There’s ONE question that all human brains want answered, and they want it answered, “Yes” – parent’s brains, children’s brains, priests’ brains, politicians’ brains, all brains. And they don’t want a lukewarm “Yes,” or a “Maybe Yes” or a “Getting-to-Yes Yes.” They want a substantial, resounding, unequivocal, “YES!”
Before I tell you what that question is, I’d like to tell you a little bit about what might have gone on in your young brain when the answer to the Main Brain Question was something other than “Yes.” First of all, if the answer was “Maybe,” or “I’m not sure,” a confusion and uncertainty very likely began to take shape in your developing brain. How this looks under a brain imaging device is a significantly reduced number of grooves in the brain together with fewer connections between neurons. Reduced connections result, not unexpectedly, in reduced abilities in different areas – for example, motor areas or immune function – resulting in greatly diminished capacities, e.g. lower social or emotional intelligence or reduced impulse control. If you go here and take a look at famous physicist Carl Friedrich Gauss’s brain, you will be able to clearly see a side-by-side comparison of two brains, one that very likely had the Main Brain Question repeatedly answered, “Yes” (Gauss’s), and another that most likely had it answered “Maybe.”
Neural Damaging “No”
Much greater problems arise for parents and children though when the answer to the Main Brain Question is, “No.” When the answer to this question is “No,” children are placed in an untenable position: the place where they live, and the people they need to take care of them are not performing that fundamental function very well. Because they are unable to take care of themselves, as a child they are now stuck. Feeling, or actually being helplessly stuck with no ready resolution in sight, has been found to be the primary experience that results in Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) in adults and children alike. What PTSD often looks like when a brain-scanning machine takes a picture of it is something like this – major neural real estate is simply not optimally integrated and operating in the neural network.
Life-Long Impact
This kind of brain damage, in differing degrees, is believed to have a lifelong impact on our children. Here’s what “recovering neurologist,” Dr. Bob Scaer, has to say about it: “The cumulative experiences of ‘life’s little traumas’ shape virtually every single aspect of existence. This accumulation of negative life experiences molds one’s personality, choices of mate, profession, clothes, appetite, pet peeves, social behaviors, posture, and most specifically, our state of physical and mental health.”
All that might not be so bad. Given the great plasticity and regenerative capacity of the brain, it might be something we could work with. However, Gabor Maté, a Canadian physician, sees the damage caused by the answer “No” to the Main Brain Question as even more serious. Here’s what he has to say: “The biology of potential illness arises early in life. The brain’s stress response mechanisms are programmed by experiences beginning in infancy, and so are the implicit, unconscious memories that govern our attitudes and behaviors toward ourselves, others and the world. Cancer, multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis and the other conditions we examined are not abrupt new developments in adult life, but culminations of lifelong processes. The human interactions and biological imprinting that shaped these processes took place in periods of our life for which we may have no conscious recall.”
So, we can see that living beings possessing brains need tender, loving, consistent care. But what exactly IS this Main Brain Question, and what do we need to do in order to consistently answer it “Yes”? I’ll be answering this question and many others in future columns. (If you absolutely can’t wait, you can go here to get the answer: AYTFM?)

5 comments
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January 4, 2009 at 2:13 pm
william
Dear Mark,
so sorry for your loss (all of our losses).
your sister sounds like such a wonderful person. Thank you for telling us about her.
William
January 4, 2009 at 3:57 pm
Danie Rousseau
Dear Mark,
You truly touched me with your sister’s story. Your memorial to her is so clearly not only in the very moving words in this column, but in your ability to to lovingly express her influence on your life.
I am grateful for your ability to share this story with us, and to relate it and integrate it within the community. May you find peace and hope always,
Danie
January 4, 2009 at 4:50 pm
Jill
Mark…Somehow I stumbled across your column/blog some months ago. I work with pregnant women, new mothers and young families (and also with the dying), and found so much of what you write about pertinent to my work. The young mothers and fathers that cross my path are intuitive, understanding and patient for the most part…more that they were years ago, or perhaps it is my new adopted home city that grows such thoughtful young people. I have a great deal of experience with life, death and birth and the more I can learn about the way our brains work, the more understanding and empathy I possess. Your words have shown me a path many times in many ways.
I lost someone extraordinary to lung cancer, the tenth anniversary is coming up soon. Your sister’s life touched you deeply, and in turn, your enlightenment has touched thousands…she did good work in the time she was allowed. And now you have introduced us to her…as a young girl she had the wisdom and heart to do whatever was needed to care for her siblings. A lifetime of giving, an imperfect soul now made more perfect in your memories.
January 4, 2009 at 5:42 pm
Carrol Suzuki
Thank you soooooooooooo much Mark for sharing the generous and loving life of your sister. A heartfelt and deep way to begin the New Year for you.
hugsc
January 4, 2009 at 8:38 pm
Helene Brun
Dear Mark,
Reading your informative, intelligent, interesting blog has become a Sunday habit for me. Today you wrote about your sister. Thank you, it is just time to say Thank You.
Helene