from your thinking brain into your limbic brain and the subconscious regions.
In other words, in order for you to dial down your neocortex and all the neural activity that it performs on a daily basis, you’d have to stop thinking analytically and vacate the faculties of reason, logic,
intellectualizing, forecasting, predicting, and rationalizing—at least temporarily. This is what’s meant by quieting your mind (Revisit Figure, if you need to.)
According to the neuroscientific model that I outlined
in the previous chapters, to quiet your mind would mean that you’d have to declare a
“cease-fire” on all of the automatic neural networks in your thinking brain that you habitually fire on a regular basis. That is, you’d have to stop reminding yourself of who you think you are, repeatedly reproducing the same level of mind.
I know that sounds like a huge task that may well be overwhelming,
but it turns out that practical, scientifically proven ways exist for us to accomplish this feat and make it a skill. In the workshops
that I teach around the world, many ordinary people who’d never meditated before got pretty good at doing this—once they learned how. You’ll learn these methods in the chapters that follow, but first, let’s increase your level of intention so that when you get to the how-to, you’ll reap greater rewards
(just as did the aerobic exercisers in Quebec from Chapter 2
who were told that their well-being would be enhanced by their efforts and, thus,
could assign meaning to what they were doing—and then got better results).
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