Course in Germany for the EEG Institute
Author: Siegfried Othmer
Just a sign of life from Germany, where Marco Versace and I just visited Lindenberg
Salem yesterday for an all-day lecture on neurofeedback. Salem is the worldwide service
organization that Thom Hartmann was associated with years ago. At his instigation, they
are now doing neurofeedback.
This beautiful spot in Northern Bavaria is something of an unknown. It is near the border
with the former East Germany and with the Czech Republic, and as such has had development
pass it by. Surprisingly, even tourists have stayed away from this idyllic place. As
a result, the region has one of the highest unemployment rates in the country, nearly
20%.
The area is known for the highest density of breweries in the world. In the nearby town
of some 3800, there are five breweries. They possess the most imposing buildings in town.
You cannot look in any direction from the railway station without seeing a brewery.
Unsurprisingly, Germans have among the highest per capita beer consumptions in the world.
In addition, smoking is still commonplace. And Germans are accustomed to lathering lard
onto their Broetchen, and dining on chicken broth at lunch. One wonders about the impact
of all this on health. Life expectancy is advancing here as elsewhere, but a price is
obviously being paid. More than half of all female deaths are now attributed to cardiovascular
problems. Men have already been there.
There is something that needs explaining here. The French set records with respect to
per capita wine consumption; the Greeks drench their food in oil; and the Italians are
obviously enjoying their prosperity through excesses in food consumption. Yet life expectancies
are on the increase everywhere.
Our talk drew a local neurologist. He is already doing neurofeedback. It was my challenge
to keep him nodding. Perhaps unsurprisingly, he has a handicapped daughter at home who
was probably a key inspiration in his entering the field. (It was very satisfying to
hear that he was originally inspired to enter the field by Maximilian Teicher of Zurich,
who in turn was attracted by Wolfgang Keeser, who had attended the first Key West Conference
in 1993 and was the first person in Europe to purchase a NeuroCybernetics system. He
also hosted two of our training courses in Europe, and attended others.) I say "our
talk" because Marco translated my mixture of English and German for the assembled.
That was a tough assignment. We had in the audience some people who could not speak English,
and some who could not speak German. A couple of people had flown over from England and
Scotland for the presentation.
Incidentally, we took the fast train through Germany from Hamburg, so covered the distance
in five hours. Imagine calmly booking a 9-minute connection at 3.5 hours into the trip,
to meet the last train of the day to take us to our final destination in the hinterlands.
Here trains serve even very small towns. They are not only the arteries but the capillaries
of the public transportation system.
The second half of our training course is coming up this weekend, with Sue in charge.
The course is full of energy. I believe that Europe as a whole will now latch onto neurofeedback
enthusiastically, much like they did in the Czech Republic years ago. (The Czech development
was largely attributable to the efforts of one man, Jiri Tyl.) The difference is that
the field is being "discovered" here at a stage of greater maturity. In the
U.S. we suffered from the fact that over the years we inadvertently cultivated the "immune
reaction" against neurofeedback by the mainstream.
Here the field also appeals to the technology bent of the locals. In the land where
homeopathy is mainstream, how could we fail? A few people have been energetically spreading
the word. This includes Doerte Klein, a child psychologist from Hannover, Uwe Gerlach,
as well as John Styffe and Werner Schlaefli in Switzerland. Pete van Deusen has been
over here to teach. Doerte Klein has also been offering training seminars. There is also
the new ISNR group in Europe to organize around. There is already a significant group
of practitioners emerging in Switzerland, a country that is surprisingly open to innovation.
Another group is building in Norway (where we did two trainings over the years). This
development is largely attributable to the efforts of one man, Oystein Larsen.
This visit to Germany after many years is meaningful to me in many ways. First of all,
we are seeing here the obvious contrast to contemporary American society in that this
is still an economy with a safety net. Despite an unemployment rate hovering around 10%,
one sees very little poverty. People falling into unemployment get state support for
up to 18 months, in order to allow them to get back on their feet. There are generous
health benefits and generous retirement benefits. The whole country is more or less middle
class. Nobody sleeps on the streets.
It is also becoming clear that this is not entirely sustainable. Globalization inevitably
levels the playing field according to the script of the leading player, the United States.
There is probably no country as dependent on international trade as is Germany, and it
cannot ultimately remain insulated from America's cut-throat, shoot-the-wounded economic
model. It is also apparent that by maintaining a certain level of comfort for everyone,
entrepreneurial adventures are less likely here. True innovation is more favored in the
culture of the US. Germany under these circumstances will be more like Japan, quick to
adopt the emerging technologies, but not in the lead with respect to innovation. Hamburg
introduced electricity into its harbor operations in 1888, which can't have been long
after Edison demonstrated it in New York.
It seems as if there is just a much bigger flywheel attached to the German economy.
On the good side, this means that the old buildings in town are modernized rather than
razed. It means that villages around the country retain their character. They are continually
revitalized, as opposed to rich folks mansionizing the hillsides and abandoning the towns
to inevitable decay. The cancerous growth of a Los Angeles would be out of the question
here because literally everything bearing on public welfare is regulated. On the down-side,
getting a few BrainMaster units through customs can mean several trips to the airport
customs office, filling out lengthy forms, and dealing with perfectly polite but relentlessly
fastidious customs officers. Filling out the form required reference to two thick volumes
of instructions, all written in German that was as opaque as legally correct language
can be. At the airport you can hire attorneys on the spot who can help you with the forms.
Yikes. This world is much more geared to large shipping companies than to small enterprises
trying to gain a foothold. When all was said and done, however, the customs officer was
impressed that we had managed the process. Few survive unaided.
In walking through downtown Hamburg yesterday, we came upon the carcass of a church
that has been preserved as a memorial from World War II much like the bombed-out church
in Berlin. Bells had been added to the unreconstructed tower at the fiftieth anniversary
commemoration. At that event, Gorbachov had been present, as well as the mayor of Jerusalem
at the time (probably Ted Kolleck). A special relationship had developed with the cathedral
at Coventry, bombed by the Germans in 1940. Coventry donated a "cross of nails" (nails
which had been used in its own original construction) to the ceremony. This cross of
nails has now launched a world-wide peace initiative.
One wag recently sighed that it is a strange world in which the most famous golfer is
an African-American, the most famous rapper is a white guy, France accuses the US of
arrogance, and Germany refuses to go to war. It is perhaps difficult for outsiders to
see how much Germany has changed. This country was, after all, able to stand by and do
nothing during the carnage in the Balkans, which are much closer to home. Is it any surprise
that it would choose to stand down when it came to Iraq?
During the Nuremberg trials, German defendants were told that no argument could be raised
in defense of the war itself because no arguments in favor of initiating warfare could
be considered defensible. Categorically. The war itself had therefore been a war crime.
This principle had become bedrock in the post-War world as a result of our own efforts.
At the memorial church there was also a display relating to the end of the war here
in Hamburg. This is particularly relevant given what we are currently facing in Iraq.
The surrender of Hamburg to the allies was negotiated by military officers who themselves
were not authorized by Hitler to do this. Hence they were immediately under threat of
death, which any person loyal to Hitler would have been empowered to carry out. Similarly,
as long as Saddam Hussein and his loyalists are still hiding out somewhere, vengeance
is still possible against any "collaborators."
The retrospective also recalled Hitler's "Nero" decree on March 15, 1945,
in which he ordered what remained of German society to be destroyed. Since the German
people were losing the war, they were obviously unworthy of him. This decree clarifies
a distinction between what Hitler regarded as his loyal following and the nation at large.
It may seem a quibble, but whereas the SS was his, i.e. a Nazi creation, the German army
had remained the German army. It was never the Nazi army. The decree to destroy Germany
may have emanated out of Hitler's progressive paranoia, but there existed a cadre of
adherents who were willing to carry out the order, even against their own countrymen.
Germany was simply the vehicle he had selected for his mission, and now it was time to
correct his error.
If one has lived through fearful times, it is difficult to shed the fear thereafter.
That having been said, allow me to voice some cautions. It seems that even in the United
States it is possible for an interest group to recruit the country in the name of patriotism,
but to have interests that are not identical with those of the country as a whole. For
lack of a better term, let us call that interest group the ruling class. Such a ruling
class would be expected to adjust the laws of the country so that in time its interests
are better served. A voluntary army would mean first of all that the sons of the well-to-do
would no longer be at risk. (In England during WWII the officer class died at a higher
rate than the grunts.) Of course that has to be accomplished before sabers are once again
rattled.
Tax law would be adjusted so that once wealth is gained, it may be preserved from generation
to generation. Capital would be increasingly favored over labor through taxation. Off-shore
tax havens would receive official sanction, so that the truly rich do not have to pay
the bills that are coming due for an aging U.S. labor force and a huge contingent of
immigrants seeking social services. It was during Reagan's presidency that his Budget
Director was moved to say in disbelief and disgust, "the hogs are really feeding." In
retrospect, they had just started in on the appetizers. We had not seen anything yet.
The ruling class would also have to move the opposition party into dependency on its
largesse, thus assuring a docile and servile opposition in the political sphere. Finally,
an information network has to be put in place so that the elect can keep tabs on all
those who at one point or another may be inclined to rock the boat and threaten the interests
of those who really matter in this world. And perhaps an election or two may have to
be tilted to assure the right outcome.
After the war, Germans were asked why they did not object.
It is getting harder to ask that question.
When, for example, should one start?
Is it when certain people are treated as non-persons?
We are there.
Is it when people are held by government incommunicado?
We are there.
Is it when we start talking about the use of torture to extract information?
We are there.
Is it when criticism of the government is considered unpatriotic?
We are there.
At the war memorial, it was recalled that Hitler had nearly half a million Germans killed
for their opposition to the regime.
That's more than one percent of all German adults at the time.
It is indeed getting harder to ask the question.
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