yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

The #1 way to strengthen your mind is to use your body | Wendy Suzuki


4m read
·Nov 3, 2024

  • I have been fascinated with the hippocampus for many, many years. I started in 1998 as a young assistant professor at New York University studying the hippocampus to make a big splash in science and discover something really, really amazing.

So, I decided that I was just gonna work. For six years, I was only gonna work, trying to understand how the hippocampus forms new memories. I didn't have a lot of social relationships. I was eating too much takeout food. I was just feeling so lethargic, and that is what brought me to the gym. And a year and a half later, I felt so good.

And I had this amazing realization: my memory, my hippocampal dependent memory that I was studying in my own lab, that seemed to be better. Maybe it was this new level of physical activity that was causing this really extraordinary change, that my writing was going better. That was the first moment that I started seriously getting interested in how exercise might be affecting the brain and also helping the hippocampus.

My name is Wendy Suzuki. I'm Dean of the College of Arts and Science at New York University and Professor of Neuroscience and Psychology.

Because I studied the effects of exercise on the brain, people always wanna ask me about the "runner's high." What is it? How do you get it? I don't run. I'm a terrible runner. However, it's a great place to start, because what it really is, is this feeling of euphoria that comes with running.

But here's the good news: You don't have to be a marathon runner to get this. Every single time you move your body, you are giving your brain what I like to call "a wonderful bubble bath of neurochemicals”— dopamine, serotonin, noradrenaline, endorphins. And that's really key to the mood-boosting effects of exercise.

But that's just the short-term effects. What about long-term effects? What if you give your brain a bubble bath on a regular basis, for a week, or a month, or several years? That's when those "growth factors" kick in.

And what do the growth factors do? We know that the growth factors go directly to two key brain areas. One is the hippocampus. The hippocampus is an extraordinary structure. It is one of the only human brain areas that can grow brand new brain cells in adulthood.

And those growth factors help the hippocampus grow shiny, new hippocampal cells. And what does that mean? Your memory is better. And the second is the prefrontal cortex, critical for your ability to shift and focus attention. Those are some of the both immediate and long-term changes that you get with exercise, that start with that neurochemical bubble bath.

You don't have to become a marathon runner or a triathlete to get these benefits. You might say, "Oh, well, I'm in the sedentary camp, there's no hope for me." Here's why there's hope for everybody: And that is the principle of brain plasticity.

Brain plasticity is this idea that the brain has an extraordinary capacity to change or modify its wiring. Are you walking a lot? Are you running? Are you keeping yourself physically active? Are you learning new things?

With brain plasticity, even if you've been sedentary all your life, you can start moving towards that bigger, fatter, fluffier, and happier brain. I love to advocate for personal experimentation. You know the science now, that you're giving your brain a bubble bath, it's gonna make your focus work better, it's gonna improve your mood.

When are you gonna apply it in your life? My motivational tip for everybody is start small and start with things you already know you like. If you hate running, don't run. You don't have to run.

As little as 10 minutes of walking will start to give you immediate benefits in terms of decreasing anxiety levels, decreasing depression levels. Anybody can do that. You don't even have to change into your spandex.

Or start practically. One of the things that I did over the pandemic is I turned my weekly cleaning session into an exercise session. Have you ever seen that movie, "Mrs. Doubtfire"? Have you ever tried to do that choreography that Robin Williams did with the vacuum cleaner? It is hard.

It is a great aerobic workout. And if you bring that play and that joy to even scrubbing the bathtub, it makes it more fun, it makes it more aerobic. Start small, and then just add on.

Can you walk a little bit more? Can you park a little bit farther away? Can you do another round of shopping with the big cart in Costco? Be more broad in your definition of bringing more movement into your life.

More Articles

View All
Examples finding the domain of functions
In this video, we’re going to do a few examples finding domains of functions. So, let’s say that we have the function f of x is equal to x plus 5 over x minus 2. What is going to be the domain of this function? Pause this video and try to figure that out.…
Factor markets worked example | Microeconomics | Khan Academy
We’re told that Epic Eats is a perfectly competitive profit-maximizing producer of stuffed sandwiches and hires workers in a perfectly competitive labor market. Part A says draw side-by-side graphs for the labor market and for Epic Eats and show each of …
Human impacts on ecosystems | Biodiversity and human impacts | High school biology | Khan Academy
What we’re going to talk about in this video is how human activity creates changes in the environment. Not just any changes, but changes that can disrupt an ecosystem and can threaten the very existence of some species. For the sake of this video, we’ll …
Meteor Showers 101 | National Geographic
They light up the sky and fall toward Earth at speeds 32 times faster than a speeding bullet. Meteor showers have been mesmerizing us for centuries, and they’re a beautiful reminder that we are part of a busy and mystical solar system. But what exactly a…
Worked example: separable differential equations | AP Calculus AB | Khan Academy
What we’re going to do in this video is get some practice finding general solutions to separable differential equations. So, let’s say that I had the differential equation Dy/Dx, the derivative of y with respect to X, is equal to e^X over y. See if you c…
See How This Avalanche Rescue Dog Is Enjoying Her Retirement | Short Film Showcase
[Music] This guy is an Australian Shepherd. We got her at eight weeks old with the purpose in mind of turning her into a search-and-rescue dog. A search-and-rescue dog, especially an avalanche rescue dog, is a dog that’s trained to find human scent that c…