needs I went through a process of accepting them. I accepted being a social animal and my skin hypersensitivity. I came to understand that these needs are not a weakness but the fabric from which I am made of. Then, I started to figure out tactics to fulfill these needs. Let’s take the need for understanding structural integrity as an example. This need might come out as compulsions to throw, bang and destroy objects including compulsions to self harm. By identifying the need I learnt to not be afraid of the compulsions and come up with other tactics to fulfill it. With the recommendation of my therapist I went to try a break room and I regularly create experimental spaces to explore gooey non-newtonian physics as well as continue to practice martial arts to explore the strength of the body.

Loving in community

I've never been monogamous. It never made sense to me. Loving only one person seemed like a stifling existence where there was no chance all my needs would be met. Putting a random barrier on what my vagina could and couldn't do with other consenting bodies was also never in my definition of love.

My baby parts will sometimes claim to be monogamous but when I check if they love different partners they do. They perceive the tribe they are connected to as a single entity, their caregiver.

By reconnecting to my own very young parts my capacity to build connections has grown. Having more secure attachment abilities means I can better deal with relationship stress. My prefrontal cortex can stay active without the baby parts going into detachment mode and hijacking the system with beliefs that their very survival is in danger.  
 

Have you ever seen multiple Pendulums sync? I still have nightmares from trying to solve the differential equations that govern the synchronisation movements. The gist is that vibrational energy can transfer through a medium that connects the Pendulums causing them to sync. I think relationships can be similar. We can synchronise to each other's needs as long as we have a medium to transfer the information. It's up to us to build that medium not only with words and language but with our embodied selves.

Anthropologist Robin Dunbar, suggested that the size of the neocortex, the part of the brain responsible for conscious thought and language, limits the number of social relationships that an individual can effectively manage. According to Dunbar's theory, this limit is around 150, which is often referred to as "Dunbar's number."

While our current use of technology and social media might allow us to maintain a larger number of weaker connections, research shows it likely comes at the cost of less actual support and more feelings of isolation. I believe that with the use of feedback from embodied technology and psychedelics we can increase our tribe number. I grew up with Asimov's foundation, not the shitty tv but the books. I would constantly debate with myself around the dichotomy of potential human evolution presented in the book. Would it be better if humans evolved into a future with a more collective consciousness but lost their individuality and personal freedoms?

Experimenting with Psychedelics made it clear to me that the dichotomy in the books was false. Our brains have a potential of entering states of high social coherence and collective consciousness and then existing those states, integrating back into a single (very complex) entity.

    We can become part of larger social systems while maintaining our agency.
One thing I've learnt the hard way regarding psychedelics and relationships is that the increased bandwidth created while on psychedelics can either help build a deeper connection or it can be used to cover up unmet needs and deep issues that are not being addressed. As Dr. Susan Blackmore says “In the end, you have to climb the mountain yourself – the hard way. Even so, by giving you that first glimpse, the drugs may provide the inspiration to keep climbing"

Environmental love

I became aware of global warming when I was around 11 and would go around telling everyone and feeling a lot of despair. Today too, there are so many unmet needs in the wider environment I can easily get overwhelmed. This is where healthy boundaries come in yet again. Being in a state of despair or crumbled in a corner is not helping. Cultivating a gratitude practice has been very helpful in building up resilience. I also have small practices of caring for my immediate environment more. I don't know how to fix all the world's problems but I can keep asking myself how I can help.

I started walking around with an extra trash bag to pick up trash. I Donate to friends and friends of friends that need help when I can. I'm trying to build a sustainable home within an eco community, learning about water harvesting, composting and gardening. I'm limiting my flights and starting to become more politically active again, after some serious burn out on that front. I also encourage my larger community to eat more plant based food. The billionaire escape fantasies Douglas Rushkoff writes about are unattainable and for me unwanted.  
 

We can only live a fulfilling life with community. We don't need to be fully sustainable ourselves, we need to build sustainable communities. If we love our environment and gift it our work towards reducing carbon emissions, increasing biodiversity and plant life our outcome will be much improved. Psychedelics in nature have been the most healing for me and helped shift my despair into love.

Many think psychedelics might help drive a more environmentally conscious society. Once again we need to remember that psychedelics can only open the door we need to walk through it, changing our lifestyle, speaking up and taking action as forms of loving our environment.

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Can Mindful Psychedelic Science Help Us Face Death Gracefully? https://shashkes.com/2023/02/20/can-mindful-psychedelic-science-help-us-face-death-gracefully/ https://shashkes.com/2023/02/20/can-mindful-psychedelic-science-help-us-face-death-gracefully/#respond Mon, 20 Feb 2023 19:52:25 +0000 https://shashkes.com/?p=170 The post Can Mindful Psychedelic Science Help Us Face Death Gracefully? appeared first on Shashkes.

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After watching the inspiring interview between psychedelic researcher and stage 4 cancer patient Roland Griffiths and mindfulness teacher Tara Brach I knew that after my first post about Birth Trauma the next one needed to be about death.

 

My Story

I grew up orthodox Jewish and I've seen first hand how fear of death and irrational stories about the afterlife can drive whole societies to self harm and abuse of others. My hope is that by practicing mindfulness and learning about psychedelic science larger parts of society can learn to accept our mortality. And with that acceptance we can start prioritizing our current life on this planet instead of an unlikely afterlife. 

 

I grew up being told that every year on a specific day (Yom Kippur), god judges people based on the set of rules in the Jewish books and decides who lives and who dies that year. I was taught that until I was 12, it was my parents that would be judges for my sins. If I had a penis my parents would be responsible for my actions for one more year until I was 13. On Yom Kipur when I was 6, I spent a whole day in synagogue praying in terror, afraid my parents would be killed for my sins. Even at that young age I resented god and realized what a sadistic cruel creature he was. While my friends, who didn't know how to read were playing outside, I was being punished for my intelligence and coerced to pray all day to prevent my parent’s death. 

 

The brand of jewish I grew up in didn't have a heaven and hell. If god judged you worthy, when the messiah came you would be resurrected to a reality where Jews ruled all the land and if you were not worthy you would be gone forever. By the time I was 7 I had decided that either all the adults around me were idiots or they were all lying to me. Either way, I had stopped believing in god and secretly began living a secular life exploring all the things that were forbidden for instance turning on lights on Saturday.

 

 

However my fear of death did not subside, it had started years earlier. I remember the exact moment I realized me and everyone I cared for would one day be dead. I was around 4 and we were on a family outing in a hotel. I was sharing a room with my sister. I was in bed trying to sleep when it suddenly hit me like a brick of wall. Everyone would be gone. I would be gone. 

 

4 year old realizes death

 

 

Usually children's awareness of death is gradual but for me it was very sudden. I began crying and shaking hysterically, utterly mortified. I'm not sure what triggered the thought. It's likely I had been watching violent tv inappropriate for my age. When my mom checked in on me to see what was wrong she tried to comfort me by telling me not to worry "It won't happen for a very long time" she said. This did not help my 4 year old brain calm down and I remember crying until I was so fatigued that I fell asleep. 

 

All throughout my childhood and adolescence I would suffer from bouts of terrifying death anxiety, mostly before sleep. This would include heart palpitations and cold sweats, just about a full on panic attack. But after that first night I never told anyone again. Most times, after the initial panic subsided I would be left with a crippling terror in my stomach. I would sneak out of my room and from a hidden corner watch whatever dumb comedy my parents were watching on TV to keep myself distracted. Distraction was my main tactic of getting through this. Forcing myself to do something all the time so there would be no time or space for the terror to come. Once in my early 20's this happened while I was driving and I needed to stop the car on the side. I remember being well aware of the irony and internal conflict in that moment as I also suffered from suicidal ideation. How can I both want to die and be so terrified of death? 

 

Before starting my master's in cognitive neuroscience I spent 3 months at my dad's apartment on the beach in Cyprus catching up on the basics of neuroscience and reviewing my previous math studies. This was also when my mindfulness journey began. The many hours of various meditation training I was exposed to via my martial arts practices over the year were not benefiting me. I needed a deeper scientific model of how my brain and body interact to construct reality to actually start being mindful.

 

 

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The Science 

The brain is an amazing multiple processor with 86 billion neurons that are organized in various sub networks with different specialities. That's why we can be in conflicting states. Different parts of our vastly complex network can be wanting, needing and optimizing for different things. Striving for a harmonic network where each part can at least communicate its processing to the global stage is how I define mindfulness. As babies being socialized we learn to inhibit our needs. We learn to hold in our pee or poop until we get to a bathroom. We learn to inhibit our hunger, our need for touch and later also our horneyness. For many people, myself included, this inhibition can become too strong fragmenting our neural network creating dissociation. The bottom up signals coming from our body can become so weak they are almost lost to the rest of the brain that could potentially make changes and act on these signals. This can lead not only to mental health problems but to physiological problems as well. For a great book on the subject I recommend the Myth of Normal by Gabor Mate.

 

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I remember how proud my mom was that she told people she had potty trained me by the age of one. Later in life between my religious upbringing and martial arts training inhibition and disassociating became a way of life. Over the last decade a combination of psychedelic, mindfulness and somatic therapy has put me on a different path. For me, Mindfulness started in those 3 months of preparing for my master's while taking short daily meditation breaks. I noticed some thoughts were totally encompassing "I” was fully in the story. Other thoughts would allow for some parts of the brain to do different things. "I" could maintain a distance. 

 

Today I call this resource awareness. Instead of perceiving an average calculation of everything that is going on "I" am more able to perceive how my processing power is distributed amongst various calculations. “I” am more able to notice which parts of my brain-body networks are doing what. How filled is my bladder? How do different parts of my body relate to each other in space? How much am I mimicking the person I'm communicating with? How many fast automatic processes are taking place and whether these processes are based on a past traumatic event? Notice the brackets around the “I”? Part of my mindfulness journey is learning how to quiet the verbal self processing networks. 

 

Our ego-self can be compared to the loudest kid in class that is also the slowest. Our ego-self often jumps up shouting "I have the answer" while the rest of the brain has moved on to the next question. Inhibiting this part is not recommended but finding ways for this network to do what it does best (meaning making and storytelling) while not interfering and trying to control the rest of the networks can be incredibly helpful. 

 

Meditating while focusing on your breath does not mean your ego takes notes, or if you are like me, freaks out about every muscle twitch involved in the breathing process as you try to map them all out in a logical sequence. It is the exact opposite. Meditation and mindfulness allow for ancient breathing pathways in your brain to get the reigns and resonate to other brain networks, while your ego self takes a step back and observes in owe.

 

Ego Dissolution and Psychedelics 

One of my main criticism towards scientific research around ego dissolution and psychedelics is the verbal questionnaires starting with "I experienced". My first ego dissolution experience happened in high-school and it wasn't due to drugs it was due to studying philosophy. 

 

"When our perceptual inputs are removed, as in dreamless sleep, in a coma, in death or under general anesthesia, our consciousness is extinguished and we are no longer present in the world".

 

These are David Hume's words from Treatise On Human Nature. For my 16 year old self reading these words and fully experiencing them was enough to shut down the ego brain for a few moments. An ecstatic sense of oneness washed over me only to pass and leave me with a sense that I had experienced something I could never fully grasp. 

 

The first time I tried psychedelics something similar happened, the verbal voice in my head went quiet. It was such a sense of relief. My brain and body were fully functional. It was easy to have conversations but when my experienced tripp sitter asked how I felt things turned strange. My verbal self was unable to answer. There were separate feelings and sensations being processed but the singular "I" networked that takes an average reading of these processes and invents stories about them was defused. 

 

This has happened to me quite a few times since. My brain becomes unable to understand the abstraction of a singular self. There is no “you” or “I”. We are only able to perceive lower level processing patterns. This was such a mysterious sensation that I decided to focus my studies on understanding how psychedelics can cause this. 

On stronger doses the sense of minimal self can disintegrate as well. Our brain's ability to differentiate what is our internal system vs what is our external world can break down. A massive sense of oneness or not being sure which hand belongs to which body is a common motif. Visiting this state can have immense benefits, reducing cognitive load, feeling connected to something bigger and even I believe increasing our learning my mimicking capabilities. Monkey see monkey do! Blending our sense of self with our community is the basis of how we learn and the basis of our empathy. However, it is not a sustainable state for a functional human. Often we need to be able to differentiate between ourselves and our environment in order to function. 

 

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The Healing Combo 

While studying I continued to actively practice mindfulness as well as use cannabis and psychedelics to cultivate parts of my brain like a garden. Weeding out specific beliefs that were based on early trauma or my unhealthy upbringing and seeding beliefs and patterns coming from people around me that I admired. In one of those experiments I managed to gain some distance from the death anxiety pattern and perceive the calculation my brain was attempting to do. My brain was stuck in loops of Nothingness times Infinity in the brain of a 4 year old. With no understanding of abstractions of calculus this can be very anxiety inducing. Then, another day I was on a strong truffle trip in a little forest grove close to my university when I could feel the onset of the death anxiety pattern. I was terrified of the coming terror. Knowing what I know about psychedelics I was afraid I would re-traumatize myself or even totally freak out and require medical attention. But then, one of the seeds I had planted in my brain spoke to the rest of the brain very clearly. “You want to know what happens when you die? Here…” the voice said, while guiding my hand to touch the earth under me. “When we die we turn into this”. The rich texture of the earth filled my bottom up senses and my brain remodeled death.

 

We go back to the earth

 

Death is a process of in creasing our entropy. Bacteria and fungus break our molecules down to their basic building blocks and then with a little help from the sun's energy these building blocks get recycled potentially creating new life. I was part of this intricate and complex natural process and there was no uncertainties to be afraid of. 

 

A few weeks later when I sensed an onset of the familiar death anxiety I knew what to do. I put my hands back on the earth and let the earth literally ground me. It’s been a decade since that last onset and I have not experienced any death anxiety since. I needed a story about an afterlife, I think we all do, but I could actually connect to the science story. The more physics, chemistry and biology I learn the more in awe I am of nature and my part in the larger system. 

 

Throughout his interview, time and time again, Roland reminds the interviewer that his scientific and secular beliefs will not allow him to believe in a heaven, hell or even karma. He adds that his mindfulness training and psychedelic experiences are helping him be curious about his own death and stay away from crippling fear and depression. Roland was also incredibly authentic, admitting that he doesn’t know how long he will be able to maintain this state of joyful life. Dealing with pain, medication and the medical system is a difficult task even for healthy people. I’m rooting for Roland and for our society in general to find a way to gracefully face death.


Researches have linked the mystical experience with the strength of the therapeutic effect of a psychedelic trip. However, examples like Roland Griffith, Michal Pollen and myself show that one can get the benefits of psychedelics including a sense of connection and oneness while still maintaining our scientific outlook. 

 

 

Hopeful Death Beliefs? 

What happens in the process of dying? As a young teenager I used to believe upon death, some essence of me separates from my physical body but I outgrew that. My current hopeful story is that in the last moments of our life we experience a state of time dilation similar to what might happen on strong psychedelic trips. Our personal experience of time gets stretched to a subjective infinity as we jump from one memory to the other relieving parts of our life over and over. This motivates me to make awesome joyful memories and let go of painful ones. What we hold on to is what we are and the knowledge that we pass on is the gift we will leave to the world when we are gone.

 

 

 

 If you are interested in trying out a cutting edge mindfulness and meditation technology that was also designed to help us prepare and integrate for psychedelic trips, check out Wisdom.

 

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Can Psychedelics Heal Birth Trauma? https://shashkes.com/2023/01/29/can-psychedelics-heal-birth-trauma/ https://shashkes.com/2023/01/29/can-psychedelics-heal-birth-trauma/#comments Sun, 29 Jan 2023 19:26:21 +0000 https://shashkes.com/?p=100 The post Can Psychedelics Heal Birth Trauma? appeared first on Shashkes.

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For my first blog post on my new site I thought it would be fitting to start at the beginning of our lives as individual entities. I’ll explain how these first few moments can impact our behavior long into adulthood sometimes in ways that are not beneficial to our adult selves. I’ll share how psychedelics can help us change unwanted behaviors. 
I think the first time I heard about birth trauma was at a contact improv dance event. I was skeptical and even judgemental, believing it an easy excuse for dysfunctionality. Only after completing a masters in cognitive neuroscience and going through several deep psychedelic trips did I realized how wrong I was. Understanding our birth trauma can be a path to improved functionality.
I will focus on my anecdotal story because most humans learn better from stories in hopes that you can find some practical learning for your own growth. I will augment my story with relevant research for those who want to delve deeper.
 

Can We Remember Our Birth? The science

There are two types of memory:
Episodic memory - this is what most of us think of when we think of memory. A narrative around where we were and what we were doing. The ability to recall specific events or experiences. This type of memory typically develops from around 2 years old and improves throughout adolescence and adulthood utilizing the brain region called the hippocampus. 
Procedural memory (sometimes called implicit memory) is the ability to acquire and retain motor skills and habits. Examples of procedural memory include riding a bike, playing a musical instrument and also simpler things like walking or crawling. Procedural memory doesn’t involve the hippocampus and is believed to begin earlier in life. How early? There is evidence that this memory starts from around 34 weeks of gestation after the fetus’s brain is developed enough that it can start multisensory integration and form feedback loops between motor output and sensory input. 
We learn what we are while utilizing these feedback loops and calculating statistical correlations between input and output. 
In the tight loud environment of the womb we push and turn and kick against the womb boundaries and start building our agency. The output of our motor neurons controlling our hand correlated with the activity of the neurons in the sensory cortex receiving the proprioceptive signals sent from our hand through the nervous system.
Slowly the complex system of our 86 billion neurons starts organizing itself, until it is able to form predictions. “If I do A, I will probably feel B”. “If I feel B I am probably doing A.” 

And then, all of a sudden, everything changes, our whole sensory world that was filtered by being in our mother’s womb vanishes and we are tossed into a world filled with so many unpredictable sensations. This might just be the most memorable moment of our lives when it comes to procedural memory.

There is one more thing to understand about our memory banks: whenever we “read” from them we also “write” to them, connecting our current sensory input with the previous learnt memory. Think about all the instances you heard your favorite song, how they connect and blare with each other. This is the basics of many trauma healing therapeutic modalities. From EMDR to Exposure therapy, we can bring up traumatic memories in safe spaces and override the procedural memory, the tightness in the body,  the
shaking, sweating or vomiting that can accompany PTSD. We can slowly learn to regulate but it’s not easy. 

My Story
My uncle used to tell me that as a baby I would bang my head on the floor and scream. Turns out, head banging can be pretty common in kids especially those diagnosed with autistic spectrum traits. For most it stops in childhood, for me this impulse returned in adolescence and my early 20’s especially in times of stress. Mostly I could inhibit it except when sometimes I couldn’t. The narrative I carried with me was that I was broken, a self destructive creature. It was only after I started somatic therapy in my mid 30’s while crawling and going through developmental movements that I remembered my birth story. I was stuck, banging my head on my mother’s pelvic for 12 hours until a MD managed to get me out. I messaged my mom and she confirmed it, I was born with a big dent on my forehead. I wasn’t broken, I was just holding on to an early procedural memory, an adaptive strategy stemming from my birth. I like to fantasize that if traditional birth practices were more common maybe I wouldn’t have gotten stuck to begin with but also enjoy attributing my stubbornness and relentless pushing towards challenges to those early moments.  There is interesting evidence that children born via cesarean operation have higher rates of obesity and asthma as these first moments impact our immune system and gut bacteria and perhaps even early learnt motor skills.  

Psychedelic Short Cut
Our brain remains plastic until the day we die even Alzihimer patients can form new procedural memories creating new neural connections. However, the majority of our plasticity happens early in our first few years of life. Various parts of the brain hyper connect at very specific times and then a pruning mechanism happens, whatever connections aren’t triggered by incoming input get pruned. Most of the research has been done with language identification. If we are not exposed to a language early in life our brain will forever react differently than if we were, even if later in life we become fluent speakers.


Psychedelics have the ability to bring back some of that lost plasticity, they can over connect different areas for a short period of time allowing us to create new feedback loops. Different psychedelics work in different ways and have very different risk profiles. My research is mostly focused on classical psychedelics such as Psilocybin and LSD, but other research shows Ketamine and MDMA have potential therapeutic effects (with a somewhat higher risk profile). In some psychedelic trips I would get glimpses of very early patterns but finding and replacing the exact procedural memory responsible for my head banging was harder than the movie eternal sunshine of the spotless mind would lead us to believe.

Yes And
My path to rewrite this specific birth trauma learnt pattern started with building an artistic shrine to these patterns in an attempt to connect them to visual-spatial processing. Then I began to use idea’s from Improv theater which are also reflected in the therapeutic modality called Internal Family Systems and Acceptance commitment therapy. Instead of trying to block or reject the impulse or sensation, I would try to accept it. However it was a dangerous impulse I add a an “AND” to it. YES I’m going to bang my head AND I’m going to put this pillow on the wall before I do it. Yes I’m going to bang my head AND I will do it on my bed mattress. Yes I’m going to bang my head AND I’m going to do it very very slowly and feel the full sensation of pressure in safe slow motion. I began exploring the impulse, expanding it and slowly stopped being afraid of it.
As I practiced this, the impulse led to one of many actions I could act out. But it still felt maladaptive. When I feel stress in my adult life it’s not because I'm physically trapped and there are so many more useful patterns that I could be doing. 


Float Tanks and Hot Tubes

Down vote on dry float

I’ve always loved hot tubs and ever since I tried a float tank for the first time it’s become an integrative part of my wellness and self care practices. I even explored a dry float tank in NYC in hopes that it could be a more effective replacement for short mental health breaks (it wasn’t but it did still help with my lower back pain).
The warm water and reduction of sensory changes quiets my over noisy bottom up sensory input. I feel safe and content. I’ve been thanking my mom for giving me what was likely a great womb experience which is far from trivial as many issues can start from lack of prenatal care.

It All Comes Together 

The singer/song writer Rachal Lark sings about hot springs and psychedelics. For me it was submerging myself in a jacuzzi in the Netherlands while on Psychedelics. In this altered state the noise of the bubbles and water sensation brought me back to the womb. Then, I opened my eyes underwater and the bright underwater light of the jacuzzi shocked and pained me. My procedural memory kicked in, I was in the womb and I needed to get out. It was terrifying. While my episodic awareness and memory was intact and I knew I was in a jacuzzi a stronger than ever impulse to bang my head on the jacuzzi wall emerged. Luckily all the somatic and therapeutic training kicked. “ok you want to get out but remember we now have a whole body and we can figure out where the way out is.” A new pattern came out of my body contracting and then pushing sideways and finally using my legs to break out of the water. It was an incredibly powerful experience.
A few days after that I felt a little twitch, the beginning of the known head banging impulse had arised. However, this time my body reacted with the new learnt pattern, contract, push sideways, expand. When I completed that pattern the impulse was gone and I felt something had changed.
It’s been months and the impulse has not returned even while under a lot of stress.
Whether the narrative of my birth story is objectively true or an inaccurate story that fits the few data points I have is immaterial. What matters is that it helped me stop exerting immense mental effort to deal with this patterns, and instead make friends with it and teach my brain some new tricks!   

*This is a personal story and by no means a recommendation for a specific therapeutic modality. 

**I do dream of (and work towards) a future where psychedelics can be legally and safely combined with embodied wellness modalities such as yoga, massage and water therapies.  

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