Tales from the road to awakening
23 Oct
It’s not all in the mind – the so-called placebo effect is real and reaches right down to the spine, say German scientists.
The finding, which appears in the journal?Science, may help in the hunt for better ways to tackle pain and other disorders.

The placebo effect is particularly strong when treating central nervous system conditions
Using modern imaging technology the researchers found that simply believing a pain treatment is effective actually dampens pain signalling in a region of the spinal cord called the dorsal horn, suggesting a powerful biological mechanism is at work.
“It is deeply rooted in very, very early areas of the central nervous system. That definitely speaks for a strong effect,” says lead researcher Falk Eippert of the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf.
Eippert and colleagues used functional magnetic resonance imaging, or fMRI, to study changes in spinal cord activity.
They applied painful heat to the arms of 15 healthy men and compared the spinal cord responses when they thought they had been treated with either an anaesthetic cream or a placebo.
Both creams, in fact, were inactive but the fMRI scans showed nerve activity was reduced significantly when subjects believed they were getting the anaesthetic.
The ability of sham medicines with no active ingredient to produce real clinical benefits has long perplexed doctors and frustrated drugmakers.
Patients are typically given either an experimental drug or a dummy in clinical trials and the fact that those on placebo often get better, too, makes it hard to determine whether a new drug is working.
The placebo effect is particularly strong when treating central nervous system conditions, like depression and pain.
Traditionally, experts have viewed the effect as psychological, but the new German research is the latest in a growing body of evidence that there is an important physical component.
Just what turns down pain signalling in the spine when a placebo is given is unclear, although Eippert suspects a range of chemicals including natural opioids, noradrenaline and serotonin may be involved.
Eippert and colleagues say their work “opens up new avenues for assessing the efficacy and possible site of action of new treatments for various forms of pain, including chronic pain”.
The word placebo comes from the Latin for ‘I shall please’.
Original news article link – ABC Science News
It would be interesting to see the MRIs they have been taking to pinpoint the actual location of the electrical activity – is it coming from a particular chakra or nervous system hub?
23 Oct
A bright ribbon of hydrogen atoms marks the edge of the solar system, where the Sun’s wind meets emissions from the rest of the galaxy, US researchers report.

Launched last October, IBEX has already has produced stunning results, say scientists
The results come from the Interstellar Boundary Explorer spacecraft (IBEX), the latest in NASA’s series of low-cost, rapidly developed space missions.
Launched last October it has already has produced stunning results, say scientists.
They used telescopes aboard the orbiting or IBEX to look toward the heliopause, which is the boundary where solar wind meets galactic wind at the edge of the solar system beyond Pluto.
Researchers combined images from IBEX with data from the Cassini spacecraft, near Saturn. They say the results, which appear in the latest issue of?Science, are changing their ideas about what this border area looks like.
“The IBEX results are truly remarkable, with emissions not resembling any of the current theories or models of this never-before-seen region,” David McComas of theSouthwest Research Institute in San Antonio, who led the research.
“We expected to see small, gradual spatial variations at the interstellar boundary, some ten billion miles (16 billion km) away.
“IBEX is showing us a very narrow ribbon that is two to three times brighter than anything else in the sky.”
Scientists have long been keen to gain greater understanding of the heliosphere, described by NASA as a ‘giant bubble’ that protects the solar system from high-energy cosmic rays.
They are particularly eager to learn more about the invisible boundary of our solar system and dust and gas that fills the area between the stars, referred to as interstellar medium.
The interstellar medium is created in part by the interaction between the solar wind — charged particles continuously traveling at supersonic speeds away from the Sun in all directions.
The two Voyager spacecraft, the robotic space probes sent to the outer solar system and beyond, have in the past provided data about more localised parts of the interstellar boundary region, but NASA officials say IBEX is helping fill in the “big picture” of what the space boundary looks like.
Original Article link – ABC Science News
It looks a lot like an aura to me in that photo.
23 Oct
I thought that this video was an interesting example of how spiritual teachers use shock value to keep their students minds agile – and engage them on a different level mentally – while making some interesting points for reflection.
Note: This video contains a significant amount of swearing.
After Friedrich Nietzsche declared that “God is Dead” – the word FUCK has become the most important word in the English language.
Osho used this sketch on the word fuck first in a talk in 1980 and repeated it again in this later talk. We have seen the original of this sketch being attributed to Jack Wagner, George Carlin and Monty Python – no one seems to be sure.
“When Friedrich Nietzsche declared, “God is dead,” he himself became utterly helpless no consolation, no hope, no meaning. He had to go through a long process of insanity.
Nietzsche seems to me to be the most important figure that has dominated the world in this century. Without any argument his statement has infiltrated into every mind. But he was not aware of the implications. I have no problem if God is dead. There is no need to mourn his death.
The problem is that if God is dead, then you lose the most important word in your language and you will need a substitute. God was one end, one extreme, and when one extreme disappears from your mental vision, the necessary and inevitable is that you will fall to the other extreme.
And that’s what has happened, Milarepa. Instead of God, `fuck’ has become the most important word in our language. Even if Friedrich Nietzsche comes back, he will be surprised and he will try to resurrect somehow the dead God, because this is stupid. But you will need a whole report on it, a whole research.
One of the most interesting words in the English language today is the word `fuck’. It is a magical word. Just by its sound it can describe pain, pleasure, hate and love. In language it falls into many grammatical categories. It can be used as a verb, both transitive, “John fucked Mary,” and intransitive, “Mary was fucked by John”, and as a noun, “Mary is a fine fuck.” It can be used as an adjective, “Mary is fucking beautiful.”
As you can see, there are not many words with the versatility of fuck. Besides the sexual meaning, there are also the following uses:
Ignorance: F**ked if I know.
Trouble: I guess I am f**ked now!
Fraud: I got f**ked at the used car lot.
Aggression: F**k you!
Displeasure: What the f**k is going on here?
Difficulty: I can’t understand this f**king job.
Incompetence: He is a f**k-off. Suspicion: What the f**k are you doing?
Enjoyment: I had a f**king good time.
Request: Get the f**k out of here.
Hostility: I’m going to knock your f**king head off.
Greeting: How the f**k are you?
Apathy: Who gives a f**k?
Innovation: Get a bigger f**king hammer.
Surprise: F**k! You scared the shit out of me!
Anxiety: Today is really f**ked.And it is very healthy if every morning you do it as a transcendental meditation just when you get up, first thing, repeat the mantra “f**k you” five times; it clears your throat too!
Okay, Vimal?”