Shortly  after his second birthday, my 
son stopped talking. The onset of symptoms was  just that abrupt. After 
nearly two years of visits to doctors and specialists,  he was finally 
diagnosed with atypical autism.
 
Autism encompasses a spectrum of psychological disorders in which the 
use of  language, reaction to stimuli, interpretation of the outside 
world, and the  establishment of social relationships are difficult and 
unusual. One in 110  children have autism spectrum disorders (ASD), and males  are more likely to have it than females.
 
Autism is a complex disease with no single known cause. The range of  
disorders that autism comprises is such that no two children who’ve been
  diagnosed with autism are the same. Autism arises from a mixture of 
genetic and  environmental factors, which as of yet, have not been 
clearly delineated.
 
Epigenetics,
 a relatively new field in science, could help  define the causes of 
Autism and offer up new modes of treatment for the  disorder, as well as
 other diseases like cancer, schizophrenia, Alzheimer’s and  diabetes. 
Epigenetics is the study of gene expression governed by the epigenome,  
the cellular material that sits on top of our genetic code. The 
epigenome does  not change the genetic code inscribed in our DNA; 
rather, it activates or  silences genes through the mobilization of 
molecules called methyl groups. These  chemical changes are triggered by
 our environment. Toxins, pollutants, changes  in diet, deficiencies in 
prenatal nutrition, and exposure to stressors alters  the way our genes 
are expressed through the epigenome. Furthermore, epigenetics  has 
proven that these changes in gene expression are passed down to our  
offspring, for at least one generation. Epigenetics renders the argument
 of  nature vs. nuture moot because it establishes that the two are are 
inextricably  intertwined. In regards to human development, one is as 
important as the  other.
 
We know that negative behaviors like smoking cigarettes, poor diet, or  
drinking access amounts of alcohol shortens our lifespan, but now 
epigenetics is  confirming that these behaviors can predispose our 
children, and even our  grandchildren, to similar diseases and decrease 
their longevity too.
Research in epigenetics reveals that both paternal and maternal toxic environmental exposures play a role in the development of disease in their offspring and future generations. Parental exposure to the popular herbicide Roundup has been linked to birth defects in their offspring. Vietnam veterans who were exposed to the herbicide agent orange, like my father was, pass on an increased risk for spina bifida and other diseases to their children. The prenatal nutrition of mothers has been shown to have an impact on an offspring’s risk of diabetes, stroke, and heart disease. A study on the eating habits of multiple generations of families in Sweden revealed that grandfathers who went from a normal diet to regularly overeating had grandsons who died an average of six years earlier than the grandsons of those who didn’t. The bottom line is this: your grandparents’ and parents’ behaviors, and any toxins or trauma they were exposed to, affects your health directly. Likewise, your behaviors and any toxins or trauma you’re exposed to could affect the health of your children and grandchildren.
 
Research in epigenetics reveals that both paternal and maternal toxic environmental exposures play a role in the development of disease in their offspring and future generations. Parental exposure to the popular herbicide Roundup has been linked to birth defects in their offspring. Vietnam veterans who were exposed to the herbicide agent orange, like my father was, pass on an increased risk for spina bifida and other diseases to their children. The prenatal nutrition of mothers has been shown to have an impact on an offspring’s risk of diabetes, stroke, and heart disease. A study on the eating habits of multiple generations of families in Sweden revealed that grandfathers who went from a normal diet to regularly overeating had grandsons who died an average of six years earlier than the grandsons of those who didn’t. The bottom line is this: your grandparents’ and parents’ behaviors, and any toxins or trauma they were exposed to, affects your health directly. Likewise, your behaviors and any toxins or trauma you’re exposed to could affect the health of your children and grandchildren.
Epigenetics may provide hard scientific evidence of intergenerational trauma  among American Indians
 and link it directly to diseases that  currently afflict us, like 
cancer and diabetes. The term “intergenerational  trauma” has been used 
to describe the cumulative effects of trauma experienced  by a group or 
individual that radiates across generations. For natives,  
intergenerational trauma has presented itself in the form of genocide, 
disease,  poverty, forced assimilation via removal of children from 
their families to  boarding schools, the seizure and environmental 
destruction of homelands, and  other routes of European colonization. 
The effects of intergenerational trauma  include substance abuse, 
depression, anxiety, and a variety of other emotional  problems. 
Emotional stress has also shown to effect gene expression via the  
epigenome. Studies show that the withholding of affection by a mother 
elicits  brain changes in her infant that impairs their response to 
stress as an  adult.
 
Epigenetics offers remarkable potential for the prevention of disease 
among  American Indians as well. We can use epigenetic inheritance to 
restore the  action of our genetic code from one generation to the next.
 Once environmental  stressors are removed and behavior is corrected, 
our DNA will revert to its  original programming. We could cure diabetes
 through behavioral changes that  allow our epigenome to operate 
correctly. The elimination of toxins and  pollutants could greatly 
reduce the incidence of cancer and birth defects. Such  modification of 
environmental exposures and behaviors will restore and even  improve the
 overall health and capacity of our genetic line.
 
As for my son, further research in epigenetics may soon decipher the 
specific  mixture of genetics and environmental exposures that lead to 
Autism Spectrum  Disorders. Along with other scientific discoveries, we 
are hopeful that such  studies will develop treatment that will lessen 
the severity of the symptoms  that make his life difficult. Until that 
time, we’ll continue to love and  nurture our son, and thank the Creator
 for entrusting us with such a miraculous,  artistically talented child,
 whose brave struggle to learn how to express  emotions like anger and 
love inspires everyone around him.
 
Ruth Hopkins (Sisseton-Wahpeton/Mdewakanton/Hunkpapa) is a  writer, a
  pro-bono tribal attorney, a science professor, and a columnist  for 
the Indian  Country Today Media Network. She can be reached at   cankudutawin@hotmail.com
Read more: http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/ict_sbc/epigenetics-scientific-evidence-of-intergenerational-trauma#ixzz1f0XmUrMD

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
I have just begun to study intergenerational trauma in the past decade as a Native American adoptee. In my work as an English adjunct in a predominantly non-native area, I have been able to introduce this into my class room at the university level. Promoting awareness is key. As a Native American Christian I know that even the Bible warns of intergenerational trauma. Non-natives--our oppressors, also suffer because these acts of genocide were accomplished by their ancestors. They have not escaped the long-reaching arm of western thinking that blinds them to previous acts and this is why it is still a great concern for both sides. I see the effects in my own indigenous family of intergenerational trauma as I was adopted off the reservation under false pretenses. I am firmly convinced the adoption of uncountable Native children is just another act of prolonged genocide, seperating children from their family, culture and traditional ways and giving us new identites in the hopes we will never want to or be able to return to our birth families. This reinforces we, as Native people, are aware of intergenerational trauma and its effects in a way non-native people are not. We are still here as warriors fighting against what has been done to us. We are resilient. We are learning how to make sense of it all when the majority of non-native people won't even be aware of their part. Perhaps the work we do today will one day be used to open more eyes as to how to heal from the damage we have suffered. We are working hard at breaking the bonds of intergenerational trauma every day.
ReplyDeleteYes, anonymous, yes. That is our work.
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