Tuesday, 15 September 2009

  • Top 10 Ways To Jump Start Your Brain

    Top 10 Ways To Jump Start Your Brain 


    You keep losing your keys, forgetting appointments, you don’t remember someone’s name, your brain feels a bit fried.

    Is this a bad sign?

    The bad news is that as we get older many of us suffer from declining mental facilities.   By the time people get into their 70’s there is a pretty good chance of suffering a decline.

    One in three American’s over 71 years old have some diminished mental function.

    A study by Duke University Medical Center, published last year in the Annals of Internal Medicine, found that 22% (5.4 million people) of that population have begun to see their mental facilities decline.

    Add that to a previous estimate of 3.4 million Americans with full dementia and that exceeds one third of the 25 million Americans over 71 years old. That’s more than eight million people.

    Is one in three of us doomed to lose our mental capacities?

    There’s plenty you can do to try to avoid that fate. Here’s some commonly recommended activities that can help to keep your brain fit.

    Top Ten Brain Fitness Techniques:

    1. Play games. Try the challenging ones like Sudoku, crosswords, and mind teasers. Great mental stimulation and good for relieving stress.
    2. Eat the right fat. Stick with the healthy Omega-3 fats like salmon, nuts, flax seed and olive oil.
    3. Exercise. Physical exercise gets your blood pumping into your brain and feeds it healthy oxygen.
    4. Learn a new skill. Learning a language, or woodworking or how to cook can work out a different part of your brain and keep you stimulated.
    5. Change your habits. Break out of your daily routine and do something you normally don’t do like take a walk at lunch or go to the theater.
    6. Change your routine. If you are right handed, try using your left hand for simple tasks (I’m trying this now and it’s kind of hard!) Drive a different way to work. Anything that forces your brain to take notice that you are doing something different.
    7. Read. Not the same old stuff you normally read but something out of your regular area of interest. Read any history lately? Or science? It can open your mind up to new interests.
    8. Hang out. You need to be social, hang around your friends and get into lively discussions. Great for your brain and entertaining too.
    9. Write. You can write about anything – your childhood, vacations, work, dreams, or anything that pops into your head. It stimulates your mind and activates areas of the brain you may not be using. Who knows, maybe there’s a best seller locked up in that brain.
    10. Drink to your health. OK, within reason. A glass (for women) or two (for men) is the maximum recommended daily dose of alcohol. Drinking in moderation has healthful benefits such as fighting heart disease as well as relieving stress and may lower the risk of dementia. (The definition of a drink: 12 ounces (oz.) of beer, 5 oz. of wine or 1.5 oz. of 80-proof distilled spirits.)

    That’s pretty easy. All-in-all, it’s kind of fun to change what you do every day and to discover new things.


    Post contributed by www.StuffYourBrainLikes.com 

Comments (9)

  • sick_of_dreams@xanga

    i already use both hands...


    I also read that having a lot of seafood in your diet helps with brain function.

  • raiyaya@xanga

    i love this post! thank you! i should change my routine now, im getting bored....

  • laurenmaureen@xanga

    i definitely agree with the writing and language one. i always feel more alert when im trying to speak spanish, surprisingly. i guess cause my brain is working extra hard :P

  • alsigirl

    Here is some evidence reported recently by Drs. Michael Roizen and Mehmet Oz:

    When rats that spent nine days on a diet that got 55 percent of its calories from fat: They ran 35 percent less far on a treadmill and did worse on a cognitive test - a maze - than rats that got slightly more than 7 percent of their calories from fat.

    College student volunteers who ate a single fatty meal right before they took tests designed to stress them out such as mental arithmetic and holding one hand in icy water, had sluggish blood vessel reactions to that stress. That indicates less ability to respond to an energy-demanding situation.

    Human bodies also react like the rats' and the college students'. That's not good, because a cardiovascular system that cannot counteract stress means the stress is inhibiting your ability to be your best, whether you're responding to questions or to challenges in a sports event. Leave those stress-augmenting saturated and trans-fats for your competition, maybe even offer them an extra order of fries.

    (Not copied verbatim but as close as I could get it)

  • The_Rebelious_Guy@xanga

    I like reading and I do go out and socialize and I drink, but I didn't realize I'm actually jumpstarting the brain. Hahaha.

  • blowme_raspberries@xanga
  • G1G1626

    Ya Baby! I do all of those things... although perhaps I could work on 4 & 5 a bit more... Otherwise I am GOOD TO GO: My brain is fresh & ready! ha ha!

  • discover_hienie@xanga
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