It is important for people to know the basics about the reptilian mind because it reveals the character, attitudes and reason of its disguised and manipulative behavior.
Snakes, for example, are able to smell warm-blooded animals and respond to it, as humans respond to the smell of warm and tasty food.
The reptilian has the most ancient of the brains. It has two hemispheres, and they relate functionally to the left and to the right.
The brain consists of the upper part of the spinal cord and the basal ganglia, the di-encephalon, and parts of the mid-brain -all of which sits atop the spinal column like a knob in the middle of the head.
It represents a fundamental core of the nervous system and derives from a form of mammal-like reptile that once ranged widely over the world but disappeared during the Tri-Assic period having provided the link between dinosaurs and mammals. It was the fusing of reptilian DNA to mammal DNA.
First and foremost of its described nature is the drive to establish the boundaries of its territory and the extremely potent will to dominate it. Then the assertiveness and aggressiveness of its elaborated plan for the defense of it, giving way to violent combats. If they are defeated in combat, they lose their majesty and lapse into a kind of depression and die.
The language of the reptilian mind is visual imagery. All communications transferred by the mind of a reptile are done by visual symbolic representations, each having specific meaning. Reptiles do not dream because their waking state function like dreams do to us.
The movie and television industry of today is based in the same process of reptilian communication. It stimulates the brain hormones that function when we are in dreaming-state, however, we are fully awake. Human subconscious is able to process the endless symbolisms and visual codes that now comes to our brain through the television, computers, cell phones, etc, and occupies up to 16-18 of our time per day.
Since all reptiles, insects, arachnids, amphibians, and fish are cold-blooded, they do things very differently than warm-blooded mammals.
Reptiles cannot expend energy chasing prey for hours, instead they spend a lot of time in a hunting 'sit and wait' mood or basking in the sun, because they can't regulate their own body temperature as warm-blooded mammals do.
Reptiles depend on ambient conditions to reach operational body temperatures. They have lower metabolic rates than warm-blooded type, at a given body mass, and, as a consequence, they generally rely on higher food consumption.
When cold-blooded animals emerge from shelter, many diurnal ones need to heat up in the early sunlight before they begin their daily activities. In cold climates most cannot survive at all.
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