Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

The Heart's Code: Tapping the Wisdom and Power of Our Heart Energy

Rate this book
A fascinating synthesis of ancient wisdom, modern medicine, scientific research, and personal experiences that proves that the human heart, not the brain, holds the secrets that link body, mind, and spirit.

You know that the heart loves and feels, but did you know that the heart also thinks, remembers, communicates with other hearts, helps regulate immunity, and contains stored information that continually pulses through your body? In The Heart's Code, Dr. Paul Pearsall explains the theory and science behind energy cardiology, the emerging field that is uncovering one of the most significant medical, social, and spiritual discoveries of our time: The heart is more than just a pump; it conducts the cellular symphony that is the very essence of our being.

Full of amazing anecdotes and data, The Heart's Code presents the latest research on cellular memory and the power of the heart's energy and explores what these breakthroughs mean about how we should live our lives. By unlocking the heart's code we can discover new ways of understanding human healing and consciousness and create a new model for living that leads to better health, happiness, and self-knowledge.


From the Trade Paperback edition.

304 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 1998

181 people are currently reading
1439 people want to read

About the author

Paul Pearsall

35 books34 followers
Dr. Paul Pearsall was a licensed clinical neuropsychologist, clinical professor at the University of Hawai`i, and on the Board of Directors of the Hawai`i State Consortium for Integrative Health Care. He was a member of the heart transplant study team at the University of Arizona School of Medicine and Senior Research Advisor for the Human Energy Systems Laboratory at the University of Arizona.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
166 (41%)
4 stars
126 (31%)
3 stars
75 (18%)
2 stars
26 (6%)
1 star
9 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 47 reviews
Profile Image for Mischenko.
1,028 reviews94 followers
March 9, 2019
Is the heart intelligent? What do you believe? This book is very thought-provoking. Full review to follow.
Profile Image for Harley.
Author 20 books107 followers
March 31, 2010
Reading this book is like preparing to run a marathon. Not because it is long. It is only 228 pages. Not because the writing is poor. It is well written. This book takes patience and time to read because each chapter, each paragraph and each sentence is packed full of content that needs to be absorbed and understood. The first time I attempted to read this book, I set it aside after two chapters. This time I ran the entire race and finished the book.
The essence of the book is best described by the subtitle: Tapping the Wisdom and Power of Our Heart Energy. Paul Pearsall's key message is that the heart communicates through energy and he backs it up with scientific evidence. The name he gives this energy is cardio-energetics.
Much of Pearsall's research has been done with heart transplant patients. He tells a story early on about an eight year old girl who received the heart of a ten year old girl who had been murdered. The young girl dreamed of the man who had murdered the girl and based on her description, the police were able to find him and convict him of murder. The heart, Pearsall teaches, has the ability to remember. He documents throughout the book many stories of heart transplant patients who remembered things from their donor that they should never have known. Some even change their behavior like the foods they liked.
One of the powerful experiments that he shares occurred in 1993 under the direction of the United States Army Intelligence and Security Command. The scientists scraped white blood cells from the mouth of a volunteer and placed them in a test tube with a probe from a polygraph detector. The volunteer was placed in a room and shown violent scenes. The test tube was placed in another room. The polygraph detected extreme excitation in the cells in the test tube even though they were down the hall. Later experiments documented the same result even when the separation was 50 miles. Pearsall says, "The donated cells remained energetically and nonlocally connected with their donor and seemed to 'remember' where they came from."
I strongly recommend this book to anyone who is interested in spirituality, energy work and the scientific basis for the power within the heart. The heart is more than a pump that is at the beck and call of the brain. The heart has the power to heal and a memory distinct from the brain. The heart communicates at a much deeper level than mere words with the hearts it comes in contact with. People in business today talk about leaders with emotional intelligence. This book provides some of the scientific support for the importance of emotion and the heart.
Profile Image for Owlseyes .
1,795 reviews298 followers
Currently reading
June 1, 2020
"I have little doubt that the heart is the major energy center of my body and a conveyor of a code that represents my soul"(...)"however, my brain demands more evidence, and that evidence is now emerging"
Paul Pearsall

This is book full of daring hypotheses and ideas one needs to get aware of. Like, the brain can abuse the heart. Yes, the heart has its reasons the mind ignores.

Quoting a heart-transplant patient "I don't know whose heart I got, but it surely is a relaxed one. I've never felt calmer...", one may possibly wonder how much the heart matters. How much different hearts, matter differently.

These are some of the hypotheses the book takes into consideration.

(1) is it possible that the heart has its own (form of) intelligence we seldom hear about, because we prefer the brain?

(2) has the heart its own way of perceiving, reacting and communicating?

(3) has the heart its own memory (info-energetic cell memories)?

(4) can changes (in personality, dreams, fantasies, food preferences...) in patients who went through heart transplant experiences be related to the donors' memories?

(5) can we (voluntarily) recover our own (heart) cellular memories and those of our ancestors'?

(6) is it possible to tune in to others heart's codes?

(7) does the vital force exist?

(8) does a subtle form of energy exist not obeying the known physical laws?

(9) can we postulate a "healing energy", ("L"), which carries information?

(10) does every heartbeat send a message (a coded, faint signal) to other souls?

(11) can the heart exchange information with non-human forms, like stones?

The author is a Psychologist whose own experiences are at the heart of the daring hypotheses.
31 reviews2 followers
April 16, 2012
This book had some useful information, but seemed to be much more speculative than many of the other books I have read lately. I also found a lot of the information overly repetative and less organized than I prefer- not to mention a number of noticeable grammar and spelling issues. Part of my let down in reading this book was that I expected to read about a lot more inspiring stories like the 2 that were paraphrased in "Molecules of Emotion" and "The Biology of Belief". (One about how a heart transplant patient recalled her donor's memories of being murdered with such clarity that she was able to provide the necessary details to police so that the murderer could be identified and convicted, and the other about how Paul Pearsall's heart told him that he was sick even though doctor's didn't believe him and helped him know what he needed to do to help his body heal.) Although extra details to these stories was nice, there wasn't as much information on the heart transplant one as I had hoped. It reminded me of one of those movies you watch because the preview looked so good- only to discover that the preview was a compilation of all the good parts of the movie and that the rest of the movie added little additional value to your experience.
Profile Image for Don Hutcheson.
Author 2 books45 followers
October 12, 2010
Pearsall confirms, to me anyway, that our brain/mind is seriously overrated. His thinking confirms Eckhart Tolle's belief that the brain is merely a computer to help us solve problems. It is not the center of our being. Dr. Pearsall says,". . . the human heart, not the brain, holds the secrets that link body, mind and spirit."
2,101 reviews58 followers
February 16, 2017
Author seems to have clear biases.
He never seems to look for data that disproves his hypothesis.
If there was better proof included this would be quite interesting.
However, without proof it's not too useful
Profile Image for Jim Gleason.
404 reviews9 followers
August 17, 2017
As a transplant recipient have you ever been asked about traits being transferred with that transplanted organ? Or have you ever wondered about that concept yourself, maybe even had an experience that seemed to be related to that same possibility? No, then maybe its just related to us heart transplants that such subjects come up. As a heart recipient myself, I have been fascinated with such topics but have not experienced any such transference or cellular memory events myself. I have talked to others who openly share such experiences and through their stories found myself reading Paul Pearsall’s very interesting collection of heart recipients’ stories of events that defy explanation except by such a reality.

Caution: This book goes beyond such stories into developing his “wisdom and power of our heart energy” concepts that I will not comment on here.

Instead I find this collection of seventy plus tales, each relating some post heart transplant experience that seems to come from the donor’s spirit or more likely, their cells, every intriguing. From that reading I find myself eager to engage anyone willing to listen and discuss such possibilities, maybe more out of its entertainment power over some table conversation at transplant related events or general conversation that never ceases to draw people into such dialogue. From an early post transplant reading of Deepak Chopra’s mention of Claire Sylvia’s experience in sharing traits with her donor and even discovering his name in her dreams, I had a unique opportunity to talk to Claire and make a personal judgment as to the validity of her story. She certainly was sane and credible, not selling anything, just sharing an experience that eventually captured both TV audiences on some national talk shows in promoting her own autobiography, A Change of Heart. Hers is one of Pearsall’s many such stories, so extending that testimony many times over in those other reports, I was interested to find some scientific basis in Dr. Candice Pert’s neuropeptides’ research at the NIH. While she doesn’t extend her findings to this extreme, one can only wonder at the possible connection to sharing donor memories when huge quantities of cells with possible memory capabilities are transferred in an organ transplant.

Ok, so nothing has been proven, but certainly the reading of such experiences post heart transplant is fascinating, especially if you are one of the thousands of heart recipients enjoying life with that new heart. I would recommend this book, not for its scientific merit, but rather for its entertainment value and for the questions it leaves behind in its reading. While I enjoyed the full hard cover book, it is also available in a 3-hour audio tape format read by its author that you can listen to in your car’s tape player on that long trip or daily commute to work when you are recovered from your transplant. I promise that you will be talking about these stories when you are through, and you will be the center of that party conversation with such a topic. Be prepared, their eventual question to you will be, “So, have you had any such experiences yourself?” I have to say, “No, I haven’t any firsthand,” but what will you say?

PS: In checking to make sure this was still available through Amazon, I was drawn to the reader’s comments about this book and recommend you check them out yourself before taking my comments as “gospel.” I did recognize my own comments from back in 1998 when I wrote:
“Fascinating insight into the depths of the human system, May 10, 1998
As a heart transplant recipient myself, I found this book to be fascinating reading. It opens the mind to ideas and concepts that remind us all how little we really do know about our human existence. While I haven't enjoyed any of the very special donor/recipient communications related in the many stories used to support the "heart's energy" concepts Dr. Pearsall offers, I do believe that others have them. This reading offers insights into the realm of our being that science has yet to really come to grips with, but in years to come I wouldn't be surprised to find acceptance of what seems very "wild ideas" today, just as he suggests to the reader. If you can't have your own heart transplant, this is the next most interesting way to share some of that unique miracle that so many today are living.”

PS: I was excited to have a phone conversation with this author, focused on just the transplant communications referred to as "cellular memory" - still not sure what to make of his other philosophies beyond that topic. He has since passed away, but the mystery of donor/recipient communications in this way remains.

see this and more than a hundred other organ donation/transplant related books - many with my personal reviews - at http://www.trioweb.org/resources/book...
Profile Image for Ruth.
923 reviews20 followers
December 6, 2008
There were times when I read this skeptically (what the author might say 'thinking with my head' instead of 'feeling from my heart). Despite the fact he tries hard to back up his ideas scientifically, it really comes off as pretty new-age. I did, however, enjoy the fact that he is bold enough to really write openly about the many possibilities out there to explain (or attempt to explain) why the heart behaves as it does, and the ramifications for our mental, physical, social and spiritual health. Some of the stories he relates about experiences of heart-transplant patients were truly fascinating. A very interesting read.
105 reviews2 followers
June 21, 2012
This book tells fascinating stories about the heart and its energetic reach and abilities. Heart transplant patients change their preferences for food and music and even their personalities to that of their donor without ever knowing a thing about their donors. In our society, the brain takes the lead which leads to imbalance. Bringing the heart back into the equation creates balance and better health. The writing style of the book isn't the easiest to get through but the subject matter is interesting enough to make it a worthwhile read.
Profile Image for Amelia.
74 reviews1 follower
April 1, 2013
very careful and self apologizing- timid- in the desire to make real headway in a medical model course correction. just really appreciate the effort, the information, and the consideration being given here. for me it's great as a way to think of interacting with other people, and perhaps i would have liked a less rigorous version with more first-hand accounts for the generous layman. overall important, if mildly hokey, and i've given away two copies already.
Profile Image for Debbie Lamperd.
Author 1 book7 followers
January 13, 2014
The author of this book, Paul Pearsall, shares his professional experience with his readers about the fascinating concept of cellular memories. How does an 8 year old heart transplant recipient remember the face of her donor's murderer? This book will challenge your whole concept of what you may consider reality. There is definitely a bigger picture to life than you may know about.
Profile Image for Sherry.
262 reviews
March 29, 2014
A fascinating blend of ancient wisdom, modern medicine, scientific research and personal experiences that proves the human heart, not the brain, holds the secrets that link body, mind and spirit.

A book that can never really be finished - but can certainly used as a reference point.
54 reviews3 followers
June 15, 2020
This book is a profound compendium of wisdom combining Paul Pearsall's realizations from his own successful struggle against a deadly form of cancer which attacked his lymph system, his professional experience as a neuropsychologist specializing in healing the immune system, the stories of heart transplant patients whose taste or habits were dramatically changed to those of their donor , the research of scientists into energy cardiology,and last but not least, the crucial role of cardiac energy patterns in healing the patient and in the interaction between therapist and patient. Reading the book was an engrossing and rewarding experience seasoned by just the right amount of self-help tips. There is nothing superfluous here – which is rare in books of this type. I cannot commend it highly enough.
Paul writes :" Every cell in the body is literally bathed in the info-energy conducted from and by the heart. Since the heart is a primary generator and transmitter of info-energy, it is central to our system’s recollection of its life—its cellular memory." This may sound far-fetched until we consider that our heart is our most powerful organ, the largest generator of electromagnetic energy in our body, 5000 times more powerful than the brain. Our body's magnetic field is essentially heart-based, and nourishes the brain (our brain waves ride our cardiac waves), just as the fetus is nourished by the cardiac energy of the mother. We carry within our hearts a permanent acoustical portrait of our mother's comforting cadence. Heart cells are the only cells in the body which pulsate. It is no wonder that a recorded heartbeat played in a nursery reduces the crying of newborns by half.
Paul claims : "All hearts exchange information with other hearts and brains. Cardiac energy patterns have dynamic interactive effects. When one heart sends energy to another, that energy becomes a part of the receiving heart’s memory."
When we are attuned to our heart's code, we have the resilience to laugh at life's inevitable and sometimes absurd ups and downs and we tend to "give love to others first" , two ways of strengthening our immune system and regaining energetic balance. Research shows that sudden cardiac death often occurs about an hour after little 'heart-hassles" which occur every day, but the plaque which builds up and clogs our arteries, leading to a heart-attack is often the result of prolonged anger and resentment, based on a humorless view of being deprived of our entitlement. The heart's code offers a way to regain control of our orchestra of cells by slowing the pace of the music and basing ourselves on the adage. “When things don’t work out right, take ’em to the left.”
In fact most heart transplant recipient patients change their musical preferences to match their donor's.Paul writes:"
Even though doctors may regulate the new heart’s beating with medication, that heart’s cells still have their memory of their original rhythm".
Heath is not just a matter of positive thinking but involves dealing with our "shadow", the dark side of our personality and Churchill's success in tackling his own depression was a key component in his ability to understand and tackle Hitler. Paul writes ". Full awareness of the influence and origins of one’s cellular memories and willingness to use their energy no matter its nature provides the necessary instability that creates the adaptive stability of great Minds."
When we are sick, our healing depends on rebalancing by tapping into our heart's code (our resonation response) which is the life force of all systems. "Cardio-energetic healing is based on this old but increasingly research-supported idea that “dis-ease” is a perturbation of the info-energetic system composed of the brain, the heart, and the 75 trillion cells in our body."
Paul Pearsall is no longer with us. But the final words of this book are his legacy " Every beat of your heart shapes the memories that will forever be your legacy, the infinite echoes of your soul that will resonate long after your body and brain have ceased to serve your soul's needs."
Read the book.
Profile Image for Fatima Abou-Abdallah.
15 reviews4 followers
June 3, 2024
Back in October 2022, I came across a five part lecture series by Ḥajj Khalil Jaʿfer titled 'In Search Of A Weeping Heart'. He made reference to the book you see pictured here where he argues that as primitive science progresses, it proves ʾIslām has always been right — speaking physically and spiritually, the organ of the heart is the most important aspect of the human being. That in a healthy balanced individual, the heart is more than just a pump. The heart remembers. The heart beats and the energy it produces is signalled out like a beacon in a lighthouse sheds light that continues on for years.
 
The Qurʾān has numerous verses that speak of a hardened, diseased, and blinded heart. Both our ancestors and the indigenous today are strong believers that the brain revolves around the heart, not vice versa. The organ that is able to think, reflect, ponder, and understand is the heart. Because do we not instinctively point to the chest when asked "tell me about yourself"? — we never point towards the brain. When we receive good or bad news, we put our hands on our hearts. When we make an important decision, we make it by the heart although we think we are logical and strategic in doing so — do we not say, "I had a change of heart", "he/she has a good heart", or "I know it by heart".
 
The brain makes trivial decisions but meaningful decisions are in the heart. The heart is always true to you while the brain deceives you. The heart is like a compass, always pointing towards Allāh (س) while the mind is like a map, a tool that can be used to point you to the right direction yet is always needing more and more "truth".
 
This tells us the heart is our most precious possession because the difference between the heart and the brain is the difference between yaqeen [certainty] and shaq [doubt]. If you do not believe it in the heart, you will never truly believe.

"While we think of our heat as in our chest, its energy is not 'in' us — it 'is' us" [p.165].
Profile Image for Paul.
Author 4 books135 followers
November 2, 2021
For this reader, the author spends too much time trying to persuade me of the validity of his undertaking. At 72 pages in, he's still trying to sell me the book I've already bought! It might be a sign of how much has happened since 1998 when the book was published, but I was already wide open to learn about how the heart has intelligence and power of its own. I didn't need to be reassured of this proposition; I just wanted to start hearing the evidence and implications, but I just wasn't getting that.
Profile Image for LaRae☕️.
707 reviews10 followers
September 7, 2018
Parts of this book were really interesting. Other parts felt flat-out made up, with little besides anecdotal evidence to support them. However, wading through the hooey I did find some nuggets. I definitely live more from my head than my heart, and will be making an effort to focus more on (and listen more closely to) my heart.
8 reviews
February 28, 2025
libro transformador

Es un libro muy impactante que te abre y deja ver un nuevo ángulo para comprender tu interior. Lo recomiendo ampliamente para quien está interesado en conocerse mejor
22 reviews1 follower
December 31, 2019
I loved this book and the perceptions that pearsall put forth.
Profile Image for Cody Gibson.
126 reviews2 followers
November 29, 2023
Scientific evidence lays out a convincing argument for the mind body connection and the heart's intelligence.
Profile Image for H.M..
Author 7 books72 followers
January 29, 2013
This book really shows up our brains' egocentric delusion for what it is and reasserts the sadly-neglected heart's central role in connecting, nurturing and integrating (not only in the individual, but transpersonally).

The book details profound implications for maintaining good physical, mental, emotional and spiritual health and healing, going far beyond the blinkered biomechanical view of health that, like the brain, so dominates our modern world.

You may find the repetition in the first half of the book a little annoying, if necessary for the message to really sink in; but stick with it: the second half of the book, which is more practical, gets better and better.

I'm not saying that Pearsall has got it all right, but there is something in what he says, and perhaps much may come of the new cardio-centric model (brain/heart/body Mind), rather than the old encephalo-centric (brain/body) paradigm?
Profile Image for Pranada Comtois.
Author 13 books26 followers
March 18, 2012
The Heart's Code contributes scientific-based work about our heart and its role in our physical and metaphysical life much like The HeartMath Solution by Doc Childre, and Molecules of Emotion by Candace Pert. This is another book that will serve to open the heart of the inquisitive, astute, and broadminded.

It's important for my own research and life work, to have these scientists presenting the evidence that the heart not only loves and feels, but thinks, remembers, and communicates. I find these findings augment and fortify my knowledge and determination to live a heart-centered life and that doesn't mean a whimsical, emotional life, but a life grounded in reality and the truth that love is the most important energy in the universe.
Profile Image for Judith.
181 reviews3 followers
August 12, 2015
Remember when people believed that the Earth was the center of our universe and the Sun rotated around it, only to discover evidence that we lived in a Solar system, and the Earth rotated around the Sun? Similarly, by the 20th Century we all knew that the human brain was the control center of our body systems, and the seat of thinking & knowledge. Right? Paul Pearsall, M.D. shares fascinating experiences and research results that indicate that the 21st Century will require a similar paradigm shift to accomodate evidence that the human heart is far more than a mechanical pump. That in fact, our hearts seem to be the seat of wisdom, insights, thought, and even cellular memories that can guide us into a safer, saner, and more humane way of living - if only we can learn to respect and listen to them. He had me hooked from the forward!
Profile Image for Shankar Balakrishnan.
22 reviews8 followers
February 2, 2019
Amazing book. Just started reading, but getting a feeling it's going to take me to another dimension. I intuitively believe the Heart has a larger place in the years to come..
Nice line from the book for us to turn "heart-centric" - "..Because we tend to be more cerebral-centric and driven by the brain's constant search for the negative, we gawk at an auto-crash,race to witness a disaster in progress, and are drawn to television shows that show 'real-life' crisis. Even though it may 'break our heart' our brain seems to seek the sad and terrible. While the brain may consider sameness boring and predictability dull, the heart is constantly on the lookout for the wonderfully simple pleasures of life..."
Profile Image for Nicole Polk.
77 reviews26 followers
July 28, 2013
A fascinating look at theories in science about how cells have memory and the heart has intelligence. I was most taken with some of the stories of transplant patients and how pieces of personality, behaviors, and tastes can transfer from one person to another. I don't want to spoil them, but I've spoken with some transplant nurses, curious to know if these things really happen and I've been assured that they have all heard of such miraculous stories.
2 reviews
October 7, 2007
This book by a cardio energeticist is about the closest I have seen anyone discuss themechanics of spirituality, and how the heart network is the real worldwide web, connecting us all. For those of us who have studied other esoteric teachings around the world, from shamanism, huna, to buddhism, one will see echoes of the ancient wisdom coming through in his writing. Highly recommended.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 47 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.