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Do you realize that in order for you to read this article, the two
sides of your brain must do completely different things? The more we
integrate those two sides, the more integrated we become as people.
Integration not only increases our ability to solve problems more
creatively, but to control physical maladies such as epilepsy and migranes,
replace certain damaged brain functions and even learn to "thin" into the
future. Even more startling is evidence coming to light that we have
become a left-brain culture.
Your brain's right and left side have distinctly different ways of
looking at the world. Your two hemispheres are as different from each
other as, oh, Micheal Wilson and Shirley Maclean. The left brain controls
the right side of the body (this is reversed in about half of the 15
percent of the population that is left-handed) and, in essence, is logical
analytical, judgemental and verbal. It's interested in the bottom line, in
being efficent. The right brain controls the left side of the body and
leans more to the creative, the intuitive. It is concerned more with the
visual and emotional side of life.
Most people, if they thought about it, would identify more with
their left brain. In fact, many of us think we are our left brains. All
of that non-stop verbalization that goes on in our heads is the dominant
left brain talking to itself. Our culture- particularly our school system
with its emphasis on the three Rs (decidedly left-brain territory) -
effectively represses the intuitive and artistic right brain. If you don't
believe it, see how far you get at the office with the right brain activity
of daydreaming.
While all of this is going on, the two sides are constantly
communicating with each other across a connecting fibre tract called the
corpus callosum. There is a certain amount of overlap but essentially
the two hemispheres of the brain are like two different personalities
that working alone would be somewhat lacking and overspecialized, but
when functioning together bring different strengths and areas of expertise
to make an integrated whole.
The most creative decision making and problem solving come about
when both sides bring their various skills to the table: the left brain
analysing issues, problems and barriers; the right brain generating fresh
approaches; and the left brain translating the into plans of action.
"In a time of vast change like the present, the intuitive side of
the brain operates so fast it can see what's coming," says Dr. Howard
Eisenberg, a medical doctor with a degree in psychology who has studied
hemispheric relationships. "The left brain is too slow, but the right
can see around corners."
Dr. Eisenberg thinks that the preoccupation with the plodding left
brain is one reason for the analysis paralysis he sees affecting world
leaders. "Good leaders don't lead by reading polls," he says. "They have
vision and operate to a certain extent by feel."
In the early 1960s, Nobel Prize winner Dr. Roger Sperry proved that
patients who had their corpus callosum severed to try and control epileptic
seizures could no longer communicate between their hemispheres. The
struggle can be seen quite clearly in the postoperative period whe the
patient is asked to do a simple block design. This is a visual, spacial
task that the left-hand (controlled by the right brain in most of us) can
do very well but the right hand (controlled by the language-oriented left
brain) does poorly. The right hand may even intervene to mix up the
design.