by
Paul Pearsall, PhD,
Gary E. Schwartz, PhD , Linda G. Russek, PhD
2002
Extracted from Nexus
Magazine, Volume 12, Number 3
April - May 2005
from
NexusMagazine Website
According to this
study of patients who have received transplanted organs,
particularly hearts, it is not uncommon for memories, behaviors,
preferences and habits associated with the donor to be
transferred to the recipient.
If you wish to
upset the law that all crows are black…it is enough if you prove
one single crow to be white.
— William James,
MD |
INTRODUCTION
It is generally assumed that learning involves primarily the nervous system
and secondarily the immune system. Hence, patients receiving peripheral
organ transplants should not experience personality changes that parallel
the personalities of donors they have never met. When personality changes
have been observed following transplants, the kinds of explanations
entertained include effects of the immunosuppressant drugs, psychosocial
stress, and pre-existing psychopathology of the recipients.1,2,3
However, living systems theory explicitly posits that all living cells
possess "memory" and "decider" functional subsystems within them.4 Moreover,
the recent integration of systems theory with the concept of energy (termed
dynamical energy systems theory) provides compelling logic that leads to the
prediction that all dynamical systems store information and energy to
various degrees.5,6,7 The systemic memory mechanism provides a plausible
explanation for the evolution of emergent (novel) systemic properties
through recurrent feedback interactions (i.e., the nonlinear circulation of
information and energy that reflects the ongoing interactions of the
components in a complex, dynamic network).
Recurrent feedback loops exist in all atomic, molecular and cellular
systems. Hence, evidence for atomic systemic memory, molecular systemic
memory and cellular systemic memory should be found in these systems.
The systemic memory mechanism has been applied to a variety of controversial
and seemingly anomalous observations in complementary and alternative
medicine, including homoeopathy.8 It also makes new predictions. One
prediction is that sensitive recipients of transplanted organs can
experience aspects of the donor’s personal history stored in the
transplanted tissues.
In 1997, a book titled A Change of Heart was published that described the
apparent personality changes experienced by Claire Sylvia.
9 Sylvia received
a heart and lung transplant at Yale–New Haven Hospital in 1988. She reported
noticing that various attitudes, habits and tastes changed following her
surgery. She had inexplicable cravings for foods she had previously
disliked. For example, though she was a health-conscious dancer and
choreographer, upon leaving the hospital she had an uncontrollable urge to
go to a Kentucky Fried Chicken outlet and order chicken nuggets, a food she
never ate. Sylvia found herself drawn toward cool colours and no longer
dressed in the bright reds and oranges she used to prefer. She began
behaving in an aggressive and impetuous manner that was uncharacteristic of
her but turned out to be similar to the personality of her donor.
Interestingly, uneaten Kentucky Fried Chicken nuggets were found in the
jacket of the young man (her donor) when he was killed.
Opinions about the plausibility of cellular memory were sought by William
Novak, the co-author of the book. Pearsall proposed that the
immunosuppressant drugs could conceivably lower the threshold for patients
to potentially register cellular memories stored in the transplanted organs
(cited in
9, extended in
10).
Schwartz and Russek proposed that the rejection process might
not only reflect the rejection of the material comprising the cells but also
the systemic information and energy stored within the cells as well (cited
in
9,
extended in
7, 8).
Sylvia was unique because she received a substantial amount of new tissue
(heart and lungs), she was health conscious and she was emotionally open and
sensitive. Schwartz and Russek proposed that Claire Sylvia
might be the "white crow" of cellular systemic memory.7
This paper reports key observations from 10 representative cases of
transplant recipients who were open to sharing experiences of personal
changes following their operations that are consistent with the systemic
memory prediction.
To protect the privacy of the donors’ families, recipients and their
families, physicians and hospitals, donors and recipients are referred to by
number, except when their first names were mentioned by family members or
friends in the transcripts. All recipients and family members or friends of
the donors were interviewed by Pearsall and audiotaped. The transcripts were
examined by Schwartz and Russek and selected for inclusion in this report.
Each of the 10 cases includes a donor family member’s report (or
equivalent), a recipient’s report (or equivalent) and a recipient family
member’s or friend’s report. Donor family members, recipients and recipient
family members or friends are quoted directly from the transcripts. Personal
opinions (including controversial content) are reported verbatim. Each case
includes two to five sample parallels between the donors and changes
observed in the recipients post transplant surgery.
Case 1
The donor was an
18-year-old boy killed in an automobile accident. The recipient was an
18-year-old girl diagnosed with endocarditis and subsequent heart
failure.
The donor’s father, a psychiatrist, said:
"My son always wrote poetry. We had waited more than a year to clean
out his room after he died. We found a book of poems he had never shown
us, and we’ve never told anyone about them. One of them has left us
shaken emotionally and spiritually. It spoke of his seeing his own
sudden death. He was a musician, too, and we found a song he titled
"Danny, My Heart Is Yours"—the words about how my son felt he was
destined to die and give his heart to someone. He had decided to donate
his organs when he was 12 years old. We thought it was quite strong, but
we thought they were talking about it in school. When we met his
recipient, we were so...we didn’t know, like, what it was. We don’t know
now. We just don’t know."
The recipient reported:
"When they showed me pictures of their son, I knew him directly. I
would have picked him out anywhere. He’s in me. I know he is in me and
he is in love with me. He was always my lover, maybe in another time
somewhere. How could he know years before he died that he would die and
give his heart to me? How would he know my name is Danny? And then, when
they played me some of his music, I could finish the phrases of his
songs. I could never play before, but after my transplant I began to
love music. I felt it in my heart. My heart had to play it. I told my
mom I wanted to take guitar lessons—the same instrument Paul [the donor]
had played. His song is in me. I feel it a lot at night and it’s like
Paul is serenading me."
The recipient’s father reported:
"My daughter, she was what you say....a hell-raiser. Until she got
sick—they say from a dentist, they think—she was the wild one. Then she
became quite quiet. I think it was her illness, but she said she felt
more energy, not less. She said she wanted to play an instrument and she
wanted to sing. When she wrote her first song, she sang about her new
heart as her lover’s heart. She said her lover had come to save her
life."
Case 2
The donor was a
16-month-old boy who drowned in a bathtub. The recipient was a
seven-month-old boy diagnosed with tetralogy of Fallot (a hole in the
ventricular septum with displacement of the aorta, pulmonary stenosis
and thickening of the right ventricle).
The donor’s mother, a
physician, noted:
"The first thing is that I could more than hear Jerry’s [donor’s]
heart. I could feel it in me. When Carter [the recipient] first saw me,
he ran to me and pushed his nose against me and rubbed and rubbed it. It
was just exactly what we did with Jerry. Jerry and Carter’s heart is
five years old now, but Carter’s eyes were Jerry’s eyes. When he hugged
me, I could feel my son. I mean I could feel him, not just symbolically.
He was there. I felt his energy.
"I’m a doctor. I’m trained to be a keen observer and have always been a
natural-born skeptic. But this was real. I know people will say that I
need to believe my son’s spirit is alive, and perhaps I do. But I felt
it. My husband and my father felt it. And I swear to you, and you can
ask my mother, Carter said the same baby-talk words that Jerry said.
Carter is six, but he was talking Jerry’s baby talk and playing with my
nose just like Jerry did.
"We stayed with the ... [recipient family] that night. In the middle of
the night, Carter came in and asked to sleep with my husband and me. He
cuddled up between us exactly like Jerry did, and we began to cry.
Carter told us not to cry because Jerry said everything was okay. My
husband and I, our parents and those who really knew Jerry have no
doubt. Our son’s heart contains much of our son and beats in Carter’s
chest. On some level, our son is still alive."
The recipient’s mother reported:
"I saw Carter go to her [donor’s mother]. He never does that. He is
very, very shy, but he went to her just like he used to run to me when
he was a baby. When he whispered ’It’s okay, mama’, I broke down. He
called her ’Mother’, or maybe it was Jerry’s heart talking. And one more
thing that got to us. We found out talking to Jerry’s mom that Jerry had
mild cerebral palsy mostly on his left side. Carter has stiffness and
some shaking on that same side. He never did as a baby and it only
showed up after the transplant. The doctors say it’s probably something
to do with his medical condition, but I really think there’s more to it.
"One more thing I’d like to know about. When we went to church together,
Carter had never met Jerry’s father. We came late and Jerry’s dad was
sitting with a group of people in the middle of the congregation. Carter
let go of my hand and ran right to that man. He climbed on his lap,
hugged him and said ’Daddy’. We were flabbergasted. How could he have
known him? Why did he call him dad? He never did things like that. He
would never let go of my hand in church and never run to a stranger.
When I asked him why he did it, he said he didn’t. He said Jerry did and
he went with him."
Case 3
The donor was a
24-year-old woman who was the victim of an automobile accident. The
recipient was a 25-year-old male graduate student suffering from
cystic
fibrosis who received a heart-lung transplant.
The donor’s sister
reported:
"My sister was a very sensual person. Her one love was painting. She
was on her way to her first solo showing at a tiny art shop when a drunk
ploughed into her. It’s a lesbian art store that supports gay artists.
My sister was not really very ’out’ about it, but she was gay. She said
her landscape paintings were really representations of the mother or
woman figure. She would look at a naked woman model and paint a
landscape from that! Can you imagine? She was gifted."
The recipient reported:
"I never told anyone at first, but I thought having a woman’s heart
would make me gay. Since my surgery, I’ve been hornier than ever and
women just seem to look even more erotic and sensual, so I thought I
might have gotten internal transsexual surgery. My doctor told me it was
just my new energy and lease on life that made me feel that way, but I’m
different. I know I’m different. I make love like I know exactly how the
woman’s body feels and responds—almost as if it is my body. I have the
same body, but I still think I’ve got a woman’s way of thinking about
sex now."
The recipient’s girlfriend said:
"He’s a much better lover now. Of course, he was weaker before, but
it’s not that. He’s like, I mean, he just knows my body as well as I do.
He wants to cuddle, hold and take a lot of time. Before he was a good
lover, but not like this. It’s just different. He wants to hug all the
time and go shopping. My God, he never wanted to shop! And you know
what, he carries a purse now. His purse! He slings it over his shoulder
and calls it his bag, but it’s a purse. He hates it when I say that, but
going to the mall with him is like going with one of the girls. And one
more thing, he loves to go to museums. He would never, absolutely never,
do that. Now he would go every week. Sometimes he stands for minutes and
looks at a painting without talking. He loves landscapes and just
stares. Sometimes I just leave him there and come back later."
Case 4
The donor was a
17-year-old black male student victim of a drive-by shooting. The
recipient was a 47-year-old white male foundry worker diagnosed with
aortic stenosis.
The donor’s mother reported:
"Our son was walking to violin class when he was hit. Nobody knows
where the bullet came from, but it just hit him and he fell. He died
right there on the street, hugging his violin case. He loved music and
his teachers said he had a real thing for it. He would listen to music
and play along with it. I think he would have been at Carnegie Hall some
day, but the other kids always made fun of the music he liked."
The recipient reported:
"I’m real sad and all for the guy who died and gave me his heart,
but I really have trouble with the fact that he was black. I’m not a
racist, mind you, not at all. Most of [my] friends at the plant are
black guys. But the idea that there is a black heart in a white body
seems really...well, I don’t know. I told my wife that I thought my
penis might grow to a black man’s size. They say black men have larger
penises, but I don’t know for sure. After we have sex, I sometimes feel
guilty because a black man made love to my wife, but I don’t really
think that seriously.
"I can tell you one thing, though. I used to hate classical music, but
now I love it. So I know it’s not my new heart, because a black guy from
the ’hood wouldn’t be into that. Now it calms my heart. I play it all
the time. I more than like it. I didn’t tell any of the guys on the line
that I have a black heart, but I think about it a lot."
The recipient’s wife reported:
"He was more than concerned about the idea when he heard it was a
black man’s heart. He actually asked me if he could ask the doctor for a
white heart when one came up. He’s no Archie Bunker, but he’s close to
it. And he would kill me if he knew I told you this, but for the first
time he’s invited his black friends over from work. It’s like he doesn’t
see their colour any more, even though he still talks about it
sometimes. He seems more comfortable and at ease with these black guys,
but he’s not aware of it.
"And one more thing I should say. He’s driving me nuts with the
classical music. He doesn’t know the name of one song and never, never
listened to it before. Now, he sits for hours and listens to it. He even
whistles classical music songs that he could never know. How does he
know them? You’d think he’d like rap music or something because of his
black heart."
Case 5
The donor was a
19-year-old woman killed in an automobile accident. The recipient was a
29-year-old woman diagnosed with cardiomyopathy secondary to
endocarditis.
The donor’s mother reported:
"My Sara was the most loving girl. She owned and operated her own
health food restaurant and scolded me constantly about not being a
vegetarian. She was a great kid. Wild, but great. She was into the
free-love thing and had a different man in her life every few months.
She was man crazy when she was a little girl and it never stopped. She
was able to write some notes to me when she was dying. She was so out of
it, but she kept saying how she could feel the impact of the car hitting
them. She said she could feel it going through her body."
The recipient reported:
"You can tell people about this if you want to, but it will make you
sound crazy. When I got my new heart, two things happened to me. First,
almost every night, and still sometimes now, I actually feel the
accident my donor had. I can feel the impact in my chest. It slams into
me, but my doctor said everything looks fine. Also, I hate meat now. I
can’t stand it. I was McDonald’s biggest money-maker, and now meat makes
me throw up. Actually, when I even smell it, my heart starts to race.
But that’s not the big deal. My doctor said that’s just due to my
medicines.
"I couldn’t tell him, but what really bothers me is that I’m engaged to
be married now. He’s a great guy and we love each other. The sex is
terrific. The problem is, I’m gay. At least, I thought I was. After my
transplant, I’m not...I don’t think, anyway...I’m sort of semi- or
confused gay. Women still seem attractive to me, but my boyfriend turns
me on; women don’t. I have absolutely no desire to be with a woman. I
think I got a gender transplant."
The recipient’s brother reported:
"Susie’s straight now. I mean it seriously. She was gay and now her
new heart made her straight. She threw out all her books and stuff about
gay politics and never talks about it any more. She was really militant
about it before. She holds hands and cuddles with Steven just like my
girlfriend does with me. She talks girl-talk with my girlfriend, where
before she would be lecturing about the evils of sexist men. And my
sister, the queen of the Big Mac, hates meat. She won’t even have it in
the house."
Case 6
The donor was a
14-year-old girl injured in a gymnastics accident. The recipient was a
47-year-old man diagnosed with benign myxoma and cardiomyopathy.
The donor’s mother reported:
"Look at her [shows photograph]. My daughter was the picture of
health. There wasn’t an ounce of fat on her. She was a gymnast and her
coach could lift her above his head with one hand. She was so excited
about life that she would just hop and jump all the time like a kitten.
She had some trouble with food, though. She would skip meals, and for a
while she was purging. I think they would call her a little anorexic. We
took her to therapy about it, but she just wasn’t much into food. And
she had this silly little giggle when she got embarrassed. It sounded
like a little bird."
The recipient reported:
"I feel new again. I feel like a teenager. I actually feel giddy. I
know it’s just the energy of the new heart, but I really feel younger in
every way, not just physically. I see the world that way. I’m really
young at heart. I have this annoying tendency to giggle that drives my
wife nuts. And there’s something about food. I don’t know what it is. I
get hungry, but after I eat I often feel nauseated and that it would
help if I could throw up."
The recipient’s brother reported:
"Gus is a teenager. No doubt about that. He’s a kid or at least he
thinks he’s a kid. Even when we’re bowling, he yells and jumps around
like a fool. He’s got this weird laugh now. It’s a girl’s laugh and we
tell him that. He doesn’t care. His appetite never did bounce back after
the surgery. He’s pretty much nauseated almost all the time. After
Thanksgiving dinner—and he loved it—he went upstairs and vomited. We
took him to the emergency room, but it wasn’t anything to do with his
new heart. They said it was probably a reaction to something in the
meal. None of the rest of the family got sick, though. He’s going to
have to watch it. His doctor is concerned about his weight."
Case 7
The donor was a
three-year-old girl who drowned in the family pool. The recipient was a
nine-year-old boy diagnosed with myocarditis and septal defect.
The recipient’s mother said:
"He [the recipient] doesn’t know who his donor was or how she died.
We do. She drowned at her mother’s boyfriend’s house. Her mother and her
boyfriend left her with a teenage babysitter who was on the phone when
it happened. I never met her father, but the mother said they had a very
ugly divorce and that the father never saw his daughter. She said she
worked a lot of hours and wished she had spent more time with her. I
think she feels pretty guilty about it all...you know, the both of them
sort of not appreciating their daughter until it was too late."
The recipient, who claimed not to know who the donor was, reported:
"I talk to her sometimes. I can feel her in there. She seems very
sad. She is very afraid. I tell her it’s okay, but she is very afraid.
She says she wishes that parents wouldn’t throw away their children. I
don’t know why she would say that."
The recipient’s mother said about the recipient:
"Well, the one thing I notice most is that Jimmy is now deathly
afraid of the water. He loved it before. We live on a lake and he won’t
go out in the backyard. He keeps closing and locking the back door. He
says he’s afraid of the water and doesn’t know why. He won’t talk about
it."
Case 8
The donor was a
19-year-old woman who had suffered a broken neck in dance class. The
recipient was a 19-year-old woman diagnosed with cardiomyopathy.
The donor’s mother reported:
"We’ve met Angela [the recipient], and she is the image of our
daughter [Stacy]. They could almost be twins. They’re both bright girls;
I mean, my daughter was bright, too. She wanted to be an actress, but we
thought she had too much academic potential for that. Her father is a
doctor and really wanted her to follow in his footsteps."
The donor’s father reported:
"Stacy was extremely bright. It’s so tragic. She would have made an
outstanding physician, but she wanted to dance and sing. That’s how she
died. She fell in dance class. We always argued good-naturedly about how
disappointed I would be if she went to Hollywood instead of Harvard. I
hope she knew I just wanted her to be happy."
The recipient reported:
"I think of her as my sister. I think we must have been sisters in a
former life. I only know my donor was a girl my age, but it’s more that
that. I talk to her at night or when I’m sad. I feel her answering me. I
can feel it in my chest. I put my left hand there and press it with my
right. It’s like I can connect with her. Sometimes she seems sad. I
think she wanted to be a nurse or something, but other times it’s like
she wanted to be on Broadway. I think she wanted to be on Broadway more.
I want to be a nurse, but I could be a doctor too. I hope she will be
happy, because she will always be my angel, my sister in my chest. I
carry my angel with me everywhere."
The recipient’s mother reported:
"We can sometimes hear her talking to her heart. It’s like a ’Dear
diary’ thing. She puts her hand on her chest and talks to who she thinks
her donor is. Once we found her holding a stethoscope to her chest to
try to hear her new heart. I think she still does that sometimes. And
the only other thing is that she really wants to go to medical school
now. She never wanted to do that before, but that’s because I don’t
think she thought she would live. She’s already changed her college
classes."
Case 9
The donor was a
three-year-old boy who fell from an apartment window. The recipient was
a five-year-old boy with septal defect and cardiomyopathy.
The donor’s mother reported:
"It was uncanny. When I met the family and Daryl [the recipient] at
the transplant meeting, I broke into tears. Then we went up to the
giving tree where you hand a token symbolizing your donor. I was already
crying when my husband told me to look at the table we were passing. It
was the donor family with Daryl sitting there. I knew it right away.
Daryl smiled at me exactly like Timmy [the donor] did. After we talked
for hours with Daryl’s parents, we were comforted. It somehow just
didn’t seem strange at all after a while. When we heard that Daryl had
made up the name Timmy and got his age right, we began to cry. But they
were tears of relief because we knew that Timmy’s spirit was alive."
The recipient reported:
"I gave the boy a name. He’s younger than me and I call him ’Timmy’.
He’s just a little kid. He’s a little brother like about half my age. He
got hurt bad when he fell down. He likes Power Rangers a lot, I think,
just like I used to. I don’t like them anymore, though. I like Tim Allen
on Tool Time, so I called him Tim. I wonder where my old heart went,
too. I sort of miss it. It was broken, but it took care of me for a
while."
The recipient’s father reported:
"Daryl never knew the name of his donor or his age. We didn’t know
either until recently. We just learned that the boy who died had fallen
from a window. We didn’t even know his age until now. Daryl had it about
right. Probably just a lucky guess or something, but he got it right.
What is spooky, though, is that he not only got the age right and some
idea of how he died, he got the name right. The boy’s name was Thomas,
but for some reason his immediate family called him ’Tim’."
The recipient’s mother reported:
"Are you going to tell him the real twilight zone thing? Timmy fell
trying to reach a Power Ranger toy that had fallen on the ledge of the
window. Daryl won’t even touch his Power Rangers any more..."
Case 10
The donor was a
34-year-old police officer shot attempting to arrest a drug dealer. The
recipient was a 56-year-old college professor diagnosed with
atherosclerosis and ischaemic heart disease.
The donor’s wife reported:
"When I met Ben [the recipient] and Casey [Ben’s wife], I almost
collapsed. First, it was a remarkable feeling seeing the man with my
husband’s heart in his chest. I think I could almost see Carl [the
donor] in Ben’s eyes. When I asked how Ben felt, I think I was really
trying to ask Carl how he was. I wouldn’t say that to them, but I wish I
could have touched Ben’s chest and talked to my husband’s heart.
"What really bothers me, though, is when Casey said offhandedly that the
only real side-effect of Ben’s surgery was flashes of light in his face.
That’s exactly how Carl died. The bastard shot him right in the face.
The last thing he must have seen is a terrible flash. They never caught
the guy, but they think they know who it is. I’ve seen the drawing of
his face. The guy has long hair, deep eyes, a beard, and this real calm
look. He looks sort of like some of the pictures of Jesus."
The recipient reported:
"If you promise you won’t tell anyone my name, I’ll tell you what
I’ve not told any of my doctors. Only my wife knows. I only knew that my
donor was a 34-year-old very healthy guy. A few weeks after I got my
heart, I began to have dreams. I would see a flash of light right in my
face and my face gets real, real hot. It actually burns. Just before
that time, I would get a glimpse of Jesus. I’ve had these dreams and now
daydreams ever since: Jesus and then a flash. That’s the only thing I
can say is something different, other than feeling really good for the
first time in my life."
The recipient’s wife reported:
"I’m very, very glad you asked him about his transplant. He is more
bothered than he’ll tell you about these flashes. He says he sees Jesus
and then a blind flash. He told the doctors about the flashes but not
Jesus. They said it’s probably a side effect of the medications, but God
we wish they would stop."
DISCUSSION
The cases reported here are representative of more than 74 transplant
patients, 23 of whom were heart transplant recipients, that were brought to
Pearsall’s attention over the past 10 years.10
Since the cases were collected sporadically and clinically, it is not
possible to calculate the percentage of patients who reported degrees of
personality changes that did or did not parallel the donors to various
degrees. The present report provides theoretical and empirical justification
for conducting a controlled comprehensive study.
Historically, transplant recipients have been reluctant to share such
experiences with their physicians (and in many cases, even with their
families and friends). Moreover, the prevailing belief that memories are
stored primarily in the nervous system (and secondarily in the immune
system) would decrease the likelihood that transplant recipients would be
open to receiving cellular memories from the transplanted organs in the
first place. The same belief would decrease the likelihood that family
members and friends, as well as surgeons and health care providers in
general, would be open to hearing from transplant recipients about cellular
memories. Hence, it is not possible to determine what the actual percentage
is of personality changes; underreporting appears to be the rule rather than
the exception.
Case 4 illustrates this point expressly. When a 47-year-old white male
foundry worker received the heart of a 17-year-old black male student, he
presumed that the black youth would prefer "rap" music. Hence, he dismissed
the idea that his new radical change in preference for classical music could
have come from the heart of the donor. However, unbeknownst to the
recipient, the donor actually loved classical music, and died "hugging his
violin case" on the way to his violin class.
Since completing this paper, Schwartz and Russek interviewed a patient of
Dr
Copeland who received a heart transplant and experienced a large set of
personality changes. He received a woman’s heart, and his many personality
changes include a passion for the colour pink (a colour he disliked prior to
surgery), and a preference for perfumes (which prior to his surgery he could
not tolerate and would not allow his wife to wear). He currently bathes in
and wears feminine fragrances.
His daughters tease him, and he is afraid to share these experiences with
his doctors. He shared them with Schwartz and Russek because he learned they
were open to these changes and would help him discover if they were related
to the donor (efforts are currently underway to contact the donor’s family).
His case is interesting because he was pronounced dead twice and revived
prior to his transplant. He had a near-death experience that, according to
the patient and his wife, transformed him and led him to be more open.
Recipients may vary in their openness to receiving cellular information as
well as in their clarity in experiencing and reporting changes. One reviewer
of the manuscript asked:
"Do recipients have any control over this? If all
recipients were open to it, would they all receive?"
This is an important
question, one that can be addressed in future research. Theoretically, more
individuals should be able to retrieve information if they are encouraged to
be open and receive the information. Hypnosis could be considered as a
possible clinical research tool.
The cases reported here are unusual (but not unique) in that clear changes
were observed by recipients that were subsequently verified by recipient
family members or friends. Moreover, in each case, information about the
donors was specifically verified from donor family members or friends. In
each case, personal changes in the recipients preceded any contact with
donor family members or friends.
The recipients reported here would not receive psychiatric diagnoses. They
were not suffering from extreme depression or anxiety, though some reported
anxiety about their experiences. Case 10 illustrates this expressly. A
56-year-old college professor recipient experienced dreams not only of white
flashes in his face but just before the flash he sometimes "would get a
glimpse of Jesus". Fearful of this potential hallucination and its possible
diagnostic significance, he did not share this information with his doctors
(though he did tell them about the flashes). The donor was a 34-year-old
police officer who was shot in the face while attempting to arrest a drug
dealer. According to the donor’s wife:
"They never caught the guy, but they
think they know who it is. I’ve seen the drawing of his face. The guy has
long hair, deep eyes, a beard, and this real calm look. He looks sort of
like some of the pictures of Jesus."
Can such reports be explained by statistical coincidence? The parallels in
names reported in cases 1, 8 and 9 could potentially be explained as
coincidences. In case 9, for example, the young recipient’s choice of the
name Tim (for the donor he never met) may have been related to his personal
preference.
The recipient stated: "I like Tim Allen on Tool Time, so I called him Tim."
However, the statistical coincidence explanation is strained by the
observation of this recipient’s perception: "He [the donor] likes Power
Rangers a lot, I think, just like I used to. I don’t like them any more,
though." The donor purportedly died "trying to reach a Power Ranger toy that
had fallen on the ledge of the window". The findings spanning the 10 cases
appear too coincidental to be accidental (the statistical coincidence
hypothesis).
Future research is necessary to investigate the recipient–donor coincidence
phenomenon systematically. Research is underway at the University of Arizona
on a sample of over 300 transplant patients to estimate the incidence of
such coincidences using semi-structured interviews and systematic questions.
In addition, a subset of the transplant patients is being monitored
physiologically to examine biophysical measures of heart–brain synchrony.11
The research is testing predictions derived from dynamical energy systems
theory applied to the heart. Termed "energy cardiology", the basic
hypothesis is that information and energy are transmitted
electromagnetically between the brain and heart, and that through
electromagnetic resonance the brain may process information derived from the
donor’s heart.12
Other forms of energetic communication are also plausible and should be
considered in future research.13
Pearsall has informally observed that in addition to heart
recipients, kidney, liver and other organ recipients also indicated changes
in sense of smell, food preference and emotional factors. However, they were
usually transitory and could be associated with medications and other
factors of transplantation.10
The findings for heart transplants appear more robust and were more strongly
associated with the donor’s history. If this observation is verified in
future research, the implications for basic physiology as well as clinical
medicine could be substantial.
Pearsall became open to the possibility of cellular memory in transplant
recipients partly because of his own bone marrow transplant in 1987, and
also because of his Hawaiian heritage that has always valued the heart as
being a "thinking, feeling, communicating, and spiritual organ".10
Schwartz and Russek became open to the possibility of cellular memory partly
through Schwartz’s discovery of the systemic memory logic in the early 1980s
when he was a professor of psychology and psychiatry at Yale
University,5,6,7 and partly through the evolution of dynamical energy
systems theory in the mid-1990s as applied to the heart by Russek and
Schwartz.12, 14
However, systemic memory is only one possible cellular memory mechanism.
Other mechanisms (e.g., microtubule memory, which may also involve the
systemic memory process) should be considered.15
If future research documents evidence for cellular memory in transplant
patients, the theoretical, clinical and ethical implications are vast.16
The present findings are reported in the hope that they will stimulate
future research to examine the hypothesis seriously. 8
Authors’
Acknowledgements
We wish to thank the families of the donors, the recipients and the families
of the recipients who bravely shared their stories and graciously agreed to
have them reported.
The 10 heart transplant cases reported here come from a total sample of 74
transplant recipients (23 were heart transplants), all of whom showed
various degrees of changes that paralleled the personalities of their
donors. We thank the anonymous reviewers of this manuscript for their
constructive feedback. We dedicate this paper to the memories of donors and
to the memories of Frank Pearsall, Howard Schwartz and Henry I. Russek,
MD—our fathers.
Endnotes
1. Lunde DT. Psychiatric
complications of heart transplants. Am J Psychiatry 1967; 124:1190-1195.
2. Kuhn WF et al. Psychopathology in heart transplant candidates. J
Heart Transplants 1988; 7:223-226.
3. Mai FM. Graft and donor denial in heart transplant recipients. Am J
Psychiatry 1986; 143:1159-1161.
4. Miller JG. Living Systems. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill, 1978.
5. Schwartz GE, Russek LG. Dynamical energy systems and modern physics:
Fostering the science and spirit of complimentary and alternative
medicine. Alter Therapies Health Med 1997; 3(3):46-56.
6. Schwartz GE, Russek LG. Do all dynamical systems have memory?
Implications of the systemic memory hypothesis for science and society.
In KH Pribram (ed.). Brain and Values: Is a Biological Science of Values
Possible? Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1998.
7. Schwartz GER, Russek LGS. The origin of holism and memory in nature:
The systemic memory hypothesis. Frontier Perspectives 1998; 7(2):23-30.
8. Schwartz GER, Russek LGS. The plausibility of homeopathy: The
systemic memory mechanism. Integrative Med 1998; 1(2):53-60.
9. Sylvia C, with Novak W. A Change of Heart. New York, NY: Little,
Brown, 1997.
10. Pearsall P. The Heart’s Code. New York, NY: Broadway Books, 1998.
11. Song LZYX, Schwartz GER, Russek LGS. Heart-focused attention and
heart-brain synchronization: Energetic and physiological mechanisms.
Alter Therapies Health Med 1998; 4(5):44-63.
12. Russek LG, Schwartz GE. Energy cardiology: A dynamical energy
systems approach for integrating conventional and alternative medicine.
Advances. J Mind-Body Health 1996; 12(4):4-24.
13. Tiller WA. Science and Human Transformation: Subtle Energies,
Intentionality and Consciousness. Walnut Creek, CA: Pavior, 1997.
14. Russek LR, Schwartz GE. Interpersonal heart-brain registration and
the perception of parental love: A 42-year follow-up of the Harvard
Mastery of Stress study. Subtle Energies 1994; 5(3):195-208.
15. Hameroff SR, Penrose R. Orchestrated reduction of quantum coherence
in brain microtubules: A model for consciousness. In SR Hameroff, AW
Kaszniak, AC Scott (eds). Toward a Science of Consciousness. Cambridge,
MA: The MIT Press, 1996.
16. Schwartz GER, Russek, LGS. The Living Energy Universe.
Charlottesville, VA: Hampton Roads Publishing, 1999.
|