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Showing posts with label rest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rest. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 7, 2015

Sleep and revitalizing the Brain

Sleep is essential not alone for the body in general but for resting and revitalizing the brain in particular. Good sleeping habits (page 94) are well worth developing. Both overstimulation of the brain through excessive use of caffeine in coffee, tea, and soft drinks and depression of the brain through frequent use of sedatives such as barbiturates and bromides are best avoided. 

The brain works most effectively when freed from anxieties and mental conflicts. We suggest that a reading of the next section of this book, Preventive Mental Care, may provide you with insights you will find useful in keeping your psyche-the functional part of the brain-in the best possible condition.
Are special "brain foods" and "brain tonics" necessary? Not at all. As it will for all the rest of the body, a well-balanced and varied diet will ; 

The Brain and Nervous System / 241 provide the brain with all the nourishment it requires. Fish, a good food, is not any better for the brain, despite its reputation for being so, than any other protein food. There is no magical brain food. It bears emphasizing that the mind reacts to distress elsewhere in the body. Headaches, dizziness, fainting, impairment of memory, and other "brain" symptoms may, of course, stem from disturbances in and around the brain (for example, sinusitis or tumor).

 But they can also be the results of, for example, the circulation of poisons because of failure of damaged kidneys to remove toxic materials from the blood. In short, brain symptoms call for a complete medical checkup. Can the effects of aging on the brain be prevented? Some of the most harmful effects of hardening of the arteries can be prevented or considerably diminished by following the suggestions given in the sections of this book devoted to nutrition, obesity, high blood pressure, and aging. 

There is every reason to be optimistic about your brain function as you get on in years. You may recall that Michelangelo produced some of the greatest art of all time when he was more than 80 years old, and Arturo Toscanini at 87 directed symphonies without reference to musical scores. Many people in everyday life continue to have alert, active brains long beyond the age of 70.


Actually, a study made for the Office of Naval Research indicates that, contrary to what has been commonly thought, mentalability does not invariably decline with age but may, in fact, be greater at and after 50 than at 20. The ONR study avoided a pitfall of other studies in the past. In the latter, the same tests were given to various age groups, and the results suggested that a peak of intelligence comes at 20 and thereafter declines. 

But such studies, many scientists have thought, were faulty. In recent years, young people have been receiving more and more formal education, and it has been demonstrated that generally the more formal education, the higher the Score on mental tests. Therefore, older people, generally had had less formal education, were handicapped in test competition with younger ones.

 In the ONR study, 127 men who had taken the Army Alpha Examination upon entering Iowa State College after World War I were retested 30 years later. They were competing against their younger selves. The results showed them to be intellectually more able at mean age 50 than they had been at mean age 19 when they had been college freshmen

Monday, December 8, 2014

Importance of rest and relaxation

A better understanding of the importance of rest and relaxation has been made possible by advances in neurophysiology providing new in- sights into what happens in the central nervous system. Investigators have been able to establish-by actually picking out the structures in animals and stimulating them with electric currents-that there are structures which have a damping or inhibitory effect and are in fatigue, and there are other structures which make up a system. 

If we sum up the vast amount of Neuro-physiological research, we fit this picture: An individual's mood-his ability to perform-at the given time depends on the degree of activity of the two systems. Inhibitory system dominates, the individual is in a state of fatigue; in the activating system dominates; he is ready to step up performance. This concept of fatigue helps to explain many symptoms otherwise difficult to understand.

All of us know, for example, that a feeling of tiredness can often disappear immediately if something unexpected happens or if a piece of intelligence or train of thought produces an emotional change. In such cases, the activating system is being stimulated. But if the surroundings are monotonous, if we are bored by what we are doing, the pitch of the activating system is lowered and the inhibitory system is in the ascendancy. 

And it is this that explains the fatigue that ran occurs in monotonous situations even when there is no stress. Monotony, by definition, is a wearisome sameness, a lack of change in the variety. And whatever the work we do, it can be considered monotonous work if it goes on without pause or change of pace.


We all are aware of the need for a good night's sleep, but too few of us recognize the need for rest and relaxation during the day. Many of us businessmen, professional people, and others-who not only work hard but are under heavy stress could live more comfortably without sacrificing efficiency-indeed, with increased efficiency-and probably live longer if we managed to take breaks during the day and take them without guilty consciences.