balance, the entire structure stands strong and stable, even when being battered by the storms of stimuli that assail us in modern life.
A NEW APPROACH TO NEUROSCIENCE AND MENTAL HEALTH?
A provocative new way of thinking about neuroscience and mental health comes from the folks at the National Institute of Mental Health, who suggest that many cognitive, emotional and behavioral problemsâe.g., ADHD, depression, anxiety disordersâcan be thought of as problems in the brainâs circuitry, problems that may have existed and been ignored for years. If we can identify them early, we may be able to intervene in very specific ways to prevent and even reverse the problem; much the way a physician will prescribe a low-fat diet and exercise to a patient with slightly elevated cholesterol which, if left on its own, can lead to very serious heart and blood vessel problems or failure.
As neuroscience shows us the intricate details of these circuits, we see the brainâs checks and balances in action. One example of particular importance at the âmacroâ circuit level can be seen in the brainâs balance of emotions and cognitions. Remember the brain-imaging study that we mentioned in the introduction, the one where subjects viewed pleasant, unpleasant and neutral pictures while attempting to keep in check their emotional reactions? Through the use of imaging techniques, researchers at the University of Colorado were able to observe the âthinkingâ-brain regions of these subjects (including areas called the prefrontal cortex and the anterior cingulate cortex) actually regulating the emotion-generating regions. If you can manage your emotions, harmonize andfocus the various âthinkingâ parts of your brain, then a whole new world opens up before you. Youâve got a more organized, less stressful, more productive and, in many ways, more rewarding lifeânot to mention one where you can always find your car keys.
Yes, this is the good news about your brain. While you may be disorganized, your brain isnât. Inherently, itâs a jewel of organization and structure, of different components working harmoniously together. And hereâs the exciting partâthe features in this magnificent self-regulation system that come âpre-loadedâ in every functioning human mind can be accessed, initialized and used to become better organized and to feel more on top of things.
You just have to know how to do it.
That is the purpose of this book: to help you do for yourself what I did for Jill; to help you understand just what your brain can do to help maintain order and to keep you focused and then to show you how you can do that for yourself. Weâll talk big picture and sharp-focus details. Weâll talk about day-to-day details, but weâll also talk about life in general. Weâll talk descriptive and prescriptive. Weâll talk âneuroscienceââthe science of cognition, the science of ADHD and the science of a properly functioning brain. And weâll talk âsolutionââhow you can learn to harness those amazing organizational abilities embedded in our minds. My colleague and coauthor Margaret Moore will also employ an exciting new discipline, the science of change, to help you make these modifications in your life (more about that in the next chapter).
What we will not do, sorry to say, is eliminate distractions. The bad news on that front is that theyâre here to stay. And some of the things that distract us are very odd indeed.
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The Brain Boneâs Connected to the Ham Boneâ¦
The issue of distracted driving has been in the news over the past few years. First cell phones and now texting have been shown to be contributing factors in many incidents of distracted or inattentive driving. But you canât just blame technology here. The Record, a newspaper covering the Waterloo region of Ontario, Canada, analyzed more than four