Can you write a haiku describing anything crossing your mind now? Remember the simple rules: write 3 lines, which don't need to rhyme, containing 5,7, and 5 syllables.
My Favorite 10 Brain and Mind Haikus:
1) GTB, the skeptic, says
Haikus are easy/ But sometimes they don't make sense/ Refrigerator
2) Techne, the philosopher, wonders:
Solve the big questions:/ How do I know when I know?/ Who knows the knower?
3) Millie, the spiritual, suggests:
Playing music feeds/ my soul while reading music/ nurtures my old brain.
4) jolovli, the boomer, tries again:
improving function/ smoked too much weed in college/ it's never too late
5) Mark shares his experience with brain teasers:
I thought I did well/ Then I reviewed my answers/ I am retard
6) Steve, the environmentalist, requests:
Neuroplastic good./ Plastic, though lasts forever./ Always recycle!
7) Lloyd, the stressed-out, volunteers:
I thought so damn Hard./ My brain built lots of pressure./ I farted out loud.
8) anon, always the down-to-earth, shares
the noon hour portends/ a burrito with salsa/ brightening my tongue
9) Chuck, Mr. No, says:
This was fun, and no,/ I don't intend to haiku./ Thanks for posting it
10) Psalm sees the light:
As my mind expands,/ it grasps new ideas...oh look/ there's something shiny!!
Enjoy the many other good ones:
- Terry says:
New information/ Synthesizing my knowledge/ A forward movement
finding your teasers/ added fun to my morning,/ helped wake my brain up
- Lorraine says:
teaching math is fun/ when you find great resources/ sharp brains is the place
- Mike says
See I think I see/ Here now, not so - really real?/ Wounded, mind leaves me
- Lisa
new thoughts activate/ frontal lobe work hard, harder/ no senility
- Karen
Brain training others/ Like watching the Earth open/ One thought at a time
- Bruce
My brain stem works hard,/ But the tests are much harder,/ Need more grey matter
- Alvaro
Can perform better,/ Learning, training, and practice/ Body, brain and mind
- terri
strokes take speech away/ someone should find a quick fix/ everyone needs to speak
- qt
Aha, a challenge/ for the brain to endeavour/ sooner than later
- Stacy
Brain hurts so badly/ Working night shift: not so fun/ Need to get some sleep
- campercourt
It is morning now/ The sun rose very early/ Goodmorning to you
- kestrel
first white is purple/ or it was red I think/ now haiku, what next?
- Stacey
I thought is was fun./ Then it got a lot harder./ Wow i suck at this.
Yours , please?
Copyright (c) 2008 SharpBrains
Brain And The Mind
Interested in improving your attention, memory, thinking skills, ability to manage stressful situations? Good news: "Recent research in neuroplasticity - the brain's ability to change in response to information and new activities - shows that brain cells and new pathways continue to develop throughout life...", say mainstream newspapers like the New York Times, who are increasing their coverage on the growing movement of "brain training" games and technologies.
An article titled "Mind Over Matter, With a Machine's Help" provides a great overview on how to combine cognitive therapy with fMRI (an advanced neuroimaging technique that enables movie-like visual feedback on what areas of the brain are getting activated). Another article, titled "Calisthenics for the Older Mind, on the Home Computer", reviews a number of commercial software packages.
I have interviewed 10 neuroscientists and experts in cognitive and emotional training to better understand the research behind this field and the implications for our lives. Let me share with you some of my favorite quotes:
1) "Learning is physical. Learning means the modification, growth, and pruning of our neurons, connections?called synapses? and neuronal networks, through experience...we are cultivating our own neuronal networks."- Dr. James Zull, Professor of Biology and Biochemistry at Case Western University.
2) "Exercising our brains systematically ways is as important as exercising our bodies. In my experience, "Use it or lose it" should really be "Use it and get more of it".- Dr. Elkhonon Goldberg, neuropsychologist, clinical professor of neurology at New York University School of Medicine, and disciple of the great neuropsychologist Alexander Luria.
3) "Individuals who lead mentally stimulating lives, through education, occupation and leisure activities, have reduced risk of developing Alzheimer's symptoms. Studies suggest that they have 35-40% less risk of manifesting the disease"- Dr. Yaakov Stern, Division Leader of the Cognitive Neuroscience Division of the Sergievsky Center at the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University, New York.
4) "What research has shown is that cognition, or what we call thinking and performance, is really a set of skills that we can train systematically." - Dr. Daniel Gopher, Professor of Cognitive Psychology and Human Factors Engineering at Technion Institute of Science.
5) "Elite performers are distinguished by the structuring of their learning process...You need to protect and optimize that practice, learning time? It is important to understand the role of emotions: they are not "bad". They are very useful signals. It is important to become aware of them to avoid being engulfed by them, and learn how to manage them." - Dr. Brett Steenbarger, Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, SUNY Medical University, and author of Enhancing Trader Performance.
6) "We have shown that working memory can be improved by training" ? Dr. Torkel Klingberg, Professor at Karolinska Institute, and Director of the Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience Lab, part of the Stockholm Brain Institute.
7) "I don't see that schools are applying the best knowledge of how minds work. Schools should be the best place for applied neuroscience, taking the latest advances in cognitive research and applying it to the job of educating minds." - Dr. Arthur Lavin, Associate Clinical Professor of Pediatrics at Case Western School of Medicine, pediatrician in private practice.
If you are interested in learning more about this exciting field of "brain fitness" and "brain exercise", please keep tuned. Over the next weeks we will publish new interviews with:
- Dr. Judith S. Beck, Director of the Beck Institute for Cognitive Therapy and Research, and author of The Beck Diet Solution: Train Your Brain to Think Like a Thin Person.
- Dr. Robert Sylwester, Emeritus Professor of Education at the University of Oregon. His most recent book is The Adolescent Brain: Reaching for Autonomy. The Education Press Association of America has given him two Distinguished Achievement Awards for his syntheses of cognitive science research.
Now you know: Nutrition, Physical Exercise and Stress Management are very important to your brain health and fitness, but you can also exercise and improve your "Mental Muscles"!
Alvaro Fernandez has sinced written about articles on various topics from Aging, Brain and Aspen Travel. Alvaro Fernandez is the CEO and Co-Founder of SharpBrains.com, which reviews resources for brain health and offers and. Alvaro Fernandez's top article generates over 201000 views. to your Favourites.
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