CHAPTER V - THE NERVOUS SYSTEM
It will be noticed that the Western
scientific theories regarding the breath confine themselves
to the effects of the absorption of oxygen, and its
use through the circulatory system, while the Yogi
theory also takes into consideration the absorption
of Prana, and its manifestation through the channels
of the Nervous System. Before proceeding further,
it may be as well to take a hasty glance at the Nervous
System.
The Nervous System of man is divided
into two great systems, viz., the Cerebro-Spinal
System and the Sympathetic System. The Cerebro-Spinal
System consists of all that part of the Nervous System
contained within the cranial cavity and the spinal
canal, viz., the brain and the spinal cord, together
with the nerves which branch off from the same.
This system presides over the functions of animal life
known as volition, sensation, etc. The Sympathetic
System includes all that part of the Nervous System
located principally in the thoracic, abdominal and
pelvic cavities, and which is distributed to the internal
organs. It has control over the involuntary processes,
such as growth, nutrition, etc.
The Cerebro-Spinal System attends
to all the seeing, hearing, tasting, smelling, feeling,
etc. It sets things in motion; it is used
by the Ego to think to manifest consciousness.
It is the instrument with which the Ego communicates
with the outside world. This system may be likened
to a telephone system, with the brain as the central
office, and the spinal column and nerves as cable
and wires respectively.
The brain is a great mass of nerve
tissue, and consists of three parts, viz., the
Cerebrum or brain proper, which occupies the upper,
front, middle and back portion of the skull; the Cerebellum,
or “little brain,” which fills the lower
and back portion of the skull; and the Medulla Oblongata,
which Is the broadened commencement of the spinal
cord, lying before and in front of the Cerebellum.
The Cerebrum is the organ of that
part of the mind which manifests itself in intellectual
action. The Cerebellum regulates the movements
of the voluntary muscles. The Medulla Oblongata
is the upper enlarged end of the spinal cord, and
from it and the Cerebrum branch forth the Cranial
Nerves which reach to various parts of the head, to
the organs of special sense, and to some of the thoracic
and abdominal organs, and to the organs of respiration.
The Spinal Cord, or spinal marrow,
fills the spinal canal in the vertebral column, or
“backbone.” It is a long mass of nerve
tissue, branching off at the several vertebrae to
nerves communicating with all parts of the body.
The Spinal Cord is like a large telephone cable, and
the emerging nerves are like the private wires connecting
therewith.
The Sympathetic Nervous System consists
of a double chain of Ganglia on the side of the Spinal
column, and scattered ganglia in the head, neck, chest
and abdomen. (A ganglion is a mass of nervous matter
including nerve cells.) These ganglia are connected
with each other by filaments, and are also connected
with the Cerebro-Spinal System by motor and sensory
nerves. From these ganglia numerous fibers branch
out to the organs of the body, blood vessels, etc.
At various points, the nerves meet together and form
what are known as plexuses. The Sympathetic System
practically controls the involuntary processes, such
as circulation, respiration and digestion.
The power or force transmitted from
the brain to all parts of the body by means of the
nerves, is known to Western science as “nerve
force,” although the Yogi knows it to be a manifestation
of Prana. In character and rapidity it resembles
the electric current. It will be seen that without
this “nerve force” the heart cannot beat;
the blood cannot circulate; the lungs cannot breathe;
the various organs cannot function; in fact the machinery
of the body comes to a stop without it. Nay more,
even the brain cannot think without Prana be present.
When these facts are considered, the importance of
the absorption of Prana must be evident to all, and
the Science of Breath assumes an importance even greater
than that accorded it by Western science.
The Yogi teachings go further than
does Western science, in one important feature of
the Nervous System. We allude to what Western
science terms the “Solar Plexus,” and which
it considers as merely one of a series of certain
matted nets of sympathetic nerves with their ganglia
found in various parts of the body. Yogi science
teaches that this Solar Plexus is really a most important
part of the Nervous System, and that it is a form
of brain, playing one of the principal parts in the
human economy. Western science seems to be moving
gradually towards a recognition of this fact which
has been known to the Yogis of the East for centuries,
and some recent Western writers have termed the Solar
Plexus the “Abdominal Brain.” The
Solar Plexus is situated in the Epigastric region,
just back of the “pit of the stomach”
on either side of the spinal column. It is composed
of white and gray brain matter, similar to that composing
the other brains of man. It has control of the
main internal organs of man, and plays a much more
important part than is generally recognized. We
will not go into the Yogi theory regarding the Solar
Plexus, further than to say that they know it as the
great central store-house of Prana. Men have
been known to be instantly killed by a severe blow
over the Solar Plexus, and prize fighters recognize
its vulnerability and frequently temporarily paralyze
their opponents by a blow over this region.
The name “Solar” is well
bestowed on this “brain,” as it radiates
strength and energy to all parts of the body, even
the upper brains depending largely upon it as a storehouse
of Prana. Sooner or later Western science will
fully recognize the real function of the Solar Plexus,
and will accord to it a far more important place then
it now occupies in their text-books and teachings.