The 5 Things You Must Do to Keep Your Mind Young and Sharp_9

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Critical Area 3: Mental Stimulation 119 programs. The work setting can also be an environment that provides opportunities for mental stimulation. It is important to first review your own behavior in the workplace and to assess how you might be able to derive more mental stimulation during your typical workday. Most employees complete work duties on a daily basis that tend to be predictable and routinized. As such, employees spend a good deal of their time stimulating their subcortex, the part of the brain that helps with procedures and skills that require processing that is subconscious. The goal of a brain health environment is to provide novel and complex stimuli that engage and stimulate the cortex, help to build brain reserve, and maintain conscious processing. Consider the following for ways you can stimulate your brain at work: • As an employee, you are encouraged to try new tasks and activities in your work setting. This will increase processing of stimuli that are novel and complex and increase the chance for brain health benefit. • Do not be afraid to express your creative ideas and provide time for employees to imagine. Integration of diverse disciplines can help to forge new ideas that otherwise might tend to remain in operational silos. • When leading a meeting, consider setting the chairs of the room in a circle or several small circles rather than rows and columns. This can engage everyone in a more integrated rather than didactic manner. A more integrated approach can promote personal interaction and constructive dialogue. 120 Save Your Brain • Ask human resources if your company provides any assistance for you to enroll in formal lifelong learning that might occur at a local college or university or within the work setting itself. • Ask if you can assume roles that will nurture your communication skills, including public speaking and provision of succinct responses that are both clear and informative. Ask your information officer if the company has technologies to assist your own daily tasks and if you can learn about the different software. • Ask if you can establish a type of brain health kiosk in the work setting where employees can access information on the basics of the human brain and the brain health lifestyle, complete their online brain fitness workout, get the latest research news on the human brain and brain health, and even complete their online brain health survey to assess the strengths and weaknesses of their brain health lifestyle. Mental Stimulation in Other Areas of Your Life You can take a brief inventory of the environments you typically traverse on a daily basis. Most of us spend a healthy portion of our time at home, which is why a previous section was dedicated to mental stimulation in the home. However, we also spend time in other settings, such as our work site and maybe Critical Area 3: Mental Stimulation 121 a gymnasium, library, or facilities where we recreate or enjoy entertainment. Once you have a conscious sense of where you typically spend your time, you can analyze the value of novelty and complexity that each environment provides you. The goal is to expose your brain to settings that provide activities and stimulation that are novel and complex. You can do this and still have some fun along the way! The following brain-healthpromoting tips can be used in different areas of your life to promote mental stimulation: • Try new tasks and activities in your daily life. Some ideas would be to accomplish your typical daily tasks using a different approach, or maybe you could reach your destination using a different route. By changing your approach, you will be providing your brain with novelty and complexity and therefore boost your brain health benefit. • Try to develop one or two new hobbies over the next year. A hobby really is the development of a new talent, and this requires stimulating your brain to develop the neural circuitry that enables you to perform the task or hobby. You can learn how to use a new computer program, or you can take up golf or tennis, gardening or knitting. So long as the new activity is new for you, your brain will be stimulated in a healthy way. • As the brain is pleased with multiple and simultaneous stimuli, consider and encourage communication and learning or teaching that engages multiple sensory systems. We all tend to rely heavily on our visual and auditory systems 122 Save Your Brain to the neglect of our ability to taste, smell, and touch. Your brain can be stimulated using all the sensory pathways. • Break out of intellectual silos and share knowledge. Perhaps most important from the perspective of brain health is the need to integrate and merge different bodies of knowledge, academic and applied, to form an entirely new intellectual or tangible entity (intellectual alloy). This is accomplished by getting groups of people to think differently and to merge their talents and knowledge with those of others. Most of the time we operate in silos with complete focus on our own goals and deadlines. We can enhance brain health and promote creativity, imagination, and innovation by breaking down silos and merging the content within the silos—the benefit being that mental stimulation, creativity, and new answers to old problems can emerge from this sharing of knowledge. These are just a few tips to get you started—there are so many ways to engage your mind. Mental stimulation is critical to brain health. Your brain is constantly seeking and processing information. The wonderful thing about the human brain is that it changes and responds to the types of environmental input provided. This fact provides all of us the opportunity to select specific settings or environments that provide the most brain-health-promoting stimuli, so immerse yourself in enriched environments to keep your brain sharp and fit. Critical Area 3: Mental Stimulation 123 Tips to Promote Brain Health: Quick Review • Keep an active reading habit. This can include a book or two a month, reading the newspaper every day, and a favorite magazine on a weekly basis. • Enroll in a brain fitness program like those found on fitbrains.com. You can engage in daily activities that stimulate memory, language, attention, visuospatial, and executive skills. • Engage in new activities that are challenging. Try to learn a new language or learn how to play a new instrument. • Be artistic and creative. Pick up a hobby like painting, making pottery, or any other activity that promotes your imagination. • Enroll in a class or workshop that interests you, perhaps a class on public speaking or even course offerings available through corporate learning centers. This page intentionally left blank 8 Critical Area 4: Spirituality I turned inward and became one with my world. 7 S pirituality is another critical area that promotes brain health, and at first you may be skeptical, but in this chapter, I will show you how spirituality is directly connected to a healthier brain. When I talk about spirituality, I’m not necessarily addressing religion but rather engagement in deep introspection or meditation as part of the human condition. Although spirituality can be both formal, religiously inspired, as well as informal, using modes of introspection gained from such things as meditation, spirituality in the context of a brain health lifestyle is broadly defined as action or behavior that helps us slow down, turn inward, and rid our bodies of toxic stress. Since the beginning of time, humans have engaged in behaviors we refer to as religion or spirituality or a belief in a higher power. For many years this reality has been resisted, wars continue to be fought over such matters, and deep intra- 125 126 Save Your Brain personal conflict revolves around spirituality. I believe that we should not deny this reality but rather embrace it as part of our DNA and ask questions about whether and how spirituality can enhance our human condition and, in the case of this book, our brain health. Encouraging Research That Connects Brain Health and Spirituality I am not the only one who is interested in spirituality and the human brain, as an entire new field called “neurotheology” has developed to study this exact topic. To date, scientists have reported that prayer, which can be considered a form of meditation, on a daily basis enhances the immune system. The brains of monks in deep meditation as measured by PET (positronemission tomography) scans, which measure levels of glucose metabolism, evince change as if there is no distinction between processing of what is going on outside the human brain from inside. This has potential significance as our brain typically differentiates processing information and activity that occurs inside versus outside of our brain. It appears from the PET scans that deep meditation removes the internal versus external processing and instead integrates the internal and external into a unified existence. Perhaps this is why those who meditate describe a peaceful existence. Persons who attend formalized Critical Area 4: Spirituality 127 religious service report happier lives and have healthier lives, and over 90 percent of American physicians report that prayer is important to the well-being of their patients. This is certainly a good start on trying to understand the relationship between our spirituality and health. With continued research, we will learn more and perhaps even have the courage to prescribe spiritual behaviors as part of our overall treatment regimen for patients in need. Other research within the field of neurotheology has focused on the structural and functional relationship between our recognition of God and the human brain. I have seen reports that suggest our temporal and parietal lobes are primary sites for the relationship, but this is not conclusive. We know that temporal lobe epilepsy, in which a person will experience abnormal electrical activity within the cells of the temporal lobe, is associated with hyperreligiosity and even delusions of grandeur in which one may believe he or she is God. Research is ongoing to understand this relationship between God and brain so we can better explain why and how humans seek a higher being and how that impacts the function of the brain and our overall condition. I have noticed that most people are a bit timid when talking about spirituality, but as I mentioned earlier, spirituality does not necessarily always go hand in hand with religious beliefs. Spirituality has many meanings, and it may mean something different to you than me. This section refers to spirituality as one means of turning inward to foster a peaceful existence and to remove oneself from the hurried society. Sometimes spirituality takes the form of engaging in prayer, meditation, and other relaxation procedures. Save Your Brain 128 Stress: Implications for Brain Health Why is it so important for humans and for the human brain to not be hurried, overwhelmed, rushed, or stressed? We all know how bad it feels when we’re hurried or stressed, which also negatively affects us emotionally or behaviorally; what’s also important to realize is this kind of anxiety affects our brain health as well. When our body and brain are at ease, we can achieve a relaxed state of being, one that enables our brain and body to perform at their most efficient level. Ridding our body and brain of the daily bombardment of stress and reaching a type of inner homeostasis is important, but difficult to achieve. The Importance of Balance Homeostasis is a term that refers to balance, symmetry, and smoothness that exists within our body. Our brains also experience homeostasis, which is a blissful state without anxiety, stress, or feeling rushed or troubled. We all feel this bliss at times, though it may be fleeting and temporary. More often, we experience a lack of homeostasis, and there can be significant negative consequences to our health and even our longevity if this imbalance becomes chronic. Disorders such as hypertension, obesity, addiction, depression, anxiety, somatic conditions, interpersonal tension, impulsivity, and even criminal
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