The Spiritual Anatomy of Emotion: How Feelings Link the Brain, the Body, and the Sixth Sense

Excerpts & Samples

By Michael A. Jawer

Publisher : Inner Traditions/Bear & Company

ABOUT Michael A. Jawer

Michael A. Jawer
Michael A. Jawer is an emotion researcher and expert on “sick building syndrome.” He lives in Vienna, Virginia.

BUY ONLINE

Description

A cutting-edge examination of feelings, not thoughts, as the gateway to understanding consciousness

• Contends that emotion is the greatest influence on personality development

• Offers a new perspective on immunity, stress, and psychosomatic conditions

• Explains how emotion is key to understanding out-of-body experience, apparitions, and other anomalous perceptions

Contemporary science holds that the brain rules the body and generates all our feelings and perceptions. Michael Jawer and Dr. Marc Micozzi disagree. They contend that it is our feelings that underlie our conscious selves and determine what we think and how we conduct our lives.

The less consciousness we have of our emotional being, the more physical disturbances we are likely to have--from ailments such as migraines, fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue, and post-traumatic stress to anomalous perceptions such as apparitions and involuntary out-of-body experiences. Using the latest scientific research on immunity, sensation, stress, cognition, and emotional expression, the authors demonstrate that the way we process our feelings provides a key to who is most likely to experience these phenomena and why. They explain that emotion is a portal into the world of extraordinary perception, and they provide the studies that validate the science behind telepathic dreams, poltergeists, and ESP. The Spiritual Anatomy of Emotion challenges the prevailing belief that the brain must necessarily rule the body. Far from being by-products of neurochemistry, the authors show that emotions are the key vehicle by which we can understand ourselves and our interactions with the world around us as well as our most intriguing--and perennially baffling--experiences.

“A unique body of data on environmental sensitivity, which has great relevance to human health and psychology. I highly recommend this well-written and accessible book.”
Ernest Hartmann, M.D., professor of psychiatry, Tufts University School of Medicine, and author of Dreams and Nightmares and Boundaries in the Mind

“Challenges all of us to open our eyes, expand what we’re willing to engage, and cease our censorship of reality . . . ideas on which we eventually will base our concepts of what it means to be human.”
Larry Dossey, M.D., from the foreword