Read Switch on Your Brain: The Key to Peak Happiness, Thinking, and Health Online
Authors: Dr. Caroline Leaf
Tags: #Health; Fitness & Dieting, #Christian Living, #Mental Health, #Christian Books & Bibles
that gives us perspective and wisdom and the opportunity to
connect with God. This is a state of mind in which we switch
off to the external and switch on to the internal.
In this deeply intellectual state, involved networks remain
active, and the shifting between them remains active, but it is a
different kind of activity. It is more focused and introspective.
So when our brain enters the rest circuit, we don’t actually
rest; we move into a highly intelligent, self-reflective, directed
state. And the more often we go there, the more we get in
touch with the deep, spiritual part of who we are. I believe
God has created this state to directly connect us to him and
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to develop and practice an awareness of his presence. As the
Scripture says, “Keep awake (give strict attention, be cautious
and active) and watch and pray, that you may not come into
temptation. The spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak”
(Matt. 26:41 AMP).
The DMN is a primary network that we switch into when
we switch off from the outside world and move into a state of
focused mindfulness. It activates to even higher levels when
a person is daydreaming, introspecting, or letting his or her
mind wander in an organized exploratory way through the
endless myriad of thoughts within the mind. It’s a directed,
deeply intellectual focusing inward and tuning out the out-
side world. It is a cessation from active external, which is
like the Sabbath when we switch off from the world and
focus on God.
In this directed rest state, you focus inward, you introspect,
and you appear to slow down; but actually, your mental re-
sources speed up and your thinking moves onto a higher level.
When you think in this way, when you pause your activity
and enter into a directed rest, you will emerge far ahead of
where you would have been if you just operated within the
realms of a shifting, shuffling, limited conscious, cognitive
mind. This is the state of being still and knowing that he is
God (Ps. 46:10).
The DMN, which used to be thought of as
dark energy
in
the brain, is activated into ever-higher states when we engage
in self-referential activity. Brain imaging experiments show
that there is a persistent level of background activity when
a person is in a state of directed rest.4 This includes recollec-
tions, ruminations, imaginations, and self-perceptions; and
it involves the ability to focus on a specific memory, thinking
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HOW TO SWITCH ON YOUR BRAIN
through things from different angles while still being solu-
tion focused. It is very important in planning future actions.5
In fact, miswiring of brain regions involved in the DMN,
leading to all kinds of ups and downs in the DMN, may even
be part of disorders ranging from Alzheimer’s to schizophre-
nia to other neuropsychiatric disorders. Research is starting
to show that, for example, brain areas that atrophy and die
in Alzheimer’s overlap with major centers of the DMN. Pa-
tients with depression show decreased connectivity between
certain regions of the DMN and the emotional areas of the
brain. And in schizophrenia, many areas of the DMN showed
increased activity levels.6
Regular meditators—by this I mean those who have ad-
opted a disciplined and focused, reflecting thought life in
which they bring all thoughts into captivity—show that their
DMN is more active and that there is more switching back
and forth between networks.7 This means the brain is more
active, growing more branches and integrating and linking
thoughts, which translates as increased intelligence and wis-
dom and that wonderful feeling of peace. God also throws
in some additional benefits such as increased immune and
cardiovascular health.
When we pray, when we catch our thoughts, when we mem-
orize and quote Scripture, we move into this deep meditative
state. This great state of mind is also activated when we intel-
lectualize deeply about information—perhaps what we are
studying or a skill we are developing in our job. We are highly
intellectual beings created to have relationship with a highly
intellectual God. We should never underestimate how brilliant
we are and that we are only limited by how we see ourselves.
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In His Great Mercy
In his great mercy, God has wired into the design of our brain
these circuits that are spearheaded by the default mode net-
work (DMN) we need to regularly access to keep connected
to our spirits and to be able to follow the leading of the Holy
Spirit—a time of ceasing from our own activity, ceasing from
our own efforts (Heb. 4:9–10). Our minds need time to under-
stand what our spirits already know.
In the busyness of life and the flurry of everyday activity,
we expose ourselves to the possibility of developing a chaotic
mindset with the net result of neurochemical and electro-
magnetic chaos in the brain. This feels like endless loops and
spirals of thinking that can easily get out of control. When
we activate the DMN, however, it is almost like a Sabbath
in the brain, which is a cessation from the conscious flurry
of work and a withdrawal into the depths of our mind. It is
like a mental rebooting process to reconnect with who we are
and with our Savior to bring perspective to the issues of life.
The Sabbath in the Brain
In fact, when we don’t frequently slow down and enter this
rest state, this
Sabbath
in the brain, we disrupt natural func-
tions in the brain. Research shows that when we don’t en-
gage in this disciplined and focused self-reflective pattern of
thinking that activates the DMN, we may experience negative
self-esteem, depression, worry, anxiety, and health issues, and
over-focus on generalized and short-term memory issues. We
may get stuck, unable to cope, and have a tendency to focus on
the problem and not the solution. In fact, as things go wrong
in the processing of information in the default mode network,
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HOW TO SWITCH ON YOUR BRAIN
the mishandled data is passed on to other networks in the
brain where it creates additional problems.8 These additional
problems can be experienced as memory issues, cloudy and
fuzzy thinking, anxiety, depression, and many other mani-
festations including neuropsychiatric disorders.
The Task Positive Network
In line with the amazing order and balance God created in
everything, we find this default mode resting network is bal-
anced by the task positive network (TPN). The TPN supports
the active thinking required for making decisions.9 So as we
focus our thinking and activate the DMN, at some point in
our thinking process we move into active decision-making.
This activates the TPN, and we experience this as action. In
my 21-Day Brain Detox Plan (discussed in part 2), I call this
action an
active reach
. Brain research—specifically the sci-
ence of thought10—shows that action completes the cycle of
building up and breaking down thoughts. We see this in the
Scriptures as well: “Faith without works is dead” (James 2:26).
What is very interesting, and sobering, however, is how our
DMN and TPN networks, as well as the balance between the
two, are thrown off when we choose to be toxic. Toxic negative
thinking produces increased activity in the DMN, and activity
in the TPN decreases. This results in maladaptive, depressive
ruminations and a decrease in the ability to solve problems.
This makes us feel foggy, confused, negative, and depressed.
God is a God of order and balance, and he has fashioned
our spirit, soul, and body this way. So it is quite simple; when
we don’t follow his ordinances, there will be consequences.
The brain moves into an unbalanced state, producing neu-
rochemical and electromagnetic chaos. “For where you have
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Entering into Directed Rest
envy and selfish ambition, there you find disorder and every
evil practice” (James 3:16 NIV).
Our Brain Follows Our Mind
Studies using imaging techniques show that the DMN ac-
tivates abnormally in individuals with depression.11 Other
studies show that in depressed individuals, the front middle
part of the brain (anterior medial cortex) has increased activ-
ity.12 This means that although their ruminations increased,
this good sign was thrown into disarray by decreased activity
in the middle-back part of the brain (the posterior medial
cortex). When there is decreased activity in the posterior
medial cortex, a pattern of dissociation occurs and there
is a tendency to move away from being clear and specific in
thinking about memories toward focusing on overly general
memories.13
What this means is that when rumination turns into un-
productive brooding and negative issues are blown out of
proportion, it is detrimental to the brain and to good life
choices. When this happens, healthy focused introspection
activating the DMN turns from a coping-and-solution focus
to a passive-and-maladaptive focus, which can result in wor-
rying, anxiety, and depression.
This gives us scientific proof that we need to have the mind-
set expressed in Philippians 4:8: “Finally, brothers and sisters,
whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever
is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything
is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things” (NIV).
By following this perfect advice from God’s Word, you can
bring back the balance between the default mode network
(DMN) and the task positive network (TPN).
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