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5 New Year’s resolution­s to benefit the brain

- Metro Creative Connection

Resolution­s made at the start of a new year often focus on personal improvemen­t. Giving up poor habits like smoking or drinking too much alcohol and losing weight through diet and exercise are some popular resolution­s.

Health and wellness certainly dominates the resolution landscape. Improvemen­t-minded individual­s interested in gaining long-term benefits from their resolution­s this year may want to consider ways to improve brain health and function. Here are five ideas to consider.

1. Get moving: Exercise does the body good and even positively affects the brain. The American Academy of Neurology has found aerob ic exercise may play a significan­t role in reversing and preventing cognitive decline. Researcher­s have found that even a little exercise each day can result in improved brain function in less than six months. Andrew E. Budson, M.D., a professor of neurology at Boston University, also says aerobic exercise releases growth factors in the brain, which can help grow new brain cells.

2. Start a new hobby. When doing the same activities over and over, you eventually learn how to do those activities better. But doctors can’t confirm this is actually helping the brain in a meaningful way. Rather, there is evidence that doing new things can be beneficial to the brain.

So learning a new hobby, taking a class, or even learning to play a musical instrument can push the brain to improve from a cognitive standpoint, indicates The Healthy, a Reader’s Digest brand.

3. Make more time for fun. Repeated stress can have detrimenta­l effects on the body and mind. Harvard Health says stress has been linked to cognitive problems and a higher risk for Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias. Taking time to relax and enjoy oneself can tame stress, and in turn, alleviate issues affecting memory and cognition.

4. Practice mindfulnes­s more often. Mindfulnes­s is an exercise in paying attention to one’s surroundin­gs, senses and more. Too often people are multitaski­ng and never fully devoting their attention to one thing. Mindfulnes­s gives the brain a break and brings a person into the present.

5. Eat a better diet. The benefit of eating healthy foods extends beyond the waistline. Many of the foods that are good for the heart are important for preventing cognitive decline and dementias. A 2015 systemic review found strong evidence for a protective effect of the Mediterran­ean diet, according to researcher­s at Deakin University School of Medicine in Australia.

By making brain health a priority when coming up with New Year’s resolution­s this year, individual­s can benefit for years to come.

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