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Twelve Prenatal Senses, Not Five*

By David B. Chamberlain, Ph.D

 

During most of the 20th Century, scientists doubted the presence of functioning

senses during fetal life. Touch, they said, was merely “reflexive”; hearing was severely

“dampened” (if not drowned) in the liquid environment of the womb; vision was primitive

at best, first blocked by closed eyelids, and then distorted under water; and the sense

of smell was judged “impossible” without air. By the end of the century, experts were

reaching for a consensus that there could be touch, hearing, and tasting in utero. However,

considering the immaturity of the brain, skepticism remained about how any sensory

information could be given any real meaning. I was in a small minority who found

evidence for five senses operating meaningfully by birth (1988).

 

Today, a few authorities are declaring that the idea of “five” human senses--an idea

dating from the Renaissance--is a dubious oversimplification. The correct number, some

suggest, is between 5 and 17 (e.g., Rivlin & Gravelle, 1984). With that encouragement, I

have taken another look at the wide range of prenatal research, including clinical data

from my own clients, and I can now point to at least twelve senses in utero. In brief, this

is my list of twelve.

 

(1) Touch (receiving touch, and reaching out to touch) is the first sense to develop.

(2) Thermal sensing of hot and cold is indeed real, but usually ignored

(3) Pain sensing (now termed nociception) involves crushing and nerve damage. The reality

of pain was tragically overlooked in creating the protocols of modern obstetrics.

(4) Hearing begins as early as 14 weeks after conception, then improves greatly in ten

weeks with cochlear resources and full growth of the external ear.

(5) Balance, gravity, and orientation in space develops from week 7 to 12.

(6) The chemosensors of smell operate in close association with the chemosensors of

(7) taste as both are bathed by amniotic fluids passing through the nasal area.

(8) “Mouthing” is used to explore texture, hardness, and contours of objects; this sense is

not about food and eating.

(9) Sucking and licking in the womb are mouth-related pleasure senses. The sucking of

fingers and toes is not nutritive. Male thumb sucking, seen as early as 13 weeks, is often

paired with erections, suggesting sexual sensations. Ultrasound reveals prenates licking

the placenta and twins licking each other, suggesting pleasure in bodily contact.

(10) Vision in utero is paradoxical because limited by eyelids being fused shut for about

six months, yet it seems functional in hitting targets like needles during amniocentesis at

14 to 16 weeks of age. Some form of vision seems to facilitate twins boxing, kicking,

kissing, and playing together in the womb.

(11) Although prenates have never been acknowledged for their psychic gifts, they do

demonstrate clairvoyance and telepathic sensing of things clearly out of reach; womb babies

know whether they are wanted or not, and discern the character of their parents.

(12) Finally, prenates also demonstrate transcendent sensing during near-death and outof-

body experiences. When out-of-body, no senses should work for either babies or

adults, but they do. In transcendent states, even immature senses function well and events

are stored in memory--as can be demonstrated years later. Contrary to popular belief, babies

in the womb are richly equipped for sensing!

*From: Communicating with the Mind of a Prenate, JOPPPAH 18(2), 95-108 (2003)

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