Defy Your Age, Sharpen Your Mind
If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!
When it comes to staying young, a mind-lift beats a face-lift anyday. ~Marty Bucella
Mental and emotional health is extremely important to healthy aging and maintaining your youth. Depression, stress and anxiety can affect your ability to recover from illness. Spiritual, mental and physical aspects of life all influence longevity. Living a healthy lifestyle and learning new things can keep your brain functioning optimally. A healthy mind is part of a healthy body. If you are in a good state of mind you are better able to make the best decisions for yourself about your lifestyle and your health. Longevity depends on a healthy brain and attitude. One of the most important things you can do as you age is to maintain a healthy sharp brain.
There are many things you can do to keep your mind healthy and sharp and in peak condition. Did you know many of these things are also key to maintaining a healthy body as well?
• Reduce the stress in your life. Stress can damage the brain.
Relax, meditate and treat yourself once in a while. Managing
the stress in your life improves your memory, makes you less
sensitive to pain and more able to cope.
• Practice the art of positive thinking. Develop a positive attitude
about yourself and the world around you. To ensure longevity
in the brain keep a positive sense of purpose and a healthy
optimism.
“Cheerfulness and contentment are great beautifiers and are
famous preservers of youthful looks.”
Charles Dickens
• Take time to do the things you enjoy. Pursue leisure activities.
Read books and magazines, take a walk, play golf, knit with a
friend, enjoy a movie together. Leisure activities can reduce the
risk or delay the onset of dementia.
• Stay in touch with family and friends. Staying connected and being active helps us to live longer and retain mental sharpness. Build strong social networks to help the brain tolerate told age. Lonely individuals are twice as likely to develop Alzheimer’s. Volunteer and donate your time to something worthy. It allows you to use your brain and try new things. It is intellectually stimulating and you meet new people.
Several studies have found that people who volunteer live longer than those who do not.
• Get enough sleep. Getting enough sleep increases your
concentration and is critical for memory and information
processing. Sleep is when your brain sharpens new skills and
solves problems.
• If you feel depressed or anxious get help from a professional.
Depression is one of the most common conditions seniors
face.
• Free your mind and body of harmful drugs and alcohol. Stop
smoking and cut down on alcohol consumption.
• Use your mental muscles, working out your brain strengthens
neuronal pathways and builds new ones. Train your brain to
improve memory skills, reasoning and visualization efficiency.
Active learning through out your life will keep your brain
healthy later in years.
• Get regular exercise it is the best way to improve brain health,
improve memory, concentration and abstract thinking. Exercise
increases blood flow to the brain, which nourishes the brain
cells and allows them to function more efficiently. Certain areas
of the brain shrink as we age. Walking can reverse this affect. A
University of Illinois study of adults ages 60-80 revealed that
walker’s brains looked 2-3 years younger than others their
age. Walk everyday!
• Eat nutritiously to decrease the risk of Alzheimer’s and age-
related cognitive decline. Remember what you eat can affect how you think.
A man is not old as long as he is seeking something. ~Jean
Rostand
Some of the myths about aging and the brain are just not true. We can all acquire new knowledge, sharpen our skills and learn new tricks no matter what our age. Learning new things can help maintain mental functions and sharpen your mind. Researchers have learned that our older brains are quite capable of learning new things. We continue to learn as we age and we gain wisdom. Older people learn things just as well as younger people. It may take a bit more time or effort but, yes, you can teach “an old dog new tricks”.
Do a crossword puzzle, Play a game, take on a new hobby, study a language, take a college course about a passion of yours, learn a new sport, learn how to play an instrument, take dancing lessons or cozy up with a good book. Reading keeps your mind sharp for life and provides an intellectual boost, especially when reading great literature. Research believes that people who read develop a brainpower reservoir that may lessen the risk of dementia.
All of these new experiences help stimulate the area of the brain that produces dopamine. Dopamine is a chemical involved in memory and learning. Learning and doing new things builds brain mass and increases your mental agility. Don’t be afraid of challenging and expanding your horizons with fresh and new
activities. You do not have to excel in your new pursuits to reap the many benefits.
I still have a full deck; I just shuffle slower now. ~Author
Unknown
Contrary to popular belief the brain does not lose brain cells everyday, rather it grows new brain cells and reshapes itself through the experiences you encounter and the learning you do. As you challenge your brain, new brain cells sprout and the brain carves a new neural pathway keeping the brain vital and sharp. When stimulated by new activities the brain is capable of regeneration.
One of the major keys to defying your age is staying mentally active and sharpening your brain. Get out there and train your brain for longevity. You will be glad you did and smarter for it!
First you are young; then you are middle-aged; then you are old; then you are wonderful. Norman Vincent Peale
Be Wonderful Everyone! Happy Anti-aging!
Chuck and Gayle
Leave a Comment
If you would like to make a comment, please fill out the form below.
Hi there and welcome to our blog. Chuck’s background is from the music field and mine was in education. Chuck and I are both retired now and living our best healthy lifestyle.
Contact us at: chuga3140@gmail.com
Thought you would be interested in this short omega-3 video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eIgNpsbvcVM
How right!
Great post. We’re only just finding out how flexible and regenerative the adult brain can be.
Readers might be interested in Susanne Jaeggi and Martin Buschkuehl’s study on Improving Fluid Intelligence by Training Working Memory (PNAS April 2008) which recorded increases in mental agility (fluid intelligence) of more than 40% after 19 days of focused brain training.
I was so impressed that I contacted the research team and developed a software program using the same method so that anyone can achieve these improvements.
Martin Walker
http://www.mindsparke.com
Brain Fitness Software