Men's Health (UK)

… I ENTER FLOW STATE?

Sometimes referred to as being ‘in the zone’, flow state is a place of deep immersion and total focus. MH looks under the hood

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01

SWEET SPOT

Flow state is a balancing point between boredom and stress, says Nicole Vignola, a neuroscien­tist and author of Rewire: Your Neurotoolk­it For Everyday Life. The task can’t be so dull that you’re faced with ‘self-interrupti­ons – internally generated thoughts, like stopping for coffee’. But the task can’t be so tricky that you become paralysed or procrastin­ate. It also benefits from a mix of intrinsic motivation – inner drive – and extrinsic motivation (eg, a deadline).

02

FEELING GOOD

During flow, dopamine – the neurotrans­mitter that plays a role in motivation and reward – is released in the nucleus accumbens. This is part of the basal ganglia, a group of brain structures also involved in habitformi­ng. The activity becomes ‘self-rewarding’ – performed for its own sake – rather than the outcome alone, making you feel ‘euphoric and good about yourself’, says Vignola.

This in turn can diminish fatigue and discomfort.

03

LASER FOCUS

Norepineph­rine is the neurotrans­mitter released during moments of stress, to keep you ‘aroused and alert’. Too much will take you out of flow state, but a little helps. It’s responsibl­e for ‘determinin­g which part of attention needs to be diverted to which task and removing competing stimuli’, says Vignola, and allows you to become fully immersed in the job at hand. It’s what creates that tunnel-vision feeling, the sense that everything else ‘ceases to exist’.

04

OUT OF BODY

Flow state can help get you out of your own head. ‘The default mode network (DMN) is responsibl­e for internal thoughts, selfrefere­ntial informatio­n, autobiogra­phical memories and mind wandering,’ says Vignola. This network is less active when you’re in flow because you’re less self-conscious and instead are ‘solely focused on your task’. Neuroplast­icity also allows us to tap into previous experience­s with flow to push past resistance.

05

MIND MAP

Creativity during flow is an interplay between the DMN and ‘the central executive network (CEN), responsibl­e for problem-solving and cognitivel­y demanding tasks’. A third system, the salience network, ‘decides which stimuli are important and switches between the DMN and CEN, determinin­g which should be “on”’, explains Vignola. You can make this process more efficient via meditation and self-hypnosis.

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