Thursday, November 30, 2023

Your Brain Is Not for Thinking | Biofeedback Therapy Piermont

In stressful times, this surprising lesson from neuroscience may help to lessen your anxieties.

Five hundred million years ago, a tiny sea creature changed the course of history: It became the first predator. It somehow sensed the presence of another creature nearby, propelled or wiggled its way over, and deliberately ate it.

This new activity of hunting started an evolutionary arms race. Over millions of years, both predators and prey evolved more complex bodies that could sense and move more effectively to catch or elude other creatures.

Eventually, some creatures evolved a command center to run those complex bodies. We call it a brain.

This story of how brains evolved, while admittedly just a sketch, draws attention to a key insight about human beings that is too often overlooked. Your brain’s most important job isn’t thinking; it’s running the systems of your body to keep you alive and well. According to recent findings in neuroscience, even when your brain does produce conscious thoughts and feelings, they are more in service to the needs of managing your body than you realize.

And in stressful times like right now, this curious perspective on your mental life may actually help to lessen your anxieties.

Much of your brain’s activity happens outside your awareness. In every moment, your brain must figure out your body’s needs for the next moment and execute a plan to fill those needs in advance. For example, each morning as you wake, your brain anticipates the energy you’ll need to drag your sorry body out of bed and start your day. It proactively floods your bloodstream with the hormone cortisol, which helps make glucose available for quick energy.

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Monday, November 27, 2023

Mental muscle vs adhd, a drug – free approach | Neurofeedback Nanuet

Daniel Goleman, noted author of ‘Focus: The Hidden Ingredient in Excellence’ and ‘Emotional Intelligence’, in his New York Times article: ‘Mental Muscle vs ADHD’, suggests that strengthening mental focus, or cognitive control, and mindfulness, may help children suffering with ADHD, and adults with A.D.D.

Research has shown that cognitive control –  impulse management, paying attention or learning readiness, self- regulation –  to be a predictor of success, both in school and work life.

Meditation is a cognitive control exercise that enhances ‘ the ability to self-regulate your internal distractions’ says Dr Adam Gazzelay, neuroscientist at the University of California, San Francisco. Also, ‘mindfulness seems to flex the brain circuitry for sustaining attention, an indicator of cognitive control’ according to research by Wendy Hasencamp and Lawrence Barselou, Emory University.

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Monday, November 20, 2023

Remembering and Forgetting: the How and the Why

 It’s often the case that we experience an event, later, to recall it only vaguely, or partially, or as a distortion of the facts. With the so-called illusory truth effect, what we assume we take in, or think we hear, may form in us false assumptions, attitudes, beliefs.

‘You don’t remember what happened. What you remember becomes what happened.’ — John Green, author.

Memory involves a process of encoding — how we take in — storing, then later retrieving data and information, as needed. It takes place in the electrochemical actions at synapses — tiny gaps between brain cells — creating neuronal connections, important for retaining new information, making decisions, solving problems.

Sensory memory can be brief, especially in taking in visual information, such as light, as well as auditory, smell and touch. When focused on, it passes into short term memory, generally around 18–30 seconds, then afterwards into long term memory. The hippocampus and amygdale in the limbic system are involved in consolidation of short term memory into long term memory; spatial memory, with neuronal connections in the neocortex.

In explicit memory, a conscious, intentional recollection occurs in the retrieval of contextual information from specific experiences and events, and formation of new episodic memories — things that happen to us — via the prefrontal cortex and limbic system. Damage or atrophy in the hippocampus can be seen in the development of dementia and Alzheimer’s Disease.

‘For all of us, explicit memory makes it possible to pass, to leap across space and time and conjure up events and emotional states that have vanished into the past, yet somehow, continue to live in our minds.’ — Eric Kandel, psychiatrist, neuroscientist.

Implicit memory is motor memory, retained in the body, effortlessly, used in automatic tasks, such as riding a bike or tying one’s shoelaces, and many other unconscious patterns governing daily functions.

Memories of emotional experiences and events — such as hearing a certain piece of music, or the death of a loved one, involving biological arousal, are those most likely to be evoked and endure. Flashbulb memories are especially vivid, often with sensory elements, with immediate recall triggering, and being triggered by past events. Flashbacks are frequently reported by victims of PTSD, war, trauma, abuse, prolonged stress.

There are various and different reasons for why we forget, fail to retain and retrieve information and events: inattention, distractions — internal and external; difficulty processing — encoding failure, whereby information is not stored, or improperly stored and therefore cannot be retrieved later. This often shows up in children diagnosed with ADD/ADHD, in head-injured patients, those with dementia; also, frequently with aging, forgetting names, momentary lapses, so-called absent-mindedness.

Another reason for forgetting may be in suppressing painful memories — intentionally or subconsciously — as in the case of victims of trauma, abuse and war.

Failure to maintain mental stimulation and physical activity often adversely impacts short term recall in particular. Long term memories, those carrying an emotional charge, are less affected. We tend to forget events of a more neutral nature, as though the brain gives them less priority.

Ability to remember may be compromised by severe and prolonged stress, causing so-called ‘brain freeze’, adversely affecting situations requiring a clear, prompt response.

Memory impairment can occur through environmental or electronic pollution, as well as chemical — including excessive, prolonged use of alcohol and illicit or prescribed drugs.

Lack of quality sleep and rest is known to negatively impact our ability to remember.

We can improve our memory through stimulation and utilizing strategies, including: –

  • linking new information to old and to visual information
  • meaningful associations attached to given information
  • chunking data into manageable bytes or in groupings
  • setting reminders, post its, using organizers, etc
  • the act of writing down aids storage
  • cultivating activities that keep us mentally sharp, that stretch our abilities and capacities
  • practicing a healthy lifestyle, mindfulness, exercising for good circulation, there being a strong connection between a clear mind and a resilient body.

Above all, maintaining active cognitive abilities serves as important reminder and motivator for purposeful living.

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Friday, November 17, 2023

Alzheimer’s is Preventable

Alzheimer’s Disease – a form of dementia affecting 5.6 million Americans , currently incurable – is preventable, according to The Lancet Neurology, an established medical journal for brain research.

In Dr Joseph Mercola’s interview of board-certified neurologist and nutritional authority, Dr David Perlmutter what it brought out and emphasized is the important role of aerobic exercise and healthy lifestyle choices: that eating a diet high in ‘good’ fats and oils, and low in carbs can positively affect brain health and lower the risk of developing Alzheimer’s.

Dr David Perlmutter is author of the best-selling book, ‘Grain Brain: the Surprising Truth about Wheat, Carbs and Sugar – Your Brain’s Silent Killer.’ In the book, he states: ‘Lifestyle choices, like aerobic exercise, healthy fats, reducing carbs, including whole grains, affect overall brain health, as well as risk of Alzheimer’s.’ Further, says Dr Perlmutter, ‘a hi-carb diet, of which 20% comes from wheat-based food,’ can lead to Dementia, ADHD, Anxiety, Chronic Headaches , Depression and other neurological diseases.

Gluten in wheat leads to gluten-sensitivity and the production of Zonulin in the gut, according to Dr Dasano, a pediatric gastroenterologist and research scientist directing the Center for Celiac Research & Treatment at Mass. General Hospital, Boston. Zonulin is the cornerstone of diseases characterized by permeability of the gut and inflammation in the brain – Alzheimer’s, Autism, Parkinson’s and Attention Deficit Disorders as well as auto-immune diseases’- related to consumption of carbohydrates, says Dr Perlmutter. Dr Fasano’s research shows that reaction to Zonulin is not confined to the 1.85% with Celiac, but is present in 100% of the population.

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Wednesday, November 8, 2023

Procrastination may harm your health

Avoidance is linked to poor outcomes, but change is possible

The worst procrastinators probably won’t be able to read this story. ‘It’ll remind them’ of what they’re trying to avoid, ‘psychologist’ Piers Steel says.

Maybe they’re dragging their feet going to the gym. Maybe they haven’t gotten around to their New Year’s resolutions, Maybe they’re waiting just one more day to study for that test.

Procrastination is “putting off to later what you know you should be doing now,’ even if you’ll be worse off, says Steel, of the University of Calgary in Canada. But all those tasks pushed to tomorrow seem to wedge themselves into the mind — and it may be harming people’s health.

In a study of thousands of university students, scientists linked procrastination to a panoply of poor outcomes, including depression, anxiety and even disabling arm pain. “I was surprised when I saw that one,” says Fred Johansson, a clinical psychologist at Sophia hemmet University in Stockholm. His team reports the results January 4 in JAMA Network Open.

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Thursday, November 2, 2023

Elect Stress Reduction: Picking Ways to Cope

Here are several methods to help restore a sense of tranquillity to your life.

By TARA PARKER-POPE

Can’t concentrate? Losing sleep? Binge-eating your feelings?

In a stressful year, the nation collectively Appeared to be experiencing peak anxiety last week. People-Shared stories of stress eating, clearing their calendars (who could sit through a Zoom meeting during a time like this?) and threatening to stay in bed. The’ stress has consumed -both .sides of the political aisle. A poll released by the American Psychological Association showed that 76 percent of Democrats and 67 percent of Republicans found the 2020 election to be a significant source of stress.

“We’ve had this unending momentum of a steady stream of stuff just going wrong since the beginning of March,” said the Rev. angel Kyodo Williams, a meditation teacher and author of the book “Radical Dharma.” “The groundlessness that people feel is not really something the human body was meant to sustain over long periods of time.”

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Neurofeedback for Everyday Stress Management

In today’s fast-paced world, stress has become a constant companion for many. From work deadlines to personal responsibilities, managing str...