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Coach and coax your brain to create new habits: Lay down some new tracks

Traintracks Want to make some changes in your life? Is there something you want to quit doing? Or start doing? If yes, then please read one of the articles I have written with Jeffrey Schwartz to which I have linked and from which I have taken excerpts below.

I was pleased to see an article in Sunday's New York Times in which was a discussion about self-directed neuroplasticity (changing your brain on purpose). The article's author Janet Rae-Dupree did not use the phrase "self-directed neuroplasticity but nevertheless described it.

HABITS are a funny thing. We reach for them mindlessly, setting our brains on auto-pilot and relaxing into the unconscious comfort of familiar routine. “Not choice, but habit rules the unreflecting herd,” William Wordsworth said in the 19th century. In the ever-changing 21st century, even the word “habit” carries a negative connotation.

So it seems antithetical to talk about habits in the same context as creativity and innovation. But brain researchers have discovered that when we consciously develop new habits, we create parallel synaptic paths, and even entirely new brain cells, that can jump our trains of thought onto new, innovative tracks.

Rather than dismissing ourselves as unchangeable creatures of habit, we can instead direct our own change by consciously developing new habits. In fact, the more new things we try — the more we step outside our comfort zone — the more inherently creative we become, both in the workplace and in our personal lives.

Click to read the rest of "Can You Become a Creature of New Habits?"

Here are more tips on changing your brain from two of our articles.

From "Brain Management . . . Law Firm Leadership on the Neuro Frontier" (Of Counsel):

Let’s say that you have decided to listen more to your prospective clients, clients, partners, associates, or staff. Perhaps you have heard, as a result of some business development or management or mentoring training program, all about the benefits of being a good listener. But as you begin a conversation, you feel the need to talk, even pontificate.

Now, you confront the moment of choice. That moment of choice holds the gold in self-directed neuroplasticity, in controlling the rewiring of your brain. You can choose to talk. If you are accustomed to being more of a talker than a listener, your brain will call to you to follow the old neuron connections, the old and well-worn synapses. These old synapses are habitual and the most comfortable for you. The old paths fit like a pair of used, comfortable slippers or jeans. They are seductive and part of the familiar you.

Or you can choose to listen. If you experience the powerful urge to open your mouth and talk, you are going to need to begin to develop some new brain grooves, some new synapses. Not as easy as going with the old ruts and grooves, but it is doable and the good news is that it gets easier and easier. Each time you choose to listen instead of talk, you will be developing and strengthening new neuron connections, new listening synapses.

The more you choose to listen, the stronger those paths will grow. After a while, listening will feel old slipper comfortable, too. Then, when an interaction occurs, you will have the choice of which brain path to follow depending upon which is appropriate to the situation. In any event, you won’t simply be governed by an old habit.

From "Exercise Mind Hygiene On A Daily Basis" (The Complete Lawyer):

...Golden Moments of Choice are possible because your brain is always changing (that's called neuroplasticity). The changes are either by default as it interacts with

Continue reading "Coach and coax your brain to create new habits: Lay down some new tracks" »

A month of playful picks from YouTube

1553498547_33218baa53_m Need some play in your day? Spirituality & Practice has created a Play Month. For each day of April, they have chosen a YouTube video selected especially for its playfulness. Play selections are mainly songs from the 50s: "Purple People Eater," "YMCA," "Dizzy," "Great Balls of Fire," "Splish Splash," "Louie Louie" and more. Do not miss "The Lion Sleeps Tonight"! Click on over; I bet at least a couple will make you smile, if not stand up and dance. Hey, play!

It is a happy talent to know how to play.
- Ralph Waldo Emerson

I count that day lost when I am not moved to laughter or tears, but even more if I have not played.
- George Sheehan

Image credit: Piney at flickr

12 ways to get smarter

Wired_logo From Wired: "Get Smarter: 12 Hacks That Will Amp Up Your Brainpower." Here are a few of the tips. Take a look at all 12 by clicking over to the article.

1) Max Your Mind's Performance by Distracting Yourself
Excerpt:

Desperate to memorize a crucial fact?. . .The trick is to distract yourself by studying stuff that's slightly different from whatever you're trying to learn. Your brain will then work harder to permanently store the original information.

4) Think Positive, and You Will Get Smarter
Excerpt:

Learning new things actually strengthens your brain — especially when you believe you can learn new things. It's a virtuous circle: When you think you're getting smarter, you study harder, making more nerve-cell connections, which in turn makes you ... smarter. This effect shows up consistently among experimental subjects, from seventh graders to college students to businesspeople.

7) Thalamus, Cortex, Amygdala ... Pick Apart the Brain
Clever graphic to help you learn about the parts of your brain and their functions

8) Embracing Chaos Could Bring Order to Your Memory
Excerpt:

One way to learn Better: Mix yourself up. That's advice from Robert Bjork, chair of UCLA's psychology department and a leading expert in memory and learning. Volunteers in his experiments exhibited superior recall when they learned information in randomly ordered chunks.

11) Up Your Intelligence by Choosing Your Exercise Wisely
Excerpt:

Can exercise make you think better? In some cases, yes. Here's what works best.

Preventing neuroboomeritis: A trip to the brain gym might be one method

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San Francisco has a new "health club for your brain" called vibrantBrains™  From Brain Reserves:

vibrantBrains, a gym to exercise our brains, has recently opened in San Francisco. We all buy into the health club idea for our bodies so why not one to tone our brains, too? The vibrantBrains folks have created a pleasant, bright space on Sacramento Street, close to cafes, shops, and residential areas. They have the front of the club filled with interesting books, including some bestsellers, by scientists and others on various aspects of brain research and how the brain works; the middle part of the club is filled with state-of-the-art computers with headphones nearby. A lounge area with comfy chairs and tea, coffee, and water always available fills the floor-to-ceiling windowed alcove at the back of the club and is a great place to chat with other members. They have developed Neurobics Circuit Training, which incorporates a number of scientifically based software programs that enable a club member to work on different skills for each visit or a variety of skills within a workout and at a huge discount over trying to find and purchase these programs individually.

. . .

The vibrantBrains innovative founders, Jan Zivic and Lisa Schoonerman, may just have latched onto a trend that Boomers and others must incorporate into our lives to keep that notion that "60 is the new 40" alive and well. And just to enjoy our lives more. They will also offer a speaker series soon as well as book clubs and other related activies.

Fun idea. Although there are ways to maintain cognitive fitness which are easier and require no financial expenditure, going to the brain gym might be a good fit for those who find that the trip increases commitment and discipline. And I can see that a group of people with similar goals and interests might, with the help of the gym, develop into a like-minded (and like-brained) community. Community can be a good source of support and inspiration. Anything that furthers the prevention of neuroboomeritis has my vote.

For those of you in the Bay Area, you may want to attend the gym's Speaker Series. Some knowledgeable people will be presenting.

Note (added 7:05 PM Mountain): For the aging body: British playground for kids over 60.

Note (added April 23, 2008, 7:14 PM Mountain): From Springwise ("your daily fix of entrepreneurial ideas"): Brain gyms for boomers.

Upcoming in Denver—"Brains On Purpose™: Change Your Mind, Change Your Brain"

I will be giving a course "Brains On Purpose™: Change Your Mind, Change Your Brain" here in Denver in February and again in April.

The dates are:

Tuesday, February 5 and 12, 2008, 6-8:15 PM

Or

Wednesday, April 9 and 16, 2008, 6-8:15 PM

Click here for all the other details.

Please feel free to pass the word along to any of your friends or colleagues in the Rocky Mountain region. Thanks.

Preventing the ghouling of the bar: Painting the aging with a positive brush

Songanddance The graying of the bar has enjoyed the spotlight lately. With the aging of the Baby Boomers, the number of older people, including older lawyers, is growing. In our culture, many images of older people are not positive. At the Center on Aging, Health & Humanities at George Washington University, these negative ideas about the oldest amongst us and the origins of these ideas are a focus. From the Center's Web site:

Gene D. Cohen, M.D., Ph.D., Director of the Center on Aging, Health & Humanities at The George Washington University postulated that a major factor contributing to children’s negative attitudes about aging is that the earliest literature in the form of fairy tales that the youngest of children are introduced to typically portray older people as wicked, weird, or weak—conveying very negative images of aging.

Consider Cinderella’s malevolent step mother, the evil old witch in Hansel and Gretel, the scheming Rumpelstiltskin, and the child abusing old lady who lived in a shoe as but a few examples.

In conjunction with the Association for Library Service to Children (ALSC), the Center prepared a list ofWilfrid_cover_2 91 children's books (PDF) "presenting aging realistically and positively for children from Pre-K through Grade 6."

Many of these books look like they would be fun reads, even for adults (especially those feeling their age). Don't some of these synopses make you smile?

  • SONG AND DANCE MAN—Three children spend the day in their grandfather’s attic, enjoying his tap dancing and memories of vaudeville.
  • THE GAWGON AND THE BOY—When eleven-year-old David is too ill to attend school, he is tutored by his Aunt Annie who changes his life with her unorthodox style.
  • GRANNY THE PAG—Catriona lives with her loving but unorthodox Harley-Davidson riding Granny.
  • VERDI—Verdi, a python, discovers that no matter how old or green he becomes, he is still his fun loving self.
  • WILFRID GORDON MCDONALD PARTRIDGE—When his parents tell him his friend, Miss Nancy, has lost her memories, Wilfrid sets out to find them for her.
  • EMMA—A 72-year-old woman discovers her artistic talent after receiving a birthday gift.
  • SEA SWAN—At the age of 75, a very proper Boston lady decides that she will learn how to swim!
  • MEET MY GRANDMOTHER. SHE'S A SUPREME COURT JUSTICE—The life of the first woman Supreme Court justice, Sandra Day O’Connor, as seen through the eyes of her granddaughter.
  • EVERYONE KNOWS WHAT A DRAGON LOOKS LIKE—When a small, fat and bald old man announces he is a dragon, offering to defend the city of Wu against impending attack, everyone laughs at him but one young boy.
  • OLD BEAVER—As Young Beaver comes to the pond, Old Beaver feels unwanted until he learns that there’s still quite a bit of help he can give the other animals.

Do you have any books to add?

PBS program to get your lawyer brain in shape (maybe lessen neuroboomeritis, too)

PBS is offering "The Brain Fitness Program" this week. In my part of the world, it was on this morning at 5 AM, will play again tomorrow morning at 4:30 AM, and will air Tuesday morning at 3:30 AM. I think some of us here will want to tape it rather than watching it at dawn or in the middle of the night. Click here for a three-minute preview. Or here. Or here.

I have posted about neuroboomeritis here before. An excerpt:

Just as baby boomers can get boomeritis in their bodies, they can get neuroboomeritis in their brains. In order to prevent these conditions, people need to stretch their bodies and brains.

This PBS program probably is one way to address neuroboomeritis. Will you be watching and stretching?

From the PBS Web sites:

This program presents a workout to help viewers get their brains in better shape. The Brain Fitness Program is based on neuro-plasticity, the ability of the brain to change and adapt - even rewire itself. In the past two years, a team of scientists has developed computer-based stimulus sets that drive beneficial chemical, physical and functional changes in the brain. Dr. Michael Merzenich of the University of California San Francisco and his colleagues around the world have been leading this effort; he brings the research findings, along with a scientifically based set of brain exercises, to PBS viewers in this innovative and life-altering program. Peter Coyote narrates.

(Check for your local air times.)

Hat tip to Alvaro Fernandez at SharpBrains.

Who are you calling old? With 104 being the new 80, graying doesn't lead to grazing in some pasture

Douseetheoldwoman Photo credit below

The Rocky Mountain News this weekend reminded me that, these days, the retirement age of 65 may seem both old-fashioned and silly. 70 is the new 50 is a concept with merit. In "Working over time" we read . .

About 6.4 percent of Americans 75 and older, or slightly more than 1 million, went to work last year. That's up from 4.7 percent,or 634,000, a decade earlier, according to the U.S. Departmentof Labor.

I am betting those numbers will continue to rise in the workforce—and in the legal profession. The article carries the stories of people in their 70s, 80s, and a man in his 90s who are still working. One was 89-year-old lawyer Brooke Wunnicke of Hall & Evans. Included in the article were these words . . .

In our search to find seven individuals for our Labor Day package, we asked readers to submit names of workers 75 and older. The responses poured in, giving us fits trying to pick several to focus on.

The times, they are a-changin'. Several factors will affect (and effect) the change. Boomers will recreate retirement just as they have changed so much else.  From "As baby boomers age, they retool retirement" . . .

Continue reading "Who are you calling old? With 104 being the new 80, graying doesn't lead to grazing in some pasture" »

Blog Glob: Monday morning shorts

Excerpt from California Bar Adopts Voluntary Lawyer Civility Guidelines for Lawyers . . .

Last year, JD Bliss reported on an initiative in the California Bar to promote civility among lawyers. We promised to keep you posted on the initiative's progress, and we're happy to report that the State Bar of California has adopted a voluntary set of guidelines for lawyers to conduct themselves more civilly.

The attorney civility guidelines (PDF document) address eight areas of concern: . . .

Excerpt from "Canada’s chief justice defends embattled lawyers" . . .

“I don’t think name calling and exaggeration helps,” [Chief Justice Beverley] McLachlin told reporters at an annual press conference at a gathering of Canadian lawyers. “We should recognize there are hundreds of thousands who work for relatively low salaries and lawyers have always been concerned to provide access to justice.”

Excerpt from "Law out of reach" . . .

It is not that there is any shortage of lawyers; it is simply that a growing section of the population cannot afford to hire one for anything but the most basic legal services because legal fees are so high.

Excerpt from Blawg Review #121 . . .

And that’s when it hit me - like a ton of bricks, the cosmic 2′ by 4′ upside the head. The theme is that there is no theme. We’re back to basics, folks, with this, the theme-free Blawg Review.

Excerpt from What's it all about? . . .

[S]cience tells us, with increasing power and efficiency, how to use the resources of our marvelously plastic brain to overcome developmental impairments or adult-acquired losses, through driving the brain via intensive training, in functionally prophylactic, correcting and rejuvenating directions.

Excerpt from Is Solo Lawyering a "Trend?" My Friday Funny. . . .

Continue reading "Blog Glob: Monday morning shorts" »

Interview of Marco Martinez who does stress-reduction and health-support work in law firms

From Legal profession most stressful in City: The Priory (in TheLawyer.com) . . .

The law is one of the most stressful professions in the City and clients are largely to blame, according to Marco Martinez, business development director of corporate services at The Priory.

Reflecting on his experience as a banker, Martinez said the legal profession was arguably more stressful. “It wouldn’t be uncommon for us to be sleeping at a lawyer’s offices over the weekend with a sleeping bag on the floor waiting for a deal to sign off,” he said.

“There aren’t too many other industries that I know where you have that kind of stress over, say, a weekend period and it is client led. It’s the old adage that when a client says jump you usually say how high.”

Listen to the interview of Martinez. His interview begins a little over halfway into the program. In the interview, Martinez includes a description of the telltale signs of stress.

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