Articles

Intro Text

Click on the below links to read the Articles:

Will Your Brain to Work Smarter and Faster

Plain Content

Researchers at the University of Wisconsin working with Tibetan monks have been able to translate what mental experiences actually rewire the brain for better coordination, heightened awareness and quicker access to stored information. The studies have been held at the W. M. Keck Laboratory for Functional Brain Imaging and Behavior, led by neuroscientist Richard Davidson.

Working with the monks since 1992, Davidson team has found which thoughts and emotions produce the greatest effect. They report that choosing your specific thoughts and emotions can permanently change the working of the brain.

Using electroencephalograph testing and brain scanning, Davidson’s team found that certain types of meditation increase the activity of the pre-frontal cortex, increasing mental activity and the ability to perform without increasing adrenalin and stress. The greatest bursts of activity occur when the monks focus on positive thoughts and emotions.

In fact, the brain impulses were the strongest in both monks and volunteers when they focused on unconditional compassion. The Dalai Lama’s teachings describe this state as the “unrestricted readiness and availability to help living beings.” The focus does not have to be on particular objects, memories or images. Participants practiced feeling love and compassion. When they did, their brains went into action, connecting and building new circuitry at high speed.

The increase of gamma waves, the highest-frequency and most important of electrical impulses, was found in all participants regardless of prior mental training. When shifting into feeling happy and loving, brain activity increases. However, the greatest effects are seen in the trained minds of the monks, and those who have been practicing this “emotional meditation” over time.

The monks who had spent the most years meditating stimulated the highest levels of gamma waves when meditating. “What we found is that the trained mind, or brain, is physically different from the untrained one,” Davidson said. Yet lesser but significant results were found when testing volunteers who had no practice with meditation.

Previously, most studies on increasing mental acuity and physical performance focused on either changing thought patterns or clearing the mind of all thought when doing a task or sport. Davidson has found that adding in the emotional element to our mental practice is the key to increasing the gamma waves.

Therefore, even spending ten minutes a day focusing on feeling loving and kind can make your smarter.

These studies also prove that mental connections are not fixed at any stage of life. With the help in advances in brain imaging, scientists have embraced the concept of ongoing brain development and “neuroplasticity.”

Therefore, changing the way we think and behave is a matter of will. We can no longer say that we “can’t” change our habits, temperaments and possibly, our personalities. The brain is capable of being trained and physically modified in ways few people can imagine. The work has just begun.

However, the key word is “discipline.” Mental discipline means first, being aware of our thoughts, and even more importantly, our emotions. Then we must engage in the daily practice of shifting our emotional states and keeping our emotions intact for as long a period of time as we can. I suggest you choose your emotional state at least three times a day: when you get up to set the tone of your day, at mid-day to reset your state, then before you go to sleep to make sure you rest with peace of mind. Choose to feel happy, grateful, kindhearted, appreciative, affectionate, amazed, and even amused.

Do you want to be smarter? Then you must commit to choosing your emotions and thoughts. With practice, the new circuitry will create the new mental habits that will actively change your life.

End of Article

Marcia Reynolds, author of Capture the Rapture: How to Step Out of Your Head and Leap Into Life and her latest, How to Outsmart Your Brain, is the president of Covisioning, a coaching and training company focused on helping people and organizations access emotional intelligence and courage to reach their visions. You can read more about Marcia and her work at this website, www.outsmartyourbrain.com. Find out more about Marcia.

Website by CraftySpace