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Brain exercises: 12 simple ways to stimulate your mind & memory

(Wake Up World | By Dr. Edward F. Group ) If you’re interested in ways to improve your memory, focus, concentration or other cognitive abilities, there are plenty of brain exercises you can experiment with.

Simple ways to stimulate your mind & memory

Did you know your brain can atrophy or shrink if you don’t train it regularly? When the brain atrophies, your ability to remember, think clearly, and make decisions shrinks, as well. The good news? You can strengthen your mental acuity with brain exercises! You can do these regularly throughout life.

Just like lifting weights can sculpt your muscles, mental fitness can keep your brain operating at its peak. In a world where a new case of dementia is diagnosed every four seconds, [1] it’s never too soon to take action. Think of this as a workout for your mind.

The benefits of exercising your brain are similar to those of exercising your entire body!

The top 12 ways to exercise your brain

The benefits of exercising your brain are similar to those of exercising your entire body!

From hitting the dance floor to putting together a jigsaw puzzle, here are 12 easy “neurobic” exercises you can try. They will improve your focus, memory, and concentration and help you live an even healthier lifestyle.

1. Dance up a storm

Keep your brain alive and active by dancing up a storm! Dancing helps integrate the parts of your brain that enable you to keep your balance, strategize, and keep to a rhythm. From ballroom waltzes to Latin rhythms, dancing has a greater impact on cognitive abilities than other types of physical exercise — or any kind of mental task on its own.[2]

Participants in a Latin ballroom dance program found great improvements in their focus, attention, and memory. These improvements were seen in healthy individuals as well as older adults with mild cognitive impairment.[2]

But dancing has another hidden benefit. When it occurs in a social setting, dance also wards off loneliness — which cuts down your risk for dementia.[3]

2. Get active!

Physical activity has a profound impact on your brain health in several ways. Exercise helps the prefrontal cortex and medial temporal cortex — areas of the brain that govern your ability to plan, organize, and make decisions.

By increasing your heart rate, exercise pumps more oxygen to the brain. As a result, even brief exercise of moderate intensity improves your ability to process information and remember it later.[4]

Regular aerobic exercise increases the size of the hippocampus.[5] That’s the area of the brain involved in verbal memory and learning. Physical activity not only grows new brain cell connections but also releases hormones that provide a nourishing environment in which those cells can grow.[6] It drops your stress hormone levels, creating an antidepressant effect that also helps your hippocampus grow.[7] Now that’s a great reason to get your fitness on!

3. Take a new driving route

Pushing your brain out of its comfort zone helps it make new neural pathways. These connections protect you from age-related cognitive decline.

One way to do this is by choosing novel driving routes to get to your destination, rather than operating on automatic mode at the wheel. But just thinking through a driving route, you can boost your brain health!

London taxi drivers were asked to picture various routes around the city from memory. That simple mental activity helped activate the hippocampus.[8] Some people also like to draw a map out by hand. Repeat this exercise as often as you’d like.

4. Solve a jigsaw puzzle

Jigsaw puzzles are a fun way to stimulate your logical left brain while also fulfilling the needs of your creative right brain. Making connections between both sides of your brain helps enhance your ability to learn and understand.

In addition to being an excellent way to improve your hand-eye coordination and sense of spatial arrangement, jigsaw puzzles also help develop your ability to analyze, reason, and deduce answers.[9]

As you look for the correct shape and color of pieces to solve the puzzle, you train your brain’s short-term memory. The act of putting each piece in place, bringing you closer to completion, causes your brain to produce dopamine. This neurotransmitter affects motor control, memory, motivation, and concentration.[9]

brain exercises

5. Try your hand at crossword puzzles

Crossword puzzles are not just a fun way to alleviate boredom. They also boost your vocabulary, prevent memory loss, and boost your mental clarity.

Participation in intellectual activities such as crossword puzzles may reduce the risk of Alzheimer’s dementia and mild cognitive impairment later in life.[10]

The act of solving crossword puzzles alone may delay the onset of memory decline by more than two and a half years![11]

6. Practice mindfulness meditation

People who engage in meditation actually retain more brain cells as they get older than those who don’t.[12]

Mindfulness meditation, specifically, involves being actively aware of your surroundings, and what you are doing, thinking, and feeling at any given time. When one part of your brain observes the other part of you that thinks, acts, and feels, it helps your hippocampus store memories more actively.

Mindfulness activates the areas of your brain responsible for memory, learning, regulating emotions, and processing information. People who engage in mindfulness also have an enhanced ability to see things from different perspectives.

Incorporating mindfulness into your daily routine changes the structure of your brain itself — in a positive way.[12]

reading-book

7. Read books!

Reading is an excellent way to train your brain.[13] To preserve your memory and ward off dementia later in life, make reading a regular, lifelong habit.

Three hundred older adults who were avid readers showed less physical signs of dementia in their brains compared to those who were not.

Reading your way into old age can help improve memory and preserve mental ability longer, reducing decline by more than 30 percent.[14]

8. Learn a foreign language

Besides being able to communicate more easily with people from other parts of the world, learning a foreign language has numerous benefits for your brain. It reduces your risk of Alzheimer’s, dementia, and brain aging.[15]

Because the left and right brain hemispheres exchange information when you speak two languages, it increases your grey matter. Evidence suggests that these changes occur in the hippocampus and cerebral cortex.

These areas are associated with functions like memory, problem-solving, and being able to multitask.

9. Take up crafting, knitting, or quilting

Like crossword puzzles, knitting, quilting, or crafting also protect your brain from age-related damage. More than 80 percent of knitters battling depression report feelings of satisfaction and happiness after engaging in this activity.[16]

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