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Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Train Your Mind, Change Your Brain
The following is a quote from neuroscientist Richard Davidson PhD from "Train Your Mind, Change Your Brain by Sharon Begley...
 
"We have no idea how much plasticity there really is in the human brain until we see what intense mental training, not some weekly meditation session, can accomplish.  We've gotten this idea, in Western culture, that we can change our mental status by a once-a-week, forty-five minute intervention, which is completely cockamamny.  Athletes and muscicians train many hours every day.  As a neuroscientist, I have to believe that engaging in compassion meditation every day for an hour each day would change your brain in important ways.  To deny that without testing it, to accept the null hypothesis, is simply bad science."
 
"I believe that neuroplasticity will reshape psychology in the coming years. (Davidson) continued. "Much of psychology had accepted the idea of a fixed program unfolding in the brain, one that strongly shapes behavior, personality, and emotional states.  That view is just shattered by the discoveries of neuroplasticity.  Neuroplasticity will be the counterweight to the determanistic view (that genes have behavior on a short leash).  The message I take from my own work is that I have a choice in how I react, that who I am depends on the choices I make, and that who I am is therefore my responsibility."
 
Richard Davidson, Ph.D University of Wisconsin-Madison
9:58 am est

Saturday, July 21, 2007

Thought for the day...

Death can come at any minute, in any way. We do not know what is in store tomorrow, or, whether there is a tomorrow, or even a tonight! But still, we have the golden present. Now we are alive and kicking. What should we do now? Love all, serve all.

Swami Satchidananda
4:50 am est

Thursday, July 5, 2007

A post from another blogger....

If you want to read more of the blog "The Being Project" click on the title below it will take you to this blogger's site...

How to make work more like camp

Posted: 04 Jul 2007 09:30 AM CDT

camp kidsLast week was my daughter’s first day of camp. At 6:30 in the morning (that’s an hour before she usually wakes up), I awoke to the sounds of Jesse running around he house yelling, “first day of camp, first day of camp, first day of camp, yaaaayyyyyyy!!!”

By 6:35, she was washed up, dressed-up, eaten-up and ready to go. Next big challenge…camp didn’t start until 9:00am.

As I sat there watching her utter joy in the prospect of how she was about to spend her day, I flashed quickly back tto a Sunday night, about 8 years ago. We were renting a little summer cottage by the bay on Long Beach Island with two other couples. As the weekend wound down to it’s inevitable end and everyone began to pack for the drive home, one of the husbands grumbled, “I hate Sunday nights.”

“Why?” I asked, already knowing the answer. “Because, it means tomorrow I go back to work.” And, here’s the funny thing…this particular guy couldn’t even complain about having to work for the man, because the man was him. He had his own law practice, but every day was just another miserable, paycheck earning day.

I never really understood that. You’re the man, you can change anything you want. Do it and stop bitching! Though I’ve now seen the phenomenon so many times since, it makes me wonder whether we all just really like to complain a whole lot more than we’ll fess up to.

The vast majority of grown-ups will never leave a job in the name of creating a more passionate, joyful life.� And, of the precious who do, the vast majority will leave their life-sucking jobs in the name of getting a life, but then, scared of doing something that might really turn them on but require them to step out of their comfort zones a bit more, end up either working back in the same sector, just under another boss or company, or make a slight shift in emphasis, landing them in “Same sucky job different company/boss/location-land.”

And, oh, the travesty of that person who takes the giant step of starting her own business, changing the setting and control, but holding onto the same content of work that’s led to years of dwindling inspiration. If you’re gonna make the jump, put yourself, your time and money at risk, please, at least make te potential rewards in terms of life and job satisfaction potentially huge.

Where am I going with all of this? Simple. I wake up every Monday with the same feeling about work that my daughter has about camp.� Are there cruddy things I sometimes need to do?� Sure.� But, on the whole, I love what I do (though, don’t ask me to define it) so much that I actually look for ways to do it more.� My work is simply an extension and adaptation of my play.

So, my question to you is - what would need to happen for you to get to place where you could wake up on a Monday morning with the same level of excitement to go to work that my daughter has to go to camp? What would need to change?

Think about it, then share your thoughts and questions in the Comment section. I will follow up on this with my own thoughts in my next posts…so stay tuned.

And, have an amazing 4th of July weekend all!

Much love,

Jonathan

8:29 am est

Sunday, July 1, 2007

This is your brain on meditation...
Brain Scans Reveal Why Meditation Works

Melinda Wenner
Special to LiveScience
LiveScience.com
Sat Jun 30, 1:35 PM ET

If you name your emotions, you can tame them, according to new research that suggests why meditation works.

Brain scans show that putting negative emotions into words calms the brain's emotion center. That could explain meditation’s purported emotional benefits, because people who meditate often label their negative emotions in an effort to “let them go.”

Psychologists have long believed that people who talk about their feelings have more control over them, but they don't know why it works.

UCLA psychologist Matthew Lieberman and his colleagues hooked 30 people up to functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) machines, which scan the brain to reveal which parts are active and inactive at any given moment.

They asked the subjects to look at pictures of male or female faces making emotional expressions. Below some of the photos was a choice of words describing the emotion—such as “angry” or “fearful”—or two possible names for the people in the pictures, one male name and one female name.

When presented with these choices, the subjects were asked to pick the most appropriate emotion or gender-appropriate name to fit the face they saw.

When the participants chose labels for the negative emotions, activity in the right ventrolateral prefrontal cortex region—an area associated with thinking in words about emotional experiences—became more active, whereas activity in the amygdala, a brain region involved in emotional processing, was calmed.

By contrast, when the subjects picked appropriate names for the faces, the brain scans revealed none of these changes—indicating that only emotional labeling makes a difference.

“In the same way you hit the brake when you’re driving when you see a yellow light, when you put feelings into words, you seem to be hitting the brakes on your emotional responses,” Lieberman said of his study, which is detailed in the current issue of Psychological Science.

In a second experiment, 27 of the same subjects completed questionnaires to determine how “mindful” they are.

Meditation and other “mindfulness” techniques are designed to help people pay more attention to their present emotions, thoughts and sensations without reacting strongly to them. Meditators often acknowledge and name their negative emotions in order to “let them go.”

When the team compared brain scans from subjects who had more mindful dispositions to those from subjects who were less mindful, they found a stark difference—the mindful subjects experienced greater activation in the right ventrolateral prefrontral cortex and a greater calming effect in the amygdala after labeling their emotions.

“These findings may help explain the beneficial health effects of mindfulness meditation, and suggest, for the first time, an underlying reason why mindfulness meditation programs improve mood and health,” said David Creswell, a UCLA psychologist who led the second part of the study, which will be detailed in Psychosomatic Medicine.

 

12:25 pm est


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