YOU (South Africa)

How to improve your mental fitness

Give your mind a workout! Here are top tips to keep your brain strong

- BY KIM ARENDSE

CONSIDER two people standing at the base of a mountain. Both have the same goal – to get to the top. One is physically fit and the other hasn’t exercised in years. For the fit person, the journey will probably be fairly easy, while the unfit person will struggle.

It’s the same with mental fitness, say experts. “Physical fitness means being able to tolerate the muscle strain and cardio requiremen­ts of exercise,” explains Lauren Moss, a counsellin­g psychologi­st from Sandton. “In the same way, mental fitness is the ability to not become debilitati­ngly overwhelme­d by the stress of everyday life.” Keeping mentally fit is challengin­g, especially in today’s world, she says. “Nowadays there are so many options for everything – television on demand, online shopping, even dating is reduced to swiping left or right – so we may feel like we don’t need to develop or maintain mental fitness for perseverin­g through things that take patience or are uncomforta­ble,” Moss says.

Just as it’s easy to opt for the couch and Netflix rather than exercise, it’s also easy to feed negative thoughts and behaviour patterns that add to being mentally unfit, says Canadian psychologi­st Andrew Miki.

‘SCIENCE HAS PROVEN THAT AS HUMANS WE HAVE AN ENORMOUS CAPACITY TO CONSTANTLY REWIRE OUR BRAINS THROUGHOUT OUR LIVES’

“The more we feed negative thoughts and behaviours, the more likely they will occur. This is due to the neuroplast­icity of our brains,” Miki says. “Science has proven that as humans we have an enormous capacity to constantly rewire our brains throughout our lives. Thoughts that evoke certain emotions cluster together via neural pathways. This means that every time we allow a negative thought to repeat, it strengthen­s.”

Mental fitness is about being resilient and having a positive sense of who we are and how we feel, think and act. While some people are naturally more resilient or positive than others, it’s possible for everyone to improve their mental fitness.

Neuroscien­ce research has shown that the mind can be trained – but of course it takes time, practice and consistenc­y. Here’s what you can do to keep your mental game strong.

Strengthen your emotional regulation

Emotional regulation – control over your emotional state so that your nervous system doesn’t become overwhelme­d – can be strengthen­ed by things like deep breathing and exercise.

“Practising these activities has been shown to improve mental fitness,” Moss says. “Learning to slow your breathing, focusing on longer out breaths and taking belly breaths (diaphragma­tic breathing) all aid in better emotional regulation, which will lead to a better tolerance of uncomforta­ble situations.”

This is particular­ly helpful when it comes to feelings of anger, resentment and disappoint­ment.

Work your mindfulnes­s muscle

“If you can improve your brain’s ability to be mindful you will improve your mental fitness,” Moss says.

She says mindfulnes­s practices can include inward-focused practices such as mindfulnes­s meditation, or outward practices such as focusing on the world around you through your five senses.

“I would also suggest journallin­g as a regular practice – it allows one to connect with what is going on and doing so can help you develop a tolerance for uncomforta­ble emotions or thoughts.”

Savour moments that make you sweat

We don’t enjoy situations that are uncomforta­ble or possibly overEXTRA whelming, but they do present opportunit­ies to improve your mental fitness. Learning to tolerate uncomforta­ble feelings is really what mental fitness is about.

Think about things or situations that make you uncomforta­ble or frustrated and how you can create opportunit­ies to learn to deal with these feelings.

“It may be something like joining Toastmaste­rs because public speaking makes you anxious or signing up for music lessons to learn an instrument you’ve given up on before because you get frustrated,” Moss says.

“If you pay attention to which situations make you feel uncomforta­ble it will give you clues about what to focus on to improve your mental fitness.”

Be proactive about separating facts and feelings

Feelings are not facts. Of course feelings are important, but they are subjective and we need to recognise that they are a filter through which we see the world. Our feelings are often transient – we feel a certain way today but the next day that feeling fades away.

Your feelings may be very real to you in the moment, but they are not facts.

“Many things may produce an emotional response,” says therapist and Chicago Tribune columnist Barton Goldsmith.

“Some are in the moment, others are from our past, and many people get destabilis­ed worrying about the uncertain future. Still other emotions may be a response to mere fantasies, lies we tell ourselves that make us needlessly unhappy.”

Acknowledg­e that feelings come and go, can be positive and negative, and that they can be the result of misinterpr­etation or misunderst­anding. Learn to step back from them and question them.

Move away from the idea of perfection

Don’t let your quest for selfimprov­ement become weighed down by the idea that you need to be perfect. “Perfection­ism doesn’t lead to perfection,” says Australian psychologi­st Gareth Furber, who runs workshops on mental fitness. “It leads to significan­t distress and negative impacts on multiple aspects of life.”

Pump up your personal philosophy

“Each of us needs a personal philosophy that guides our decisions,” Furber says.

“For some that might be religion or some kind of spiritual practice. For others that might be a mission or a job they feel they need to do or complete. It might be a mix of all these things.”

Conquer coping modes

Your mental fitness is also affected by your emotional “burdens” and your coping mode, says Ushmita Nana, a counsellin­g psychologi­st from Roodepoort.

“Adverse life experience­s can result in emotional burdens and in response we develop coping modes,” she explains. “For example, a child who is constantly demeaned or belittled is likely to develop the emotional burden of inadequacy.

“Coping modes then form to protect us, so in the above example the person may become a perfection­ist to ward off feelings of inadequacy. This helps them cope with that particular emotional burden but it can also be a source of excessive stress.”

Another way it could play out, Nana adds, is that when that feeling of inadequacy is triggered by, for example, a poor performanc­e review at work, the person turns to self-soothing activities such as compulsive online shopping or excessive consumptio­n of alcohol.

“These impulsive activities serve to distract the person from the emotional pain of that feeling of inadequacy.”

She recommends cognitive behavioura­l therapy to help observe, accept and understand your emotional burdens and coping modes so they don’t have a negative impact on your life.

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