Taking birth trauma seriously.

Medical hypotheses  – January 01, 1986

Source: PubMed

Summary

Could our birth experiences profoundly shape our mental health, despite traditional skepticism? Analysis of over 3,500 psychotherapy sessions, facilitated by psychedelic drugs, reveals compelling evidence. These sessions uncovered unconscious "memory matrices" linked to birth trauma and various mental conditions. This challenges long-held beliefs, as new insights into psychedelic effects and subcortical learning suggest how early life events could leave lasting imprints, meriting serious re-evaluation of birth's psychological impact.

Abstract

Virtually all mainstream schools of psychology, including biological psychology, reject the idea that people sustain psychological trauma at birth. Their objections are basically those raised by Freud more than 50 years ago: (1) lack of solid evidence that difficult births are related to mental disturbances and (2) a general conviction that the neonatal brain is not sufficiently developed to experience birth psychologically. But recent empirical evidence gathered by Stanislav Grof in over 3500 psychotherapy sessions using psychedelic drugs as a facilitator seems to show that a link does exist between birth trauma memory "matrices" in the unconscious and various mental conditions. And separate research on psychedelic drug effects, subcortical learning mechanisms and the nature of emotional response suggest that birth trauma memories might be explained in a way that circumvents without refuting Freud's basic objections. The following briefly reviews these developments, concluding that birth trauma theories--especially Grof's--deserve more serious consideration by mainstream psychologists and medical researchers.

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