PDA

View Full Version : How to get smarter in a week...



Peter Mitchell
03-18-2006, 01:23 PM
I thought this article was interesting and wanted to share. If we are doing our intu-flow, plus prasara, or clubbells... watching how we eat and voraciously reading and studying our CST/RMAX material (which at times can be puzzling indeed) we too should be experiencing similar if not better results. Either way a positive validation for choosing an RMAX lifestyle.




Denis Campbell, social affairs correspondent
Sunday March 5, 2006
The Observer

It is not an intelligence-boosting formula likely to impress an Oxbridge don: watching Countdown, playing Sudoku, remembering telephone numbers and taking a shower with your eyes closed.

Yet doing 'brain exercises' such as these can make us all up to 40 per cent cleverer within seven days, according to research by a BBC programme this week.

The tests conducted for Get Smarter in a Week appear to bear out the growing belief among scientists that making simple changes to our lifestyle can lead to significant improvements in how well our brains function.
The programme found that a combination of techniques based on healthy eating, physical activity, sound sleep and stimulating your mind through solving puzzles and remembering lists makes people sharper, more confident and better at making decisions.

The usefulness of such methods will be tested on 100 volunteers from around the UK in an experiment that will get two hours of prime time television on BBC1 on Saturday night. 'IQ has traditionally been thought of as a fixed measure of someone's intelligence,' said Philip Morrow, the show's executive producer.

'But an increasing body of scientific opinion holds that you can take steps in your life to actually improve your brainpower by, for example, enhancing your memory, working on your spatial awareness, doing things differently to normal and eating healthily. Scientists say you will see noticeable improvements within a week. Our show is seeing if the science works.'

When the production team did trial runs among 15 volunteers, who each followed a 'get smarter' regime for a week, they expected their guinea pigs would be about 10 per cent cleverer at the end of it. What they found was that some performed up to 40 per cent better than in the initial assessment. However, one man who had gone out on a stag night the evening before the second test found his score 20 per cent down - proving that alcohol damages mental function.

The 100 contestants on Saturday's show spent last week following as much of the advice in a 50-page Get Smarter Guide as they could manage. Its recommendations include moving around your home blindfolded, using your computer mouse with your 'wrong' hand for an hour a day, and playing games such as Scrabble and charades.

The results will be unveiled when the programme airs. But early indications are that the volunteers had benefited from taking part. 'Some of them were ringing up and saying that this had totally transformed their lives or that they had had their first good night's sleep in five years,' said Morrow.

'A lot of people feel they are under-performing in their life, that they are letting themselves down, in terms of their ability to handle events or thinking that people at work are cleverer than them. This programme shows everyone can get smarter, and feel better, if they do these things.'


Again... imagine of they did RMAX things!

Joseph David
03-18-2006, 04:21 PM
I can imagine. I believe that I'm in for a magical formula as Coach Sonnon and Coach Barnes unvail The Path next month 8)

Coach Gostnell
03-19-2006, 07:54 AM
playing Sudoku,

Oh, am I ever hooked on that one! Plus I seem to have inherited the "turn off the lights" gene from my dad, so no doubt getting smarter all the time, walking around the house in the dark 'n all. :D

inmy70ees
03-19-2006, 04:01 PM
Jeanne.......Sudoka...Ah brand new to me.....so ....just went into Ebay.....a very wide variety available.......do you have any suggestions?......Smiles......my old mind needs more exercise than my body....any help on your part would be very welcome

Thanks in advance

Coach Gostnell
03-20-2006, 07:47 AM
I just go to websudoku.com & get crazy with it. :D

There's four or five levels of difficulty, then when you finish one you can see how you did compared to everyone else. So far, I'm dumber than about 80% of the people who do the puzzles. :wink: (But, even though there's no math involved, I bet if they used letters instead of numbers, I'd ROCK!)

cbeltrante
03-20-2006, 08:18 AM
I just go to websudoku.com & get crazy with it. :D

Jeanne,

Thanks for the website, I just started getting into Sudoku about 2 months ago and bought a handheld game to take with me on trips to pass the time.

The website is helpful too.

Take care,
Chris

bejustintime
03-20-2006, 06:05 PM
I purchased a book of 360 soduku puzzles at Walgreens. They also have the electronic game. They also have puzzles in the newspaper now. I have been playing during lunch time at work. Doing a lot of these puzzles forces you to look at a problem from many different angles. It has helped sharpen my mind. Now if there was a way to do Flowfit and sudoku at the same time. I wish I had a combination metronome/random number generator ala Sony PS2 Dance Dance Revolution!

PaoloValladolid
03-21-2006, 07:27 AM
I've been thinking of picking up a Nintendo DS Lite, and this is yet another reason:

Brain Age: Train your brains in minutes a day (http://ds-x2.com/index.php?id=4953)

KD Jones
03-21-2006, 09:18 AM
I tried the Soduku site. The puzzle was fun, but now I'm thinking about having my brain towed out of my yard for good - my 2nd try showed that 97 (97!) % of everyone living under a rock on land, sea or swamp did better than me.

So, is it being depressed for a week that makes a person smarter, as some kind of wierd adaptation to cranial backpressure, or is there something else I have to do?

peterng25
03-21-2006, 12:42 PM
my brother uninstalled it from his computer, because 'it's one of those puzzles that you can't solve, it frustrates you within 15 seconds!'.

Coach Gostnell
03-21-2006, 01:30 PM
but now I'm thinking about having my brain towed out of my yard for good....(97!) % of everyone living under a rock on land, sea or swamp did better than me

100% of every sentient life form did better than me on my first few attempts, but I wised up & had my son give me a lesson in how to solve those dang things (He said, "It's ALL logic. There's no guesswork.")

And if someone talks to me, the phone rings, a cricket chirps, or I have to scratch my...nose while solving one, I make a mistake.

Best ever - on the "easy" level - only 30% beat my time, but that took a couple weeks to achieve. If I'm working the tougher levels, I'm "off the clock". :D

inmy70ees
03-21-2006, 02:42 PM
Thanks for the web site.....I was jumping all around the room after completing my first puzzle......

So I just bought an electronic Sodoku on Ebay.....won the bid.......$0.01 smiles......of course there was shipping $12.99.....so now for $13.00 I have enough Sodoku puzzles to last a few lifetimes

I also have a speed reading course on my laptop called eyeQ, which has a lot of mental stimulating exercises, along with helping me to increase my reading speed

Sure is a great world we live in, is it not

KD Jones
03-21-2006, 02:44 PM
100% of every sentient life form did better than me on my first few attempts... (Laughed enough to blow off the .01 IQ points I gained on the puzzle attempt last night. )

In other news... here's a REALLY good brain game (which is actually playable)
http://www.setgame.com/set/puzzle_frame.htm
Set is really cool. My eldest learned it at 4, and plays both the card and computer versions. I haven't tried the other games.
And an interesting one (which is also playable)
http://www.puzzles.com/rivercrossing/index.htm
The physical version is cool.

Blessings, and happy attic remodelling.