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Our brain is designed to be a kind of anticipation machine. We are supposed to be able to learn in the present, and from what happened in the past, to prepare for events that lie ahead of us. It is my belief that among the many brain development changes that happen to abused and severely traumatized infants and young children is a change in how the frontal regions of our later-maturing ‘future thought’ brain abilities form themselves.
Our future thinking is connected to our ability to learn. It is connected to our ability to anticipate consequences of our own and other people’s actions. It is connected to our ability to take care of ourselves in the future, to plan and make wise choices and decisions. I also believe that these abilities are the ones that musicians use because most of them CAN use them so that they can listen to a song and either sing it or play it on an instrument – in the future.
As I struggle through learning to read music and to play keyboard I realize that the severe trauma I experienced through abuse in my infancy and childhood has all but removed the ability from me to be able to listen to a song AND TO REMEMBER IT LONG ENOUGH to be able to play it in my own future. I can clearly recognize that this lack of future memory ability prevents me from being able to accomplish something that to most musicians is taken as a given.
I do not believe I am in any way less musically talented that other musicians that can do this. What is missing inside of me is a normally formed ability to remember the future – to remember INTO the future.
Throughout all of my early years of life my own experience of being a little person was interfered with by brutalizing trauma. My life was continually interrupted. Every time my own experience of myself in my own life was interfered with by my mother’s abuse DISSOCIATION happened. These repeated and violent breaks in my own experience formed my early-developing body-brain differently from normal. My ability to future think was changed. I experience these changes all of the time.
How do we know, as early trauma survivors, that we are not processing information in the same way that others do who did not suffer what we did? I am not going to name the ways we know right now. I am only mentioning this one because I have been stymied by my inability to REMEMBER the music – sometimes even past the split second my fingers hit a key and move onto the next one. The music is very hard for me to remember in an ongoing way as being a WHOLE song. This is, I am realizing, not unlike the difficulties I truly have with remembering myself in my whole life as I move on through it.
I went searching online and found some related articles I share here (anything said in these links about astrology is merely anecdotal to this discussion – the abilities to future think are directly built into the early forming human brain – or not).
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Mind & Brain / Memory, Emotions, & Decisions
The Brain Memories Are Crucial for Looking Into the Future — Click here to find out more!
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Remembering the future: Our brain saves energy by predicting what it will see
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Does the brain “Remember The Future?”
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Why Do We Remember Bad Things?
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July 1, 2007 — “Psychologists have found that thought patterns used to recall the past and imagine the future are strikingly similar. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging to show the brain at work, they have observed the same regions activated in a similar pattern whenever a person remembers an event from the past or imagines himself in a future situation. This challenges long-standing beliefs that thoughts about the future develop exclusively in the frontal lobe.”
“Remembering your past may go hand-in-hand with envisioning your future! It’s an important link researchers found using high-tech brain scans. It’s answering questions and may one day help those with memory loss.” [Click on title for rest of article and video]
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Enchanted Mind – Future Memory
“Time and space are modes by which we think
and not conditions in which we live.”
Albert Einstein
“A truly creative mind can remember the future. Though this reads as an oxymoron – true to the wisdom within all paradox – it is possible to remember the future. A book by the same title has been written by a most extraordinary woman, P. M. H. Atwater. She has experienced future memory all of her life. She tells her story so well this book is hard to put down. She also gives all of the relevant science behind this phenomena in a very readable and understandable format.
“Einstein, Bohm, Hawking and other noted physicists, as well as Penrose, Bentov and others on the leading edge of mathematics and cosmology are documented as accepting and promoting this theory. Their ideas and discoveries are simplified and connected in a very unique way in Future Memory. Ms. Atwater does a superb job of using simple images and simple language to explain complicated physical and mathematical concepts. She also integrates this with the work of leading philosophers, psychologists, neurophysiologists, and biologists. This work is so comprehensive you will realize no stone was left unturned in revealing the simplicity of how future memory is possible.”
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Remembering the past to imagine the future: the prospective brain
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