You can rewire an aging brain

There are 350 million “microcomputers” in your brain. And they are all sending clear messaging, according to Dr. Michael Merzenich in the book “Soft-Wired: How the New Science of Brain Plasticity Can Change Your Life.”

 

Slowing down at 60

 

It says that around the age of 60, the human brain starts to shrink slowly in volume. The changes directly affect the cerebral cortex of the brain. This is where a great concentration of nerve cells are found; the cells are responsible for higher brain function like movement and mental operations. These include social behavior, memory, thought, navigation and attention.

 

Age shrinks the white matter of the brain called the hippocampus, which plays an important role in way-finding, long-term memory and other complex mental activities.

 

Other important functions affected are language skills and learning.

 

One might ask, “Which other regions of the brain are affected negatively by age? The answer is an unwelcome one: almost all of it.

 

But while the brain has the capacity to replace dying nerve cells, their slow but progressive demise outweighs their potential replacement rate. While many nerve cells survive, their interconnections become simplified.

 

The young brain is likened to a big tree filled with mature and young branches. The aging brain is also like a big tree, but minus the smaller branches.

 

To summarize, while the concern is brain shrinkage, the more serious matter is the simplification of the interconnection between the nerve cells.

 

The brain’s machinery

 

What actually happens inside the aging brain?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Brain HQ

 

Through Brain HQ, a brain training program introduces a specific set of exercises which provides a remarkable impact on brain health.

 

Through a web-delivered training program of exercises, much like home-schooling, the brain is able to reach a level of fitness. This brain activity promises vim and vigor, to say the least.

 

Through various levels, one advances in skills. The result is a well-trained and youthful brain.(For more details, log on to www.soft-wired.com.)

 

This week’s affirmation: “I think young, I become young.”

 

Love and light!

 

E-mail the author at coryquirino1@yahoo.com

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