5 WAYS TO TRAIN YOUR BRAIN FOR A HEALTHY & HAPPY NEW YEAR!

HAPPY NEW YEAR!! I wish 2013 continues to bring you all the joy, abundance, prosperity, and wellbeing that you deserve. To help you reach that intention, here are some insightful and helpful tips from the emerging field of social neuroscience for how to meet your intentions for greater health and happiness in Body, Brain, and Being!

Tip # 1 - Gratitude is a Healthy Attitude
Expressing gratitude for what you have, no matter how small it is, can also contribute to your greater health and happiness. In the past few years, scientists now recognize that gratitude is one of the most powerful and healthiest of human emotions. Studies at University of Miami, UC Davis, and Stanford University successfully demonstrate that remembering to be grateful for what you have in life can greatly outweigh any sadness, stress, or challenges you might currently experience. Further discoveries in neuroscience suggest that when you experience gratitude, the left pre-frontal cortex of the brain, an area that correlates to emotions of love and compassion, begins to activate. As I like to say, “Gratitude turns WHAT YOU HAVE into enough, creates contentment for WHAT IS, and manifests greater joy for WHO YOU ARE!” If you can’t express gratitude for what you already have, how can you expect to be grateful for all the prosperity and abundance that awaits you in the New Year! Read more in “How Gratitude Heals Your Brain, Body, & Being.”  

Tip # 2 - Don’t Buy More, Just Be More!”  
As much as our culture wants you to believe, material success does not equate to happiness. As I discussed in “Tips for Staying HAPPY during the Holidays,”authentic happiness cannot be measured by a price tag. Ed Diener of the University of Illinois and Martin Seligman from the University of Pennsylvania in 2010 published findings in the journal Psychological Science in the Public Interest that while U.S. wealth has tripled over the past 50 years, our national wellbeing and happiness have been flat. It’s just as the famous line from The Beatles goes, “Money can’t buy me love.” While having material and financial stability are vital for your way of life, the point is that the real indicators for happiness are not found in your bank account, stock portfolio, or the size of your car or house. Rather, focus on what truly is of value in your life—family, friends, loved ones, and enjoying life! Studies conducted by Dr. Sonja Lyubomirsky at UC Riverside show that people who are happiest also have strong social connections and deep personal relationships with friends and family. We humans are social animals, after all. We need to feel a sense of belonging and connection to the greater whole. So the next time you get stressed, feel anxious about finances, or worry that you can’t afford that luxury car or home, remember that the real treasures in life, the love of our family and friends, are free! Read article Consumerism, Happiness and Health 

Tip # 3 - Practice Compassion and Kindness
As His Holiness the Dalai Lama often says, “If you want to be happy, make others happy!” In my piece “The Neuroscience of Health and Happiness" research into the human brain has discovered that we possess a peculiar thing known as a mirror neuron. Scientists know believe that these mirror neurons are the reason why humans, along with certain primates, elephants, dogs, and dolphins, are biologically wired to experience the emotions of others. Mirror neurons suggest that the human brain has evolved to experience both the pain and euphoria of others. It is this biological conditioning that may account for human empathy and compassion. Brain scans reveal that expressing more compassion and kindness helps you develop these mirror neurons, and it is this notion of compassion and empathy toward others that ultimately allows you to experience greater happiness and wellbeing on a daily basis. So the more kindness you practice toward people, the happier they become and the happier you become! Enjoy this True & Personal Holiday “Tail” about the power of human compassion and empathy we humans share with our pets.

Tip # 4 - Keep Thinking Good Thoughts
Did you know that it takes at least FIVE good thoughts to outweigh a negative one! Neuropsychologist Dr. Rick Hanson states, 
“The mind is like Velcro for negative experiences and Teflon for positive ones.” I’m sure many of you can relate to this idea, but why is that our minds tend to remember the painful, negative experiences but not so much the joyous, happy moments? There’s actually a neurobiological answer that has to do with something called a “negativity bias.” At the University of Washington a study revealed how a negative experience remains wired into your brain more strongly than a positive one. In fact, it takes up to five positive experiences to outweigh a negative thought! Neurobiologists believe that this “negative bias” of the human brain was an evolutionary trait that helped early humans survive by allowing the brain to react to, remember, and recall life-threatening experiences. Imagine you were an early human chased by a lion; your brain would store that information into a neural net, recalling that memory as a survival mechanism. The lesson is that in order to experience authentic happiness, you actively have to focus on the positive to overcome the negative experiences in your life that your brain has imprinted into your consciousness. Learn more about how your psychology influences your biology in “The Healing Power of Thought.”

 

Tip # 5 - Just Breathe!” 
One of the simplest and most effective tools you have to alleviate stress and create more happiness in your life is to find some personal time in your day to focus on your breath. In
 “Breathe Your Way to Health & Happiness” one of the easiest ways to experience greater wellbeing is to engage in conscious breathing for as little as five minutes a day. Dr. James S. Gordon, a clinical professor of psychiatry at the Georgetown University Medical School, states, “Slow, deep breathing is probably the single best anti-stress medicine we have.” You may be surprised to learn that doing mindful, calm breathing exercises for just five minutes a day can begin to shift your emotional and mental health. In the growing field of “brain-body-being” research, studies show that focusing on your breath, specifically on the quality and state of your breath, might be the key to unlock your potential for health and happiness. Let’s face it, most of us do shallow breathing, i.e. not connecting our breath deep into the belly. Deep-belly breathing has now been shown in numerous studies to have a significant benefit on your neurophysiology, calming and soothing both your mind and body. When you connect and focus on your breath by taking deep and slow inhalations and exhalations, your nervous system and brain waves begin to come into balance and coherence. When your brain and body are in alignment you tend to cultivate the “four C’s” of calmness, contentment, caring and creativity. Watch my Self-Guided Breathing Video to learn how to alleviate stress and to experience greater happiness in your daily life and throughout the New Year. 

Dr. Jay Kumar

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Breathe Your Way To Health & Happiness with Dr. Jay Kumar

We all want to lead a happy and healthy life, but one key to cultivating health and happiness may reside in your brain, and more specifically with the power of your breath. You may be surprised to learn that recent advances in neuroscience and mind-body medicine offer a deeper understanding of how something as simple and abundant as the breath could be the possible answer for your health and happiness! A phrase I’ve always said: How we choose to breathe, determines how we choose to live. How we choose to live, determines how we choose to heal. How we choose to heal, determines how we choose to be.”

Let’s face it, most of us do shallow, anxious, quick breathing, i.e. not connecting our breath deep into the belly. Deep-belly breathing has now been shown in numerous studies to have a significant benefit on your neurophysiology, calming and soothing both your mind and body. When you connect and focus on your breath by taking deep and slow inhalations and exhalations, your nervous system and brain waves begin to come into balance and coherence. When your brain and body are in alignment you tend to cultivate the “four C’s” of calmness, contentment, caring and creativity. 

Many ancient healing traditions, such as Yoga, meditation, and Tai Chi, have all recognized that one of the simplest and most effective tools we have to alleviate stress and create more happiness in our life is to do deep-belly breathing. (Read more about the neurophysiology of deep-belly breathing in Breath Retraining, the Vagus Nerve, and Depression” by Dr. Fred Muench.) Recent medical studies also suggest that deep, conscious, deep-belly breathing might have the same effects anti-depressant medication!

According to a 2009 report by the Harvard Medical School, “a study compared 30 minutes of deep breathing, done six days a week, to bilateral electroconvulsive therapy and the tricyclic antidepressant imipramine in 45 people hospitalized for depression. After four weeks of treatment, 93% of those receiving electroconvulsive therapy, 73% of those taking imipramine, and 67% of those using the breathing technique had achieved remission.”  

So when someone says to you “take a breather,” there might actually be some medical merit to it. I find that one of the easiest ways to achieve greater calm in your day is to focus on your breath for as little as five minutes. As Dr. James S. Gordon, a clinical professor of psychiatry at the Georgetown University Medical School, states, “Slow, deep breathing is probably the single best anti-stress medicine we have.”  Doing mindful, calm breathing exercises for just five minutes a day can begin to shift your emotional and mental health. So it just might be that focusing on your breathing, specifically on the quality and state of your breath, could be the key to unlock your potential for health and happiness!

WARNING: Slow, deep breathing may cause long-lasting side effects such as increased happiness, optimism, health, calm, and alertness. Consult your Self before beginning slow, deep breathing.)

Feel free to watch this Self-Guided Breathing Video to learn how to practice deep-belly breathing, alleviate stress, and experience greater happiness in your life.  Remember, happiness is not something that happens to you, but rather happiness is something you choose. 

Keep on Living Your Light

Dr. Jay Kumar

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Healing Power of Thought

So many of us want to experience more joy, happiness, and health in our life, however, wanting and actually experiencing wellbeing can be two very different matters. In the last blog entry I introduced the notion that health and happiness are intimately connected to our thoughts, and specifically how our thoughts literally rewire our brain. You can read more about that in the "Neuroscience of Health & Happiness." I continue the discussion by exploring how neuroscience additionally suggests that our thoughts play a vital role when it comes to our health and state of mind. Specifically, the key for you to experience genuine wellbeing resides in the power of your thoughts and in the emotional center of the brain.

I’ll give an example of just how powerful our thoughts can be on our brain and body. Scientists at Columbia University conducted an experiment where volunteers were connected to a PET (positron emission tomography) as part of a study to see how neurochemicals in the brain react to pain in the body. The people in the experiment received a pain-producing stimulus of minor heat on their arm. As predicted, the brain registered the pain and released opioids, a neurochemical that relieves pain. The same people were then told to apply a lotion on their arm that they believed was a new experimental painkiller, when in actuality it was just simple body lotion. When the volunteers received the same stimulus, the scientists discovered that higher levels of opioids were produced and secreted from the brain in response to the pain on the area of the arm where the placebo cream was placed. (Full article here)

To quote Dr. Tor Wager, the leading researcher of the experiment, “These results extend our knowledge of how beliefs and expectations affect the brain's neurochemistry and show that one's mental response to a challenge can affect the brain and body in ways that are relevant to health….Understanding these interactions can pave the way for new treatments that are informed by knowledge of mind-body interactions.” In essence this amazing research now validates the adage that our psychology does indeed influence our biology!

The point here is that science is only now beginning to understand the power of human thought, an idea that has existed for millennia in indigenous medical system and in spiritual traditions throughout human history. I’ve always believed that the next major scientific breakthrough will occur when we truly understand the vast capacity of human consciousness and how we ALL ARE HEALERS! As Dr. W. Ross Adey of the Brain Research Institute at UCLA rightfully declares, “The ultimate creative capacity of your brain may be, for all practical purposes, infinite.” I would like to amend his statement by saying, “The ultimate healing capacity of your brain may be, for all practical purposes, infinite. 

Always remember just how amazing, and incredible you are. The key to your health and happiness is to cultivate more empowering thoughts, intentions, words and emotions as part of your daily life. I will discuss more ways in which we can do this in the next blog. Until then, keep on Living Your Light® as you keep on Believing In Your Light!

Dr. Jay Kumar
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AWAKE with Dr. Jay Kumar 9-15-11 Podcast- "Living Life in Flow"

Check out the latest podcast from "Awake with Dr. Jay Kumar" on how to live life in flow!

As the wise Taoist philosopher, Lao Tzu, once famously declared, “Life is a series of natural and spontaneous changes. Don't resist them; that only creates sorrow. Let reality be reality. Let things flow naturally forward in whatever way they like.”

May you continue LIVING YOUR LIGHT® on your adventurous river of life with ease, fun, and flow!

AWAKE & ENJOY! 

Dr. Jay Kumar

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Living Life in Balance & Flow

If you’re like many people, you might be living with challenging circumstances at this time. The fragility of the global economy, increasing natural disasters, and a general sense of not knowing what the future holds may find your life fraught with panic, overwhelm, or fear. As I discussed in an earlier blog, the very essence of life is about change, and learning not to fear change is the key successfully navigating the torrents of change. (Full article here). The way you respond to change determines your state of wellbeing and ability to cope with the major transformations unfolding around the planet. At this time, it is more important than ever to remember a very powerful axiom of life–suffering is merely resistance to change! The more you resist the powerful changes happening around you and remain stuck in fear, the more you suffer and become incapable of moving forward with the natural flow of life.

As I like to believe, the most powerful lessons from life come to us from Nature. One of my favorite outdoor activities is white-water river rafting and kayaking. My fondest memory of rafting in rapids was a few years ago in New Zealand with my father. It was a fairly advanced river, but we were both ready for the adventure. Our raft came upon a treacherous series of rapids causing it to tip over to one side throwing me into the raging currents. Even though my life jacket and helmet fortunately prevented me from drowning or from any serious injury, nevertheless, I began to panic. Struggling to get back on to the raft was a major challenge as the currents wanted to take me downstream away from shore. It was then I realized that if I just stop struggling and let the currents naturally take me downstream that I would arrive at a safe point in the river, and eventually be able to get back on the raft. Sure enough, the moment I stopped panicking and resisting the river’s powerful flow and just surrendered to its natural course, I was able to reorient my body with my feet pointing downstream as the currents led me within a minute to a calm part of the river. A few moments later, the raft was able to retrieve and allow me to continue on with my adventure.

The lesson here is that life is like a white-water rafting expedition. There are moments of great fun and adventure, and eventually moments when the river can be unpredictable throwing you into the water. If you can just remember to surrender and reposition yourself, trusting in the natural flow of the river’s course instead of floundering to get back to safety, eventually the river will let you flow to where you need to be. The more you learn not to resist the powerful currents that life sometimes brings, but remember just to go with the flow to where life takes you, you always will be safe.

It again all boils down to how much you trust the unfolding of your personal journey down the river of your life. Learning to live in the powerful moment of the here and now is the first step to being in flow with the natural rhythms and cycles of your “river of life.” The second step requires you knowing when to reposition yourself so as to be in flow with life’s changes and not to resist in futile struggle. The more you attempt to swim against the current in panic or fear, the more you suffer as you resist the natural flow of your life’s journey. The moment you surrender to the trust that your life flows effortlessly, the river automatically takes you in the direction you’re supposed to be headed. The more you live in the flow of this present moment, the more you let your life unfold exactly how it needs to be.

Every moment of your life is an opportunity to live in flow with the adventure. Yes, there are going to be moments along the river when you might get stuck or fall overboard. The more you make a conscious intention to remember that life always takes you where you need to be once you learn how to go with the flow, you will always be safe, despite the “currents of change” happening all around you at this time. As the wise Taoist philosopher, Lao Tzu, once famously declared, “Life is a series of natural and spontaneous changes. Don't resist them; that only creates sorrow. Let reality be reality. Let things flow naturally forward in whatever way they like.” May you continue LIVING YOUR LIGHT® on your adventurous river of life with ease, fun, and flow!

Dr. Jay Kumar
www.drjaykumar.com

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