Feel Like Crap Working Out That Problem Now, Maybe Keep That Brain Of Yours Kicky In Old Age
Good news for people like me who spend all day beating on their brain and making it feel like crap. (In my science/humor writing, I get to the point where there's actually a physical ache, and then I go take a 10-minute nap, make more coffee, do 10 situps and 10 Marine-style pushups, in hopes of getting my brainshit right again.)
Well Northwestern U psych prof Lisa Feldman Barrett has a piece in the NYT Opinion section about how to become a "Superager" -- meaning that you stay mentally vital in old age.
Of course, the big question is: How do you become a superager? Which activities, if any, will increase your chances of remaining mentally sharp into old age? We're still studying this question, but our best answer at the moment is: work hard at something. Many labs have observed that these critical brain regions increase in activity when people perform difficult tasks, whether the effort is physical or mental. You can therefore help keep these regions thick and healthy through vigorous exercise and bouts of strenuous mental effort. My father-in-law, for example, swims every day and plays tournament bridge.The road to superaging is difficult, though, because these brain regions have another intriguing property: When they increase in activity, you tend to feel pretty bad -- tired, stymied, frustrated. Think about the last time you grappled with a math problem or pushed yourself to your physical limits. Hard work makes you feel bad in the moment. The Marine Corps has a motto that embodies this principle: "Pain is weakness leaving the body." That is, the discomfort of exertion means you're building muscle and discipline. Superagers are like Marines: They excel at pushing past the temporary unpleasantness of intense effort. Studies suggest that the result is a more youthful brain that helps maintain a sharper memory and a greater ability to pay attention.
This means that pleasant puzzles like Sudoku are not enough to provide the benefits of superaging. Neither are the popular diversions of various "brain game" websites. You must expend enough effort that you feel some "yuck." Do it till it hurts, and then a bit more.
In the United States, we are obsessed with happiness. But as people get older, research shows, they cultivate happiness by avoiding unpleasant situations. This is sometimes a good idea, as when you avoid a rude neighbor. But if people consistently sidestep the discomfort of mental effort or physical exertion, this restraint can be detrimental to the brain. All brain tissue gets thinner from disuse. If you don't use it, you lose it.







I think Use it or Lose it has been known for some time now.
Momof4 at April 9, 2017 9:49 PM
I think this nuance is important. (Hi, Momof4!)
As she notes, people typically think you can do sudoku and other mental games and exercises to give your brain a workout. However, for a meaningful one, you apparently have to beat on the thing. Cognitively, anyway.
Amy Alkon at April 9, 2017 9:57 PM
> then I go take a 10-minute nap, make more coffee,
Try doing that in the other order, supposed it takes caffeine about 20 minutes to kick in, so the cup of coffee + short nap is supposed to be "the power nap".
It works for me, about five or six times a day.
To keep my brain alive, I typically solve the world's problems, document my solutions at various websites, and then enjoy a deeply sardonic sigh when I see in the comments the blind refuse to acknowledge the light.
jerry at April 9, 2017 10:41 PM
Thanks, but I sometimes nap for longer, and the coffee routine comes with pushups and situps that are energizing. Coffee does not come without situps/pushups.
Amy Alkon at April 10, 2017 5:19 AM
Great point, Amy. Crossword puzzles, Sudoku and the like are calisthenics for the brain - kind of a warm-up. But, as with the body, real training and conditioning of the mind requires hard, sustained effort over time.
Much as I'd like to slough off, I try to make at least half of my recreational reading the real, historical/analytical/political/scientific kind, lest a steady diet of (even well-written) detective novels leave me unable to think.
Grey Ghost at April 10, 2017 6:02 AM
Piano lessons. Including theory.
Another Amy at April 10, 2017 6:13 AM
> Thanks, but I sometimes nap for longer, and the coffee routine comes with pushups and situps that are energizing. Coffee does not come without situps/pushups.
Yeah, there are definitely days that instead of the "power nap", I think going outside and getting active in some fresh air would be much more refreshing.
jerry at April 10, 2017 8:42 AM
Skills aren't necessarily transferable from one activity to another. Playing sudoku all day makes you good a sudoku. Playing piano makes you good at playing the piano. But sudoku practice won't make you a master pianist.
Ben at April 10, 2017 2:59 PM
Thanks so much for mentioning my research on superagers! I invite your readers to visit my website, LisaFeldmanBarrett.com, for lots more information on the brain, emotion, health, and the occasional bad joke. I've also just published a book, How Emotions are Made: The Secret Life of the Brain, that explains what those superager-related brain regions do in their spare time, as well as tips for mastering your emotions, the relationship between emotion & disease, and the science of whether your pets experience emotion.
Lisa Feldman Barrett at April 15, 2017 11:43 AM
Leave a comment