|
My wife can't understand how I can read in a car without feeling
nauseous. For her, any trip in the back seat produces
discomfort.
As well as enabling us to detect sound, the ear functions as our
organ of orientation, telling us which way is up. The part of
the ear which is responsible for this is a little chamber called the
utricle. It is connected to three semi-circular canals which
contain fluid. Together, these control our sense of balance.
When a tube moves, the liquid inside it presses back in the
opposite direction against hair-like nerve cells located at the end
of the tube. This gives us a sensation of motion. With
three canals placed at right angles to each other, we are equipped
to detect motion in any direction. It is the erratic
intermittent stimulation of the hair cells in the ear that gives the
feeling of motion sickness.
As fluid moves through three canals simultaneously, contradictory
nerve impulses reach the brain. In itself, this can cause
significant disequilibrium. However, it's made even worse if
familiar cues to orientation are upset. For example, if you
read while riding in a car, the inner ear detects the movement, but
the eyes see only the static page of print. The conflicting
signals are the catalyst for motion sickness.
So next time someone says your nausea is all in your head, in a
way, you'll have to agree.
MOVING BEYOND MATTER
by Ron Hughes
Human bodies are amazing. We have so many organs that all
work together allowing us to sense and interact with the world
around us. As we've just heard, when different organs send
conflicting information to the brain we can become ill.
Looking out the car window helps settle the stomach of someone
suffering motion sickness, because it harmonizes the sensory
perceptions.
Our bodies have five modes through which we perceive and connect
with the physical world: touch, taste, smell, hearing, and
sight. But "reality" comprises more than just the
physical realm and so has other, we might call them
"senses" beyond the physical. While these things are
harder to pin down, we've all experienced the "sense" that
someone likes us or not. We know what it is to
"sense" foreboding or dread. And we
"sense" that something is "the right thing (or wrong
thing) to do."
Sometimes these are collected under a general term:
intuition. Through it, we relate to our environment in a way
that transcends the five physical senses. Even scientists
devoted to studying the physical universe follow their
"hunches." So this isn't the sole realm of poets and
philosophers.
When we move into the truly spiritual realm, your five senses are
not a great deal of help in gathering data about making an ethical
decision. They aren't of much use when deciding which of
several spiritual paths to take.
Some people, of course, dismiss the spiritual realm
altogether. For them, reality consists of matter and energy
and the interrelation between the two. But that doesn't answer
all of our questions. It doesn't fully explain how different
individuals observing the same "reality" see quite
different things.
God made us with both physical and spiritual senses. To get
the greatest advantage out of them as we use them together.
It's potentially misleading to ignore one and depend completely on
the other. Depending entirely on our physical senses and
disregarding the spiritual ones will not give us an accurate picture
of reality.
|