F i r i n g t h e R i g h t C e l l s To g e t h e r
15
memory is used when you try to remember what you had for dinner
last night, when your next dental appointment is, or the name of
a familiar - looking woman who ’ s standing next to the water cooler.
These
are facts, dates, words: pieces of information. It is this type
of memory that people often complain they are losing.
Implicit memory is often thought of as unconscious memory. It
reacts to the emotional intensity of events and situations; when the
situation is potentially dangerous, it activates the fear system in your
body. This is often called the fi ght - or - fl ight response.
This alarm system is automatic; that is, it happens before you
have time to think about it. Thousands of years ago, when our
ancestors encountered
a predatory animal like a lion, it was best
to react immediately and not stand around thinking about the lion,
admiring its beauty or wondering why it was bothering them instead
of tracking down some tasty antelope. Thus, the fast track to the
amygdala kept our ancestors alive.
A balance between your sympathetic nervous system (which acti-
vates you) and your parasympathetic nervous system (which calms
you down) allows you fl exibility. I ’ ll describe this in detail in chap-
ter 9 . These systems, along with the circadian rhythm,
nutrition,
exercise, relaxation, and meditation, can help you to be calm and
positive.
Let ’ s change the Hurricane Katrina story and say that you didn ’ t
go to Houston. You might have been so fi lled with anxiety that you
drove like mad straight north to escape the driving rain. At one point
you pulled over because you couldn ’ t see the road in front of you.
A tree limb fell on your car, and you were fi lled with even more
anxiety. Months later, during a rainstorm, you feel a surge of anxiety.
You don ’ t
know why you feel this way, but your amygdala remem-
bers quite well, because it triggers your hippocampus and cortex to
remind you of the day you escaped Katrina.
The amygdala helped you by stirring enough fear in you to make
you pull off the road, but it also made you oversensitive to rain-
storms. The problem is that this fear system is activated even when
you don ’ t need to be fearful. In other words,
sometimes it is turned
on when it would be better to have it turned off. Chapter 2 describes
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16 Rew i r e
Yo u r
B r a i n
how you can tame your amygdala so that it doesn ’ t become overacti-
vated when you need to stay calm.
Your frontal lobes are sometimes called the executive brain or the
executive control center because they are important in orchestrating
the resources of the rest of your brain. The frontal lobes decide
what to do, how to stay positive, and how to appreciate the larger
picture of life.
By being positive and active, you ’ ll rewire your frontal
lobes.
The OFC and some other parts of the brain constitute what has
been called the social brain because this system of neurons thrives
on social interaction. When these neurons are activated effectively,
you experience fewer psychological problems and better mental
health. Chapter 7 is devoted to the many benefi ts of your social brain
networks.
The bonding experiences you have had with your parents
since the beginning of your life have affected your social brain. Your
later relationships then modify those neural connections. Positive
relationships enhance
your sense of well - being, whereas negative
relationships leave you with the opposite feeling.
We know that neurochemicals such as oxytocin are involved in
childbirth and bonding, and that later in life they become activated
in intimate relationships. Higher oxytocin levels help to blunt pain
and make us feel comforted by other people. For this reason, oxyto-
cin is referred as the “ cuddling hormone. ”
The recent discovery of
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