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Flex
Your Mind
Excerpt
By
Jennifer Thomas, HealthScoutNews
(HealthScoutNews) -- If you
want to strengthen your muscles, you exercise. But what if you
want to boost your creativity, improve your memory and generally
keep your brain crackling with new thoughts and ideas?
Try "neurobics," one of several new workouts for the
brain. Although some medical experts dismiss the trend as "neuro
babble," several companies espouse a program of mental exercises
-- brain teasers, visualizations and even such activities as reading
a book upside down -- to enhance job performance, intelligence
and creativity.
The theory is that you can get your brain into shape the same
way that you do aerobics to tone muscles and strengthen the cardiovascular
system.
"The idea is to do routine activities in novel ways that
use all five senses," said Lawrence Katz, a professor of
neurobiology at Duke University Medical School in Durham, N.C.,
who coined the term "neurobics." "The goal is to
activate the brain's own biochemical pathways and to bring new
pathways online that can help to strengthen or preserve brain
circuits."
Katz is co-author of the 1999 book "Keep Your Brain Alive."
Rather than improve one specific skill, such as memorizing names,
"we want to improve brain agility and flexibility,"
he said.
His suggested activities include: If you're right-handed, brush
your teeth with your left hand. Take a new route to work. Choose
your clothes based on sense of touch rather than sight.
"During our day-to-day lives, we use very few of the pathways,
or we use the same ones over and over again," Katz said.
Katz's "neurobics" isn't the only mental workout out
there. There's the Cambridge, Mass.-based company "Brainergy,"
whose slogan is: "Because your gray matter matters."
Another is "The Mind Gym," a London-based company that
offers 70 different workouts, including sessions on learning how
to effectively say "No" and how to exude presence, or
"gravitas," when you walk into a room.
In the gravitas workout, participants visualize their bodies
taking up a larger and larger space, until their influence extends
throughout the room.
Octavius Black, managing director of The Mind Gym, first planned
to hold sessions in fitness clubs, but corporations were more
interested, he said. Some 8,000 employees of computer, accounting,
banking, cosmetic and oil companies England have taken part in
Mind Gym workouts this year, he said.
Unlike some mental workouts, The Mind Gym workouts do not claim
to increase IQ, Black said. Instead, the idea is to help people's
mind function as efficiently and effectively as possible -- and
to understand how others think -- so that they get the most out
of their work and personal lives as possible, Black said.
He compared The Mind Gym to working out at a traditional fitness
club.
"If you go to the gym, you're not necessarily going to go
to the Olympics." Black said. "If you do The Mind Gym,
you're not going to become Albert Einstein. But you can learn
about the bits of your mind you want to improve, to be able to
use your mind better than before."
But can neurobics and other such mental workouts really do any
good? Are we a nation suffering from brain neglect?
There are no clinical studies that specifically test the effectiveness
of activities like neurobics. However, research has shown that
people with high levels of intelligence and education tend to
have lower rates of Alzheimer's disease and age-related mental
decline.
"There is something to it," said Michael Shermer, publisher
of Skeptic magazine. "Neurons maintain new connections
or grow new ones based on use."
However, Shermer added, it's unlikely any type of mental exercise
is going to significantly boost IQ. Furthermore, nothing says
that any of the activities done during mental workouts will transfer
into anything else helpful.
For example, say you practice brushing your teeth with your "other"
hand. You may get good at it, but you're not necessarily going
to become ambidextrous. Taking a new route to work doesn't mean
you're going to feel mentally sharper.
"The claims often far outstrip what they're able to prove,"
Shermer said.
Katz acknowledged that learning to play the violin or a foreign
language would probably do more for the brain than any of his
exercises. The problem is most adults don't have the time or inclination
to learn a musical instrument or language.
"[Brain exercises] are the equivalent of taking the stairs
instead of the elevator," Katz said. "It's not going
to turn you into a long-distance runner, but it will provide some
benefit. It's the same with brain exercises. Doing these small
things is better than doing nothing or plopping yourself in front
of the TV."
What To Do
Here are three suggested brain exercises from Brainergy.
- Follow the second hand of a clock for one minute. Think of
nothing else. Then close your eyes. See if you can hold them
closed for exactly one minute.
- Pick up the page of a text and turn it upside down. Read
from the bottom to the top. Notice how your brain stretches
as you try to read the words and understand sentences.
- Assign numerical values 1 to 26 to each letter of the alphabet
(A=1, B=2 and so on.) Think of five words in which the sum of
the letters of each words equals 38.
To read more about brain exercises, check out
neurobics.com,
Brainergy, or
The Mind Gym.
Or, if you really want to drive yourself crazy, try doing a few
of these
brain teasers.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
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