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The
juvenile sea squirt wanders through the sea searching for a suitable
rock or hunk of coral to cling to and make its home for life. For this
task, it has a rudimentary nervous system. When it finds its spot and
takes root, it doesn’t need its brain any more so it eats it! It’s
rather like getting tenure.” ~David Dennett, “Consciousness
Explained”
And true to form, I have a client who’s a tenured college
professor, head of the department, who is “going out of his mind.” He
came to me for coaching because he’s deeply dissatisfied with his life,
and wants to change careers.Without violating confidentiality, I can
say this client is desperate for new experiences, for meaning and
purpose, and for something new in his life. He is “hamstrung” by a high
salary and a less-than-30-hour week with long vacations, but is
beginning to see the “price” is not worth it. Though this gentleman
happens to actually be a tenured professor, he is representative of
many clients I have who are 50 or older.
As more Baby Boomers “come of
age,” the studies about aging continue to pump in lots of new
information to counteract former stereotypes. Science is discovering
that “old” rats given new toys and new playmates start growing new
brain cells, and better brain cells. Imagine! And, poignantly, this is
what the professor laments the most – the fact that he isn’t
encouraged, or allowed, to innovate within the department; and that
there’s no camaraderie. Let’s take a look at some myths about aging and
the brain, to encourage you to keep learning, and to keep acquiring new
toys, and new playmates. And, oh yes, get toys that give you a good
workout, both physically and mentally. That’s one of the keys to
resilience as you age!
MYTH No. 1: Once you’re born, all you can look
forward to is a long and steady loss of brain cells (aka
neurons). REALITY: “Stem” cells in the human brain can create new
neurons indefinitely, and relatively idle neurons will extend their
branches to carry signals to and from other neurons indefinitely, under
the proper circumstances.
MYTH No. 2: We can’t get smarter as we age.
REALITY: Mice (are we like mice … you be the judge) in an enriched
environment, with interesting toys and playmates, showed an increase in
4000 new neurons in the hippocampus (crucial to memory and learning)
compared to 2400 in the control group with no toys or playmates. And
older mice’s brains also got bigger and better! And quickly! (Diamond
and Rosenzweig, Elizabeth Gould, Princeton)
MYTH No. 3: Creativity
diminishes with age. REALITY: According to Ralph Warner, author of “Get
a Life: You Don’t Need a million to Retire Well,” “older artists often
do well, commonly experiencing a sustained burst of exciting creativity
after 65.”
MYTH No. 4: There isn’t much you can do to avoid
Alzheimer’s. REALITY: According to David Snowden, Ph.D., “Aging with
Grace,” hardworking brains (the ones that get used in learning new
things all during life) do well because their stimulated cells branch
frequently, resulting in millions of new connections (synapses) so the
brain actually becomes larger and…evidence continues to accumulate that
a larger brain can cope with the effects of brain diseases, like
Alzheimer’s and strokes. Theoretically because a larger brain has
more active tissue, and therefore a greater number of ways to work
around diseased or damaged areas.
MYTH No. 5: What you’ve got, is all
you’ll ever get. REALITY: According to Paul Tallal, Rutgers University
neuroscientist, “You create your brain from the input you get.” By
this, she means intellectual stimulation strengths the brain because in
the normal course of living, our brains constantly reorganize
themselves, which is called “neuroplasticity.” And neuroplasticity
speeds up with the amount and complexity of the new information our
brains receive.
MYTH No. 6: As you age, it’s too hard to learn new
things, so stick with what you already know. REALITY: According to
Arnold Scheibel, head of UCLA’s Brain Research Institute, the brain’s
axons and dendrites (which send and receive messages) grow fastest with
new material. “The important thing is to be actively involved in areas
unfamiliar to you,” say Golden and Tsiaras, in “Building a Better
Brain.” “Anything that is intellectually challenging can probably serve
as a kind of stimulus for dendritic growth, which means it adds to the
computational reserves in your brain.” Sounds to me like building new
hard drive, yes?
MYTH No. 7: Watching the Discovery Channel suffices
for stimulation. REALITY: Dr. Robert Friedland reports that adults over
age 70 with brain-stimulating hobbies were two and a half times less
likely to suffer from the effects of Alzheimer’s later in life than
were those whose main leisure activity was watching TV.MYTH No. 8: In
order to stimulate and grow the brain, you must engage in formal
schooling.REALITY: According to Warner, traditional academic subjects
aren’t the only answer. The key is to find something both new and
challenging to you. “Thus a Latin professor,” writes Warner, “might do
better to learn how to prune fruit trees, line her car’s brakes or even
solve difficult jigsaw puzzles than to write a scholarly essay parsing
Cicero’s rhetoric.”
MYTH No. 9: I can ignore it for a while and it will
still be there when I get back. REALITY: Not! According to neurologist
Oliver Sacks, the brain uses a lot of energy and blood, something we
can’t “afford” to no purpose. If neurons dedicated to perform a given
skill are not being used, they’ll either atrophy or be co-opted to some
other function.
MYTH No. 10: Intellectual stimulation is
enough. REALITY: According to Marion Diamond, aerobic exercise, such as
swimming and jogging, may be especially beneficial to brain function in
aging people, because it tends to keep blood vessels in better shape.
And according to the Salk Institute study, mice that exercised
regularly on a running wheel grew twice as many new brain cells (again,
in the hippocampus) as other mice. So there you have it! Jog on out for
those new toys and new playmates and get a better brain and a better
life! And it’s never too late unless you don’t start now.
Source: http://mezooo-science.blogspot.com/
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