Categories: Exercise and Health

How to Do Brain Health Exercises?

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Scientists believe that exercising your brain can create a ‘cognitive reserve’ that will help you stay as sharp of you age.

  1. Memory plays a crucial role in all cognitive activities, including reading, reasoning and mental calculation. There are several types of memory at work in the brain. Taken together, these are the cognitive skills we may notice most when they begin to fail. To maintain a good memory, you need to train for it, which can be easier than you think. Listening to music is not only enjoyable, but by choosing a song you don’t know and memorizing the lyrics, you boost the level of acetylcholine, the chemical that helps build your brain, and improve your memory skills. Challenge yourself even more by showering or getting dressed in the dark or using your opposite hand to brush your teeth. These challenges help build new associations between different neural connections of the brain.
  2. Attention is necessary in nearly all daily tasks. Good attention enables you to maintain concentration despite noise and distractions and to focus on several activities at once. We can improve our attention by simply changing our routines. Change your route to work or reorganize your desk — both will force your brain to wake up from habits and pay attention again. As we age, our attention span can decrease, making us more susceptible to distraction and less efficient at multitasking. By combining activities like listening to an audio book with jogging or doing math in your head while you drive forces your brain to work at doing more in the same amount of time
  3. Language activities will challenge our ability to recognize, remember and understand words. They also exercise our fluency, grammatical skills and vocabulary. With regular practice, you can expand your knowledge of new words and much more easily retrieve words that are familiar. For example, if you usually only thoroughly read the sports section, try reading a few in-depth business articles. You’ll be exposed to new words, which are easier to understand when read in context or easier to look up on a dictionary site if you are reading the news online. Take time to understand the word in its context, which will help you build your language skills and retrieve the word more readily in front of your boss in the future.
  4. Learn something new. Intellectual stimulation can improve your memory and protect against dementia. Some examples of things you can do are to learn a foreign language, learn to play the guitar, take up a totally new hobby, take some classes in a subject you are unfamiliar with, among other activities.
  5. Interact with others. Socializing actually exercises your brain and speaking to and with people on a daily basis can help with memory and mental stimulation. If you can’t get out every day, call up friends and family members on the phone and talk away. Lack of socialization can be detrimental to you, cognitively-speaking.
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