tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13617569.post116206357399413359..comments2024-03-06T05:17:31.852-07:00Comments on Integral Options Cafe: Eight Behaviors for Coping with Changewilliam harrymanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06981478282688361274noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13617569.post-35078194017518189592009-11-12T16:40:46.747-07:002009-11-12T16:40:46.747-07:00Thanks Marsha, I am honored that you like this art...Thanks Marsha, I am honored that you like this article. <br /><br />When I wrote this, I had not read much in the field of neuroscience, but since then I have become a huge fan of Dan Siegel, Alan Schore, and others in the field - and now, your work, too.<br /><br />I definitely see the parallels between what Siegel has been writing about "the neurobiology of we," or intersubjective neuropsychology, and what a lot of the traditional rituals have been doing to rewire the brain. Very cool.<br /><br />Peace,<br />Billwilliam harrymanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06981478282688361274noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13617569.post-62236863618909459382009-11-12T08:47:15.540-07:002009-11-12T08:47:15.540-07:00Bill,
I've just discovered this article -- it&...Bill,<br />I've just discovered this article -- it's great the way you set it out in real, concrete terms. At the risk of getting lofty, what most of the excellent suggestions boil down to (from my framework) is that anything you can do to enhance your brain's integration will serve you well in changing your life. Being a neuroscience geek (<i>bon fide</i> - I'm trained in neuropscyhology), I think of it as beefing up the important integrative brain regions, my favorite of which is the middle prefrontal cortex.<br /><br />Thanks for all that you put out here. I'll keep poking around, discovering more gems, I'm sure.Marsha Lucas, PhDhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02390198378929687620noreply@blogger.com