Books

A New Model For Health And Disease – Page 75

h. Chemically induced dissociation through hallucinogenic
drugs i. Apparent death
a. Sleep
During sleep we do essentially nothing. We lie down, close our eyes and drift into oblivion. Not surprisingly, as healthy individuals, we wake up in the morning fully rested and refreshed with much more energy than before going to bed. Now just where did this energy come from? The most probable hypothesis is that it came from an energy source and that the organism had the capacity to tap this energy source.
Figure 10: First phase of sleep: The dissociation is not complete.
In order that regeneration be full, the dissociation of the finer from the grosser elements of the organism should be as complete as possible. That is why we may have different kinds of sleep with different states of regeneration. An obvious approach for assessing the functions of sleep is to prevent its occurrence and search for resulting consequences. Through different sleep experiments scientists have assessed that there are two states of sleep, called NREM (non-rapid eye movement) and REM (rapid eye movement). NREM sleep contains four stages, of which the fourth stage is that characterized by Delta waves and the highest threshold to arousal. In other words, in this stage the person is in deep sleep, and it is very difficult to awaken him. After this fourth stage of NREM sleep the person goes into REM sleep. This neurophysiological explanation is somewhat analogous to the situation I am talking about concerning the different degrees of dissociation and regeneration occurring in the different stages of sleep.