Growing Good People
At age seven months in the womb, humans begin language
coordination in response to what they hear through the mother's
belly wall. Some 52 muscles learn to respond to the various
phonemes (a basic language sound like 'b' in boy and 'm' in man)
of the language surrounding that belly. There are also studies
showing that the emotional state of the parent imprints as do
things like music and other environmental conditions. Nutrition,
drug use and pollution spill right through directly to the fetus
via the placenta and umbilical cord. Parenting begins way before
the bassinet.
At eighteen months, the child has a brain 1/3 the size of an
adult but the same number of neural connections. These
connections are called synapses and relay information - outgoing
from the nerve cell through axons, ingoing by way of dendrites.
It is the number of connections of nerve cells that relates to
intelligence, not the number of neurons.
As the brain grows, by age 6 we have about five times the
neural connections we do as adults. These trillions upon
trillions of connections are there waiting to be imprinted by
the environment, parents and society. This is probably the
reason, some 2000 years ago, the church started the sacraments
at ages 6 or 7. (It is remarkable how so many 'new' scientific
discoveries were anticipated by the intuitive traditions of,
what we believe to be, unsophisticated minds of the past.)
Beginning at about age 12, the fatty myelin sheath covering
connecting neuronal tendrils not used, are literally dissolved,
absorbed into the cerebrospinal fluid. Thus 80% of the neural
brain mass present at age 6 is gone by age 14 as a result of
disuse. Further belittling is the fact that of the remaining 20%
of the brain, we only use 5%. That means, of our full potential,
we only use about 1%! (For evolutionary materialists out there,
please explain to me how something as complex as a brain -
infinitely more complex than anything humans have ever invented
- developed so that 80% of it could dissolve and 95% of what
remains go unused.) This 'devolution' of the brain applies to
the neocortex, that big part of the brain with all the folds and
grooves that humans are so proud of because that's where all our
smarts (are supposed to) come from. The more 'primitive' parts
of the brain, the 'reptilian' brainstem and limbic systems
responsible for stimulus-response sorts of actions and
emotion-cognition, remain intact and do not experience this
loss. In other words, our ability for 'fight-flight' (running
from predators), self-awareness (me, I, look at me), sex (fun
stuff and children hatching), eating (wouldn't want to miss
that) and road rage (essential in modern living) are never at
risk, just our ability to be intelligent about all that base
reptilian stuff is. Nothing new here, right? Is it not clear
which parts of the human brain are in full function today? Just
watch a little television, listen to 'with it' music, go to some
movies and pick up some of the tabloids at the grocery counter
and you'll see the human brain stem has suffered no melt-down.
But that 3-pound blob on top of it, the seat of intelligence, is
evidently just filling up space.
What is primarily responsible for making and holding neural
connections is not what we can beat into our kids with rules,
instructions and performance pressures, but what they experience
around them. At least 95% of the imprinting a child receives,
neither the child nor the parents are aware of. Who we are
emotionally, ethically and intellectually at our core in our
day-to-day routines as parents - not what we pretend or preach -
is picked up by the child as its most important lessons and is
then 'neural connected.' So telling a child to be something we
are not doesn't work. If we want better children, then we must
be better people. This also speaks to the importance of a loving
and nurturing family nest. We learn love, in large part, by
experiencing it. The erosion of the family in our libertine
society thrusts the child into a peer group for imprinting. This
begins with technological births in hospital wards, then
continues with isolating infants in their own bedrooms,
pseudofood in bottles with nipples, television, day-care, broken
homes and on to public schooling...you know, the 'modern' way to
rear kids. The premature unfolding of development is accelerated
through exposure to adult themes pressing in from everywhere in
our society. Menstruation is beginning in 8-year-old girls
(partly the result of hormone-type pollutants in food), there is
an outbreak of pregnancies in 9-year-olds, and violent sex
crimes among children under the age of 10 are becoming common.
Children are being thrust into full operational adult thinking
way before they are capable of handling it properly. That is why
some 70% of teenagers are functionally illiterate: they may be
able to learn, but cannot grant meaning. They have not been
properly imprinted, don't have sufficient life experience for
context and don't have the neural connections. So yes, the home,
family and parents are responsible for the development of
children. On the other hand, there is a lot of nature involved
too. Any parent raising a child into adulthood will see that the
child at 40 is pretty much identical to the child in earliest
infancy. So don't be too quick to blame yourself for a child
gone bad. Don't spend your fortune in therapy either, whining
about how your parents didn't love you. We can lose important
neural connections in childhood but once you realize who you are
- very early in childhood - the ball is ultimately in your
court. There are people with essentially no brain in their skull
(compressed to a thin membrane from hydrocephalus) who excel
intellectually and ethically. So, as an adult, buck up, take
responsibility for yourself and make good use of the neural
connections remaining. That's in your court. You are not a
victim.
But the present circumstances for children are a peculiar
situation with no historical precedent. There is no solution
other than for the adults to not be distracted by the veneer of
civilization, its glamour of modernity, and its amoral and
libertine pressures. Even though we are left with 1% of our
mental potential, we can make a lot of good use of that. It
means reaching inside for the goodness that is there in our
hearts and extending that to our fellow humans. It means not
following the conscience of others but learning what is already
within and being true to it. Children don't need money, videos,
signature shoes and pressure for grades and sports performance.
The inner needs of children don't care about being raised in a
pigpen so long as there is love. If that critical emotional
relationship is not there, children will seek it in peers,
including the perverted, money grubbing, media models. Then we
have the ethically blind (other children, brainless idols and
profiteering media) leading our blind children. This is the
proper incubator for the adults of the future? What then,
particularly when everyone has been indoctrinated into thinking
they are victims and any failure in life is the fault of
somebody else? What a formula for the collapse of society!
The answer is that greatest of all intelligences, love. That is
not a platitude. Love requires an expansive and wise mind. Even
with the puny 1% of our brain that we use, the capacity for love
is infinite. In the end, what else really matters anyway? In the
process, by being a person of goodness and reaching out in this
way to others, we become the perfect model for the development
of a loving and well-adjusted child. And hardly a word needs to
be spoken in the process.