Skip to main content

Brain Myths

"Five myths in particular have proved limiting, and obstructive to change.  All were once accepted as fact, even a decade or two ago.
[Myth 1:] "The injured brain cannot heal itself.  Now we know that the brain has amazing powers of healing unsuspected in the past.
[Myth 2:] "The brain's hardwiring cannot be changed.  In fact, the line between hard and soft wiring is shifting all the time, and our ability to rewire our brains remains intact from birth to the end of life.
[Myth 3:] "Aging in the brain is inevitable and irreversible.  To counter this outmoded belief, new techniques for keeping the brain youthful and retaining mental acuity are arising every day.
[Myth 4:] "The brain loses millions of cells a day, and lost brain cells cannot be replaced.  In fact the brain contains stem cells that are capable of maturing into new brain cells throughout life.  How we lose or gain brain cells is a complex issue.  Most of the findings are good news for everyone who is afraid of losing mental capacity as they age.
[Myth 5:] "Primitive reactions (fear, anger, jealousy, aggression) overrule the higher brain.  Because our brains are imprinted with genetic memory over thousands of generations, the lower brain is still with us, generating primitive and often negative drives like fear and anger.  But the brain is constantly evolving, and we have gained the ability to master the lower brain through choice and free will.  The new field of positive psychology is teaching us how best to use free will to promote happiness and overcome negativity.
"It's good news that these five myths have been exploded.  The old view made the brain seem fixed, mechanical, and steadily deteriorating.  This turns out to be far from the case.  You are creating reality at this very minute, and if that process remains alive and dynamic, your brain will be able to keep up with it, year after year." - Deepak Chopra, M.D. and Rudolph E. Tanzi, Ph.D. in Super Brain

It is encouraging and enlightening that the brain's old myths are not true.  It is easy now to be an optimist about how our brains can change for the better.

Renee Madison, MA, LPC, CSAT is a counselor in Colorado.  She can be reached for appointments at 303-257-7623 or 970-324-6928.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Accepting a compliment

"Nearly everyone who is asked, 'What is the proper response to a compliment?' replies, 'Say 'thank you.''  But when actually offered a compliment, only a third of people accept it so simply and smoothly, found linguist Robert Herbert of Binghamton University. "The difficulty lies in the fact that a compliment ('What a nice sweater!') has two levels: a gift component (accept or reject) and a content component (agree or disagree).  The addressee is confronted with a  dilemma--how to respond simultaneously to both: 'I must agree with the speaker and thank him for the gift of a compliment while avoiding self-praise.' "Contrary to conventional wisdom, women aren't worse than men at accepting compliments.  It is the gender of the compliment-giver that most influences the response.  Women and men are both more likely to accept a compliment coming from a man than from a woman.  When a man says, 'Nice scarf," a...

Drug use and crime in USA

"Gil Kerlikoske, the White House director of national drug control policy, said a study by his office showed a strong link between drug use and crime.  Eighty percent of the adult males arrested for crimes in Sacramento, California, last year tested positive for at least one illegal drug.  Marijuana was the most commonly detected drug, found in 54 percent of those arrested. "The study found similar results in four other cities: New York, Denver, Atlanta and Chicago.  Among the cities, it included examinations of 1,736 urine samples and 1,938 interviews with men who were arrested.  "Researches found that marijuana was the most popular drug used by men who'd been arrested in all the cities, ranging from a low of 37 percent in Atlanta to a high of 58 percent in Chicago.  Chicago also had the highest overall positive test results, with 86 percent of the men found to have at least one drug in their bloodstreams. "Cocaine ranked as the second most ...

Couple Therapy

"What I learned confirmed Bowlby's message that patterns of relating created by attachment, separation, and loss during the first few years of life become fixed and impact all future relationships.  It also confirmed that couples' narratives (i.e. their presenting problems) are the logical products of the cortex playing catch-up with the emotional part of the brain.  The limbic system reacts almost instantaneously.  This understanding supports the view that couple therapy should concentrate not on the espoused content of the partners' conflict but rather on their underlying core dynamics. "Dr Walter Bracelmanns, who was developing his own integration of couple therapy.  I thank him for the support that he gave to the new idea that the focus of the work is the relationship, not the growth of the individual self of each partner." - Marion Solomon in Love and War in Intimate Relationships Couple therapy theories vary greatly.  So many different t...