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Home » How To Protect Your Brain From Stress: Niki Korteweg (Transcript)

How To Protect Your Brain From Stress: Niki Korteweg (Transcript)

Here is the transcript and summary of Niki Korteweg’s talk titled “How To Protect Your Brain From Stress” at TEDxAmsterdamWomen conference. In this TEDx talk, science journalist Niki Korteweg focuses on the impact of stress on brain health and offers practical tips for enhancing brain resilience.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

So, is there anyone in this room who would like to have a better memory, better being able to remember things? Okay, that’s nearly half of you. And are there maybe people in this room who would like to have better concentration, better being able to focus on your job and not get distracted all the time? That’s even more people.

Well, I can tell you, if these things don’t work the way you want them to, it may have to do with stress. And luckily there are things you can do to improve it. I’m trained as a neurobiologist and I work as a science journalist. So you can say I know a thing or two about this precious organ. But there can be quite a gap between knowing a lot about the brain and actually being good to it, I learned.

When I started off as a science journalist 20 years ago, I was so eager to show the world that I could do it. I took on every assignment I could have, I interviewed every hotshot around, I worked till way past midnight. And I had to get up early because I had two little kids and a hard-working husband and all sorts of challenges and no time to think.

Now we all know where that leads to, right? I couldn’t believe it, but I had a burnout, and it felt like my brain had just given up on me. I wasn’t able to plan anymore, I couldn’t decide from a large to-do list what to do first, what to do next. I couldn’t concentrate on my work. I couldn’t remember anything, and my emotions were all over the place, mainly low.

As a science journalist, as a brain scientist, I knew that chronic stress is devastating for your brain. It gets marinated in a toxic cocktail of stress hormones, and it affects two areas in particular. The first area is the frontal lobe, and I brought a human brain model here, it sits in your head like this.

And this frontal lobe, we use this to do exactly all those things I just mentioned, to set a goal, to make a plan, to decide what to do first, what to do next. It’s the seat of your working memory, you use it to focus on your job. And it keeps your emotions under control.

And the second vulnerable part is the hippocampus, it’s on either side of the brain, a bit more in the middle. And this is the core of our memory.

Now why are these two areas so sensitive to stress? It’s because stress hormones, high stress hormone levels, literally make these cells in these areas shrink. You see a brain cell here of a rat, this is the cell body, and you see all those long extensions, those branches and twigs. And they reach out to other neurons, they make contact with each other. So they form a network, and in rats and in people who are chronically stressed, you see that these branches disappear, the contacts break down, they just dissolve. And the network just doesn’t work as well anymore. So that’s bad news, right?

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But luckily, brain science has revealed many things you can do to counteract this. And I discovered that when I dove into the literature in search for ways to improve the brain. And I’ll share with you the four most important ones.

Be Physically Active

By far, the best thing you can do for your brain is be physically active. Now we all know that being physically active is good for you, right? But there can be quite a gap between knowing this and actually doing it. But when we’re working out, it’s not just good, because your heart starts pumping and you get oxygen to your brain.

While you’re being physically active, your brain actually makes a growth factor that stimulates the outgrowth of these branches. They grow out again, they reestablish contact, maybe even new cells are formed. So while you are working out, you’re not just working on a gorgeous body, but you’re also working on a gorgeous mind.

And you don’t have to run a marathon if that’s not your thing, because research shows that already people who just walk briskly for three times a week, 45 minutes a day a week, a period, three times a week, 45 minutes, their hippocampus is already bigger in size than in people who only do stretching exercises.

So I used to decide to first get that deadline and then go to the gym, maybe later, maybe next week. But I don’t do that anymore. I now first go to the gym and then get the deadline.

Sleep Well

The second very important thing you can do for your brain is sleep well. Now I’d like to see your hands. Who of you has slept eight hours last night? Eight hours. Well, you’re doing quite okay. I think it’s 40%.

There can be quite a gap between knowing that sleep is good for you and actually doing it. But I can tell you, and you may know already, that sleep loss is a chronic stressor for your brain as well. Only after one night without sleep, you know that your concentration is bad, your memory is worse, you’re more irritable.

So that’s only after one night of sleep, this area behind your forehead starts malfunctioning, let alone after many nights of too little sleep. While we sleep, our brain reorganizes itself. The good connections are strengthened, the bad connections are taken out, and it washes itself clean from waste products.