The Exercise Neuroscientist: NEW RESEARCH, The Shocking Link Between Exercise And Dementia!

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  • Опубликовано: 20 сен 2024

Комментарии • 8 тыс.

  • @TheDiaryOfACEO
    @TheDiaryOfACEO  4 месяца назад +3177

    We’ve hit 6 million subscribers, and we’re going to do something we’ve never done before as a thank you: The Diary Of A CEO subscriber raffle! 🎉 Here’s how it works: every episode this month, we’re going to pick 3 current subscribers at random. We’ll send one of you a $1,000 voucher, another one of you tickets to come and watch DOAC behind the scenes live, and another one of you will have a 10-minute phone call with me to discuss whatever you want. If you’re a subscriber, you’re in the raffle! Thank you from the bottom of my heart for allowing me and my team to do something we love so much!! x

    • @user-ui6qk4px2d
      @user-ui6qk4px2d 4 месяца назад +27

      🥳 Awesome ‼️🤸🏽🌱👣🚀🎆

    • @peacefuldoves
      @peacefuldoves 4 месяца назад +38

      Why is the studio so dark? Is it just my phone.. Rebels face was half dimmed. This lady, I can hardly see.
      I rely on faces.. love the guests, though Bravo!

    • @robertfoertsch
      @robertfoertsch 4 месяца назад +17

      Excellent Analysis, Deployed Worldwide Through My Deep Learning AI Research Library…
      Thank You.

    • @Lisa-Peter7875
      @Lisa-Peter7875 4 месяца назад +20

      Congratulations 🎉

    • @NicholasThorntonOfficial
      @NicholasThorntonOfficial 4 месяца назад +8

      i love you

  • @evarossi6
    @evarossi6 10 дней назад +3916

    This just reminded me of something, I completely changed my health habits after reading The 21 Former doctor secrets by Rachel Morgan. Everything good in life starts with health!

    • @lukag3155
      @lukag3155 10 дней назад +3

      Thanks for sharing that👍👍

    • @victoria256r
      @victoria256r 10 дней назад

      OMG I love that book

    • @victoria256r
      @victoria256r 10 дней назад +2

      Its a must-read

    • @ThomasWht13
      @ThomasWht13 10 дней назад +1

      Rachel is amazing doctor

    • @ThomasWht13
      @ThomasWht13 10 дней назад +1

      I highly recommend it as well

  • @michelletewhata4287
    @michelletewhata4287 4 месяца назад +3919

    It's nice to see a Scientist who smiles and enjoys sharing her knowledge

    • @Peterdeskater100
      @Peterdeskater100 3 месяца назад +67

      So like ... Most scientists?

    • @uzmaiqbal3155
      @uzmaiqbal3155 3 месяца назад +37

      Benefits of exercise you see, like she says the mood boost, hah!

    • @vicenteramos8498
      @vicenteramos8498 3 месяца назад +46

      Yes. I did like her mood and how she expresses herself in describing her work.

    • @franktaylor7978
      @franktaylor7978 3 месяца назад +20

      She smiles too much. Seems affected and a tad off putting. But she’s a bucket of knowledge and that’s awesome.

    • @robertarmet235
      @robertarmet235 3 месяца назад +25

      Because she also recognizes the Spiritual realm in her life.

  • @amethystfeathers7324
    @amethystfeathers7324 4 месяца назад +7907

    I'm 67, I am a retired personal trainer and I made a vow to myself when I turned 30 that I would exercise every day of my life unless I was too injured or sick. In 38 years I've hardly missed a day. I do cardio, weights, yoga, cross trainer and walk outside. I couldn't imagine not exercising.

    • @Sandramundy
      @Sandramundy 4 месяца назад +265

      Way to go! Exercise is so healing to me! I am 53 and started in my 20’s and never looked back. No matter what I am going through, sickness trauma; I still get up and train. I can’t imagine not doing it. ❤

    • @steve4633
      @steve4633 4 месяца назад +111

      Nice one guy's. Same here. I'm 50 this year and been training forever also. I find it good for the health and the mind especially

    • @crookedzebrarecords
      @crookedzebrarecords 4 месяца назад +151

      Friendly tip! Combine that with mindfulness, radical acceptance, and meditation; you have yourself a complete formula! The mind/body connection is equally as important regardless of which stage of development we are in. Glad you hear you found a winning formula, once you get those feet moving, and in the right direction, it gets easier/normalized. Keep at it.

    • @Portia620
      @Portia620 4 месяца назад +20

      ❤ agreed! Love to exercise

    • @a-k9161
      @a-k9161 4 месяца назад +32

      How is your memory?

  • @maryrice1162
    @maryrice1162 Месяц назад +203

    I just want to say how much I LOVE that you allow your guests to answer your questions fully and as in depth as they wish without any interruption from you. So many other podcasters interject and cut off their guests and it drives me crazy. Thank you for allowing the experts to voice their knowledge. Absolutely love these talks!!!

    • @leoingp
      @leoingp Месяц назад +4

      Absolutely

    • @tasyaagnesgoei
      @tasyaagnesgoei 27 дней назад +3

      agree

    • @catgardens
      @catgardens 14 дней назад +2

      💯! Interviewers are important to lead the interview and ask questions, but we mostly want to listen to the guest and you actually let that happen! ❤

  • @amsf1
    @amsf1 3 месяца назад +2766

    I use my phone and watch things less and less. I exercise everyday at least 30 minutes. And ive gotten back into reading books. I feel like myself again. No more anxiety, stress, no toxic people in my life either. Im happy.

    • @earthwindfireable
      @earthwindfireable 3 месяца назад +95

      Reading books and exercise is key. 😊

    • @DebAnn-j9u
      @DebAnn-j9u 3 месяца назад +17

      Great job!

    • @stuffylamb3420
      @stuffylamb3420 3 месяца назад +48

      I’m doing the same lately after trying to for years. It feels really good. I even started journaling. It’s a great stress and anxiety reliever.

    • @gsismaet5385
      @gsismaet5385 3 месяца назад +8

      Are you sure you're not me?

    • @jimjuarez3495
      @jimjuarez3495 3 месяца назад +6

      A person!

  • @bluebkohen24037
    @bluebkohen24037 3 месяца назад +5902

    Here are some of my key takeaways;
    1-Stay Social (Spend time with family and friends)
    2-Exercise Regularly (this one is the most important one. Move your body daily with activities you enjoy)
    3-Cold Showers (give yourself an adrenaline boost and potentially improve your overall well-being)
    4-Practice Mindfulness (Meditate, do yoga, or practice deep breathing)
    5-Keep Learning (Read, or learn new skills, keep your mind active, engage in Cognitive Activities)
    6-Eat Well (Mediterranean Diet is healthy, Eat fruits, vegetables, whole grains, lean proteins, and healthy fats like Olive oil)
    7-Sleep Enough (Aim for 7-9 hours of good sleep every night, clears out toxins and garbage stuff in the brain)
    Edit : Hey folks, I know some of you might think you've heard this all before, but I highly recommend watching the whole video. Dr. Wendy offers great research, examples, and insights into why we should follow these health tips. For instance, we all know smoking is bad, but understanding the reasons behind it can make a big difference. When you learn why certain habits are beneficial and see the evidence, it helps you follow this advice more consciously. I hope my takeaways from the video provide you with useful insights, but I 'STRONGLY' suggest watching the entire video to fully understand the importance and depth of her insights on brain health and how to keep it healthy through proper diet, exercise, and sleep. Stay healthy! 💜

    • @jacquelinemahugu5691
      @jacquelinemahugu5691 3 месяца назад +28

      Thank you!

    • @rachelmokanya2536
      @rachelmokanya2536 3 месяца назад +20

      Thanks very much. Copied

    • @SuperBelola
      @SuperBelola 3 месяца назад +15

      How about people with a health condition that can't move... how can they move if the are physically cannot?

    • @Tychicus1919
      @Tychicus1919 3 месяца назад +5

      Maybe review various deep breathing practices, move what you can - RUclips has basic exercises & talk to your doctor First of all.☦️

    • @curoseba5363
      @curoseba5363 3 месяца назад +15

      Thank you!
      I always look for your type of comment.

  • @queenofthenorth3110
    @queenofthenorth3110 4 месяца назад +1584

    I do my runs without my phone now, focusing only on my breath, the beauty and nature sounds around and saying hello to everyone I pass by.

    • @adriana27100
      @adriana27100 4 месяца назад +32

      I love that! Really in the present 💝

    • @chiwonisomandishona461
      @chiwonisomandishona461 4 месяца назад +15

      You're just soooo so me❤

    • @CornishTigerTV
      @CornishTigerTV 3 месяца назад +20

      awesome. I do the same. Nothing beats being in nature.

    • @relationshiprx6820
      @relationshiprx6820 3 месяца назад +17

      Love it! Our brains are trying to communicate that .. ditch the phone!

    • @afisanaa
      @afisanaa 3 месяца назад +44

      Still keep your phone on you in case you are injured and need to call for assistance.
      Just turn your phone to Do Not Disturb.

  • @onlythebrave7635
    @onlythebrave7635 26 дней назад +60

    8 months without a phone I wanna continue this. I only use laptop for works and study. But when I don't have it with me I'm completely disconnected from the virtual world and trust me it's a blessing!

    • @edwardhisse2687
      @edwardhisse2687 13 дней назад +5

      How are you here then? Where do youtube interviews fall on work study spectrum

  • @olykasyrelurmatam781
    @olykasyrelurmatam781 3 месяца назад +1268

    Her students are so lucky to have her. You can see her enthusiasm in her eyes while talking. 😯

    • @samd5417
      @samd5417 2 месяца назад +5

      Absolutely!

    • @alexisbas10
      @alexisbas10 2 месяца назад +13

      Definitely. I would actually retain the information she’s teaching rather than the professors that lazily recite the text

    • @yahoJ-hb8ve
      @yahoJ-hb8ve 2 месяца назад +2

      100% agree!

    • @victoriacheramie946
      @victoriacheramie946 2 месяца назад +6

      For real, I want to attend her classes just for fun! I'm definitely not a med or bio student of any sort.

    • @fei16888
      @fei16888 2 месяца назад +1

      and smile. Not just cold shower but mix taking turnd of hot and cold water which is Taiwan.

  • @wmriedell5277
    @wmriedell5277 3 месяца назад +806

    At 81 yrs old, I’ve exercised 3-6 times a wk for near 45 yrs. It helped me to stop smoking, control anxiety + arthritis pain & sleep well. In 1979 I began jogging & quit tobacco, a nasty habit. After 8 yrs, I then played tennis for 7 more yrs, until I started having early signs of lower back problems. After tennis, I began regular gym visits for aerobic & strength fitness. I now hold regular classes in science & Chess playing at a local senior center. My memory has declined some, but I still feel sharp; like to make others laugh & I live pain-free 90% of the time. I worry at times, but this is a most enjoyable time in my life. Exercise is an essential contributor.

    • @KhanyaModipa
      @KhanyaModipa 3 месяца назад +25

      Wow how incredible! Your comment gave me so much hope ❤😊

    • @Ommismyteacher
      @Ommismyteacher 2 месяца назад +7

      ❤❤❤👏👏👏 Bless you!

    • @ShazG-p8k
      @ShazG-p8k 2 месяца назад +7

      I really needed to read this comment. You are my favourite human on the internet this week. 🧠❤

    • @catalinaproductions2369
      @catalinaproductions2369 2 месяца назад +1

      💖💖

    • @kane_lives
      @kane_lives Месяц назад +1

      Don't worry, Joe. I will still remember your presidency with fondness. 😉

  • @christinat.7264
    @christinat.7264 4 месяца назад +802

    My mom made it to 93.5 years old. She lived being outside: walking, riding her bike, lots of gardening (planting trees, perennial flowers, yard work). All of this helped her go the distance. Never overweight. Exercise everyday in some form is essential. Good podcast.

    • @shoutatthesky
      @shoutatthesky 4 месяца назад +30

      My grandmother is 96 and apart from walking short distances doesn't exercise at all. And she smoked into her 50s.

    • @Urmomlolllllll
      @Urmomlolllllll 4 месяца назад

      My grandpa died at 97 of old age. He was an alcoholic and drank every day of his life. Guessing he started in his 30ies… he had no stress and only ate whole and unprocessed foods. Not by choice, that’s all he could afford and had access to in his small third world village.

    • @ZameerHJ
      @ZameerHJ 4 месяца назад +26

      @@shoutattheskysome people have protective genes. The rest of us don’t.

    • @dermotwalshe8577
      @dermotwalshe8577 4 месяца назад +20

      There's a lot of data left to chance in her studies ( and most ) It may be true that a wide amount of data indicates something...but cause and effect is more complex. To your case......my mother lived to 97 but never exercised at all or played any kind of sports...ever . She did however come from a long family line where the youngest died at 94. Is it the exercise ?......or is it the happiness ? There was a famous 80 year study that concluded "happy healthy people live longer "....but it's reasoning is flawed......it could also have concluded that sick people tend to be unhappy....and sick people live shorter lives. The happiness may not have been a causal factor but a side effect of not being sick .

    • @shoutatthesky
      @shoutatthesky 4 месяца назад +5

      @@ZameerHJ Exactly! So live your life and don't worry too much. Eat and drink and be merry.

  • @amina7686
    @amina7686 2 месяца назад +150

    What a WOMAN!!!!! Brilliant and stunning to be short!!!
    All while being informative, this video is also full of stories and fun facts! The interviewer's questions were on spot, and his presence is very calming. He doesn't interrupt his guests, listens attentively and asks the right questions in the right time.
    This video is a success. 10/10.
    Thank you for interviewing this great woman!

    • @kerrylynnlockhart
      @kerrylynnlockhart Месяц назад +1

      Well said my friend ! Agreed completely!

    • @jeanettedudley2063
      @jeanettedudley2063 13 дней назад +1

      Amazing ,she awoke me with the brain. I will listen to her again. I which I had her for my science teacher in high school 😢

    • @amina7686
      @amina7686 13 дней назад

      @@kerrylynnlockhart thank you, friend!

    • @amina7686
      @amina7686 13 дней назад

      @@jeanettedudley2063 I thought the same , she seems genuine and friendly.

  • @JA-ro3zv
    @JA-ro3zv 3 месяца назад +503

    So true I am a nurse practitioner and noticed patients who didn't have a car and walked everywhere regardless of what they ate and some of them even smoked ....had amazing cognitive function as well as vital signs. It blew me away.

    • @Coral_Forever
      @Coral_Forever 3 месяца назад +22

      Thank you for validating my dislike of cars (except when absolutely necessary).

    • @valeriapalumbo7013
      @valeriapalumbo7013 3 месяца назад +24

      I remember I was calmer n less stressed when I was taking the bus everywhere.

    • @JA-ro3zv
      @JA-ro3zv 3 месяца назад +7

      @@JohnYoga75 and older

    • @bobpaterson7540
      @bobpaterson7540 3 месяца назад +3

      ​@@Coral_Foreveryou are not alone!

    • @emh8861
      @emh8861 3 месяца назад +10

      I noticed how much better I felt when my car broke down because I had to walk. What a difference! I had no choice. I would of never believed it.

  • @wmom1816
    @wmom1816 3 месяца назад +735

    Wendy Suzuki has a rare combination of high intellect, humility and vulnerability. That made this podcast the best so far in my book ❤

    • @maalat
      @maalat 3 месяца назад +22

      I love her energy.

    • @supersoundset
      @supersoundset 3 месяца назад +21

      And don’t forget a stunningly beautiful woman❤

    • @thebarbschannel3416
      @thebarbschannel3416 3 месяца назад +5

      I find her arrogant the way she speaks.

    • @jacquievickers1229
      @jacquievickers1229 3 месяца назад +7

      I absolutely needed to hear this woman speak today. My Dad also passed due directly to Alzheimers. Thank you so much for doing this podcast. She is the best!

    • @supersoundset
      @supersoundset 3 месяца назад +26

      @@thebarbschannel3416 She is just a very confident intelligent and super gorgeous woman. A rare beauty for certain.

  • @justwannasay5454
    @justwannasay5454 4 месяца назад +1557

    I took care of my mother (Alzheimers) for 12 years. Almost killed me. When she passed at age 88, I had everything go wrong with my body. From the stress and no exercise. At almost age 67 I have been going to the gym now 4x a week. It has changed everything. Everything. I have a very sore heel so I cant do Zumba but I do weights and rowing. Free weights are the fastest way (for me) to look better. That and diet. I am hooked. All of my health problems are slowly fading away. At one point I was seeing 4-5 specialists a month. Right now I am only seeing my primary.

    • @TheCupcakeicecream
      @TheCupcakeicecream 3 месяца назад +18

    • @ronilittle7028
      @ronilittle7028 3 месяца назад +24

      Good for you!😊

    • @evka24
      @evka24 3 месяца назад +23

      Inspiring

    • @melindapappas7570
      @melindapappas7570 3 месяца назад +51

      So sorry you had to suffer like this. So your story is very similar to my experience. December 2022, my Mom passed away from dimentia and other causes. She was diagnosed in the August. But I was doing the running around, sitting at the hospital when she had seizures, seeing to her needs, working, running my household, and 3 children at school. When she died my nervous system took a huge knock. Im still trying to recover. My thumbs locked, and I couldn't move them, I had numb fingers and still experience this now but slowly recovering. I suffer from major anxiety. I am taking the vitamin B, omega and lions mane. Recovery has been the slowest process. I do weights which I love , but have to keep it low kg as I developed an issue with my wrist, did xrays and Doctor claims its inflammation but it looks like a bone growth. So I now have a bicycle. My goal is to get my body and in perfect condition. And now I know I have to get my brain in even better condition Appreciate the podcast. ❤

    • @lindarollins4998
      @lindarollins4998 3 месяца назад +22

      Thank You for sharing. My mom is 92 (has moderate vascular dementia), I'm in my 60s. I've gained over 30#s in the last 2.5 years taking care of her & other life changing issues. Mom's still alive, my brother can't help (medical reasons), how did you find time to exercise? I barely get enough sleep.

  • @michelle33333
    @michelle33333 2 месяца назад +38

    i was crying soo much during the interview and I think it is because of how I put connection with others so far back from the front lines, maybe from protecting myself from toxic people but I have realized the damage it's had on my brain and life. It showed how much I do care about having connections.

    • @StormSheldon
      @StormSheldon 2 месяца назад +6

      Some of the best people to hang around are volunteers at Charities and organisations that help other people. 💛
      Two phycologists partnered up and wrote this exceptional book called “Boundaries”. It honestly teaches how to spot (& handle) toxic people. The Drs names are Cloud & Townsend. If you read it & apply the techniques it can be life changing.

    • @cloejeanjean7770
      @cloejeanjean7770 2 месяца назад

      You are not alone ❤️

  • @Arthur-xy6wt
    @Arthur-xy6wt 4 месяца назад +1042

    I absolutely hate what dementia does. I have literally been in grief for years now observing my mom's dementia worsen. You guys have no clue how impactful videos like these are. God bless you. Thank you. These videos are now a staple in my life.

    • @Froglet1968
      @Froglet1968 4 месяца назад +19

      It can be so cruel. I hear you. 🤗

    • @brushstroke3733
      @brushstroke3733 4 месяца назад +37

      Dementia sucks! It's so sad how debilitating mental illness is.
      As a caregiver, you want them to "try harder" but they simply can't. It's like asking a computer with a glitch or bug to try harder. The brain just can't process better than it is doing, making it more and more difficult for the sufferer to try to mitigate the symptoms.
      For example, you try to encourage someone with dementia to change their diet, to get more intense exercise, and to pick up new interests to learn about (especially those that involve physical coordination as well as retaining new information.) But then they can't understand what you just told them or they forget it. You encourage them to develop systems and routines to help them. They can't remember to do that or what their new routine is.
      It's very frustrating. As a caregiver, it's tough not to just give up.
      Good luck to you and your mom and to everyone else going through this as a sufferer or caregiver (who suffers the disease as well, but in different ways.)

    • @dragonofhatefulretribution9041
      @dragonofhatefulretribution9041 4 месяца назад +16

      Watch HomeSteadHow’s videos about miraculous recoveries on the carni diet.

    • @ellea2541
      @ellea2541 4 месяца назад +5

      Sending love and strength. ❤ I worked on a dementia ward and it broke my heart in many ways.

    • @HS-cf8lz
      @HS-cf8lz 4 месяца назад +3

      I know we cannot expriement,yes its awful for you all, really hope things get easier some how, have you tried the probiotics and things like Lions mane, Sauerkraut, Kimchi etc? ❤

  • @andreah6379
    @andreah6379 3 месяца назад +4795

    You say "loneliness destroys the brain," but you need to add the wrong kind of ppl around you destroys the brain even faster!

    • @acscw8408
      @acscw8408 3 месяца назад

      Maybe not tho. The reason why they're"wrong" in your perception is because your brain cannot comprehend them. By having them in your life you actually grow and constantly try to challenge them. This makes your brain grow instead. Doing things ure already comfortable with destroys Ur brain.

    • @ilhamazad
      @ilhamazad 3 месяца назад +145

      Oh, couldn't agree more! 💯

    • @LaJuneGotOils
      @LaJuneGotOils 3 месяца назад +456

      You dont have to be by yourself to be lonely. You can be lonely around people and in a relationship.

    • @x-techgaming
      @x-techgaming 3 месяца назад +63

      ​@@LaJuneGotOilsBoom! Preach

    • @jjf7525
      @jjf7525 3 месяца назад +129

      The wrong kind of people don't help you with not feeling lonely. They can make you even lonelier. I think when addressing this emotions, one has to be true to themselves about their honesty feelings.

  • @ezenglishwith
    @ezenglishwith 3 месяца назад +335

    She’s so elegant, well spoken, knowledgeable, gentle

  • @nabeelaahmed745
    @nabeelaahmed745 2 месяца назад +48

    This has to be one of the best talk on brain health ever! 1 hour flew by, and not a single second that was boring or irrelevant. The professor and Steve both had a remarkable conversation.

  • @cleancarasmr83
    @cleancarasmr83 4 месяца назад +246

    I’m so glad she spoke about grief. I just lost my one and only child and am in the throes of grief, and hearing her speak about having the same emotions as I have and also not wanting a pill to make it go away makes me feel less alone and more normal.

    • @mrssantana6530
      @mrssantana6530 4 месяца назад +22

      Wishing you healing x

    • @ajm935
      @ajm935 4 месяца назад +27

      If you aren't already, please let people care for you and help you through this. Also be very vocal about your needs, whether that be help with your household or telling people what NOT to say to you when you need. ❤

    • @jno3445
      @jno3445 4 месяца назад +18

      Sending you healing, love and hope

    • @lindajones6835
      @lindajones6835 4 месяца назад +10

      God Bless You!

    • @cleancarasmr83
      @cleancarasmr83 4 месяца назад

      @@ajm935 I swear, I just hit some breakthroughs in therapy in the last couple of years and if I hadn’t, I wouldn’t survive this. I’ve made sure to really pay attention to what I need and not give in to what people think I need just to be “nice.” I’m so thankful for the internet and all the loving kindness that can be found here.

  • @armandomartinez4152
    @armandomartinez4152 3 месяца назад +495

    This woman’s optimism is contagious.

    • @BobRooney290
      @BobRooney290 3 месяца назад +4

      it's always all about the money. people are stressed beyond comparison now more than ever. exercise for most is not possible.

    • @saraswatkin9226
      @saraswatkin9226 3 месяца назад +4

      Hope you are speaking for yourself. Most of what she says is common sense.

    • @AmateurHuman19
      @AmateurHuman19 3 месяца назад +7

      ​@@BobRooney290I think there's a correlation there with stress. She makes a point - most everyone can walk, and regular walking is enough to improve your brain and mood. It IS possible for most

    • @citytrees1752
      @citytrees1752 3 месяца назад +1

      she annoys me

    • @CRETELOVEE
      @CRETELOVEE 3 месяца назад

      Yeah I was practicing smiling in between convos to thought I was trippin lmfaoo

  • @joerexa5510
    @joerexa5510 3 месяца назад +473

    Six plus years ago, I decided to quit social media, and since then, I've found myself engaging in deep internal conversations that often lead me to solve problems. It's fascinating to observe this mental process and appreciate the complex computations happening in our brains that ultimately lead to solutions. It's like listening to an inner dialogue unfold and witnessing how our brains can systematically reach conclusions and insights.
    EDIT; Personally, social media is Facebook, Instagram etc not including RUclips. This is just a learning platform for me. Nothing more.

    • @Amykhany
      @Amykhany 3 месяца назад +9

      This is so true. Sometimes the solution surprise oneself

    • @Iwillsurvive95
      @Iwillsurvive95 3 месяца назад +25

      Me too! Since Jan 2019. I read that social is basically like using drugs and I am in recovery so I decided my brain is gonna not get dopamine hits like that anymore. Plus I was jealous and insecure. Now I read books and exercise and pray in my free time or call up/text actual friends.

    • @Motivational.bayans
      @Motivational.bayans 3 месяца назад +5

      Then what you doing here

    • @tupd
      @tupd 3 месяца назад +8

      RUclips IS social media.

    • @thantzinmaung-yq6cu
      @thantzinmaung-yq6cu 3 месяца назад +25

      at least, if you're not in a scrolling spree, youtube is far better than facebook or instagram,

  • @196843rochelle
    @196843rochelle 9 дней назад +8

    spirituality is a thing we cannot ignore, for we are made of dust and dust we will return. love listening to this interview, wonderful.🥰

    • @Cynthia-ir3zk
      @Cynthia-ir3zk 5 дней назад

      Yes I love this about our brain, but my relationship with Jesus is my meditation

    • @aichabaajine8264
      @aichabaajine8264 4 дня назад

      ​​@@Cynthia-ir3zk There is only one god: Allah . The one who created us and gives us food water and oxygen. He sent us messengers (prophets) to guide us to the true path which is worshiping only Allah. (praying to him / fasting ...) which is Islam.
      And Jesus PBUH is one of his Messengers to people and the last prophet and messenger is Muhammad PBUH whom we should follow.
      Jesus PBUH is not a god nor the child of god, he's a human being and a worshiper and messenger of Allah. Allah(the true god) doesn't need anyone . He's strong and can do anything just by himself. He created paradise to reward the prople who follow the prophets and messengers . And hell is gonna be a punishment to those who didn't follow the messengers.

  • @Lisa-Peter7875
    @Lisa-Peter7875 4 месяца назад +766

    I survived a brain injury from 1993. I am now nearly 46 in college. I had injuries and damage to my right pre frontal cortex. I am determined to strengthen my brain. Determined to go to university to continue psychology and neuroscience.

    • @lilc5353
      @lilc5353 4 месяца назад +27

      Wow good for you! You're an inspiration to me!❤

    • @TheEtoneKapone
      @TheEtoneKapone 4 месяца назад +17

      hell yea, love seeing that!

    • @Gordan19758
      @Gordan19758 4 месяца назад +11

      A touchy story. I wish you the best and good luck with your study.

    • @user-wg3nc2iq8k
      @user-wg3nc2iq8k 4 месяца назад +16

      YOU SOUND ABSOLUTELY DETERMINED AND THAT'S MORE THAN HALF OF THE JOURNEY TO THE FINISH LINE. AND YOU KNOW WHAT? YOU'LL NEVER FINISH, YOU'LL SIMPLY KEEP GETTING BETTER AND BETTER! ALL THE BEST IN WHATEVER ENDEAVOR YOU EMBARK❣

    • @brushstroke3733
      @brushstroke3733 4 месяца назад +6

      You're an inspiration. Thanks for sharing your experience. Lack of impulse control makes life very difficult!

  • @marianacarrilho1153
    @marianacarrilho1153 4 месяца назад +189

    She is so passionate when she speaks, thinks, reflects! It’s contagious. Loved this episode.

    • @brandonv102
      @brandonv102 3 месяца назад +5

      Passionate yet gentle!

    • @Ex_877
      @Ex_877 3 месяца назад +4

      But so wrong on so many things.

    • @offshoretomorrow3346
      @offshoretomorrow3346 3 месяца назад +1

      Is Marie Curie really a prime example of "genius"?

    • @BonBonBonBonBons
      @BonBonBonBonBons 3 месяца назад +1

      Please explain why? I assume you must have a background in Neuroscience as well​@Ex_877

    • @Ex_877
      @Ex_877 3 месяца назад

      @@BonBonBonBonBons We do know what causes Alzheimer's and Dementia, and the cure, or at the very least the prevention, is not pharmaceutical drugs.
      If you want to stave off these ailments look to increase your Vitamin D levels, reduce your seed oil intake, cut down on sugar, smoking, and being sedentary.

  • @balikisbolanle2107
    @balikisbolanle2107 3 месяца назад +699

    I started going to the gym last month and people has been critizing me on it. They were like “you aren’t fat, why are you here?” The naggings are too much. This is motivating. I will keep going.

    • @sharethatWord
      @sharethatWord 3 месяца назад +74

      That's actually sad, cause if you were on the bigger side, they would still make fun of you. This world never knows what it wants. Keep going my friend👏🏽

    • @hybridangel14
      @hybridangel14 3 месяца назад +45

      I'm super skinny and whenever I went to work out people said the same. I do home workout now, every day, full rep and it feels even better. The upside of home workout is you dont have any excuse to skip a day unless you're very sick: no traffic, no weather, no crowded machines etc.

    • @anpdm1
      @anpdm1 3 месяца назад +17

      The important thing is to build strength and stamina.

    • @tattoodrdoke
      @tattoodrdoke 3 месяца назад +24

      Go to the gym for you. People's opinion of you is their business not yours.

    • @zuko2.051
      @zuko2.051 3 месяца назад +13

      They're haters and don't want you to do better than them

  • @shivareddy9138
    @shivareddy9138 Месяц назад +15

    Her smile throughout the episode tells about her passion and kindness. Kudos Dr. Wendy Suzuki

  • @dylanbeard9770
    @dylanbeard9770 4 месяца назад +503

    This podcast inspired me to feed my ball of tofu in my head. I poured out my beer, took a 30 minute walk around the block talking to neighbors, got home and made a green drink and took omega3, vitamin D, curcumin, lion's mane, and B complex

    • @MayaKeischgens
      @MayaKeischgens 3 месяца назад +13

      That's the way to go, everyday 😀

    • @mgsa5722
      @mgsa5722 3 месяца назад +8

      Don't forget to take the minerals

    • @hopeisorange
      @hopeisorange 3 месяца назад +4

      @@mgsa5722how do you take minerals? Is there a brand you like?

    • @mdavis9718
      @mdavis9718 3 месяца назад +8

      Trace miinerals - trace mineral drops. Add them to water or your favorite fruit juice. Strong taste, better off taking it with juice.

    • @evka24
      @evka24 3 месяца назад +5

      You r an excellent student

  • @roylee931
    @roylee931 4 месяца назад +297

    My grandmother lived to 108 years of age. She did tap dancing til the age of 99 and lived a very active lifestyle. She also had a healthy social life and the amount of people that came to her 100th birthday was amazing to see.
    She swore by drinking green tea but I think having regular social connections and exercise would have been the main contributing factors to her longevity.

    • @ancientwisdom108
      @ancientwisdom108 3 месяца назад +3

      That's amazing. So in this interview, did she really say that coffee destroys the brain?

    • @jakemelinko
      @jakemelinko 3 месяца назад +2

      Thanks that was really beautiful. So many people don't have such a wonderful experience

    • @jakemelinko
      @jakemelinko 3 месяца назад +2

      ​@@ancientwisdom108in still watching but I imagine it dehydrates the brain as it does your body

    • @zendarawlings2237
      @zendarawlings2237 3 месяца назад +12

      I had an aunt who went dancing every week and lived to be 104. She had four husbands during her lifetime. She often joked that she danced them to death. She was amazing.

    • @Maruzzela-l1u
      @Maruzzela-l1u 3 месяца назад +1

      Our brain is very smart..its not that it can't differentiate between actual threat and imagined threat..i dunno why ppl keep saying that ...isnt the purpose of imagination to prepare for the actual threat? Thats why you see the threat as real bcoz it is real in a hypothetical scenario it could happen ..and what would you do then its what the mind is thinking...bcoz your life is too secure and so it focuses on the high risk scenarios ..bcoz it can afford it ..what else would it think when everything else is good? It just obsesses on the unsolved potential future danger.i was always conscious the danger is not now but what bugged me was the fact it can potentially happen...and since it can because it already has happennee once then why can't I find a solution. Of course I ll obsess until I find it.its my responsibility right 😆😆

  • @littlebird4515
    @littlebird4515 3 месяца назад +391

    Unfathomable grief.
    I never could have understood the depths to which I could experience emotion like the grief I felt when my healthy, loving, adventurous adult son died unexpectedly a little over a year and a half ago. At the time, the only way I could describe it was like floating alone out in a vast ocean where I knew not the depth, the size, when the storms would rage, what monsters lurked below, or if I would ever stumble to shore again.
    Mr. Bartlett asks Dr. Suzuki if she would have taken a pill to dull the sense of grief. In the aftermath of my son dying, I talked to other grieving parents who turned to alcohol, medication, etc. - anything to give their minds a break from the incredible torment of having to face a future where your child is physically gone.
    But for me, I consciously chose to avoid all that and feel every bit of the pain of the experience. I laid out in a field and wept into the dirt. I roamed the woods. I sobbed in the shower.
    Thankfully, in the years prior to his death, I was on a bit of a spiritual journey and had found my way to mindfulness. There were points during my grief where part of me could step back during those wailing and keening episodes and see myself - this human being in such deep sadness and confusion, desperately trying to figure out how to move forward - and I could feel compassion and love for her. And it dawned on me that even in this unimaginable torment, there is a certain beauty to the human experience. I don't know if that would have come to me had I been trying to take the edge off of my pain with medication or alcohol.
    Those kinds of days still come but mercifully not as often. That vast ocean I was lost in has permeated my being. Part of that grief water is in me, and I will carry it for the rest of my time here. But at least I feel like I've found some footing. And that compassion I found for myself has opened me up to a much deeper level of compassion for others that is on an entirely other plane of understanding our connectedness. Pain and suffering are universal things of the human condition that bind us together. And when you truly come to understand that, we'll it's like in the poem "Kindness" by Naomi Shihab Nye..."Then it is only kindness that makes sense anymore."

    • @lisaordell2467
      @lisaordell2467 3 месяца назад +29

      Deepest condolences for your loss. Thank-you for your words of experience, hope, and inspiration. Thank goodness for the grace and grounding that comes eventually. Thank God for the teachers who show us how to be mindful. All the best ❤

    • @letyhaynes
      @letyhaynes 3 месяца назад +32

      I cried as I read your account. The key takeaway for me is to have compassion for yourself. We forget that sometimes

    • @winstonloh1051
      @winstonloh1051 3 месяца назад +14

      That touched me, thank you❤

    • @mrsd1371
      @mrsd1371 3 месяца назад +10

      Thanks for sharing your experience here.

    • @patangel1652
      @patangel1652 3 месяца назад +15

      I could feel your grief by reading your words. Sincere condolences on your painful loss.

  • @abigailwilkerson5284
    @abigailwilkerson5284 Месяц назад +3

    This is the first interview/podcast of yours I've ever listened to and I just have to say. You, sir, are an incredible interviewer. You had such thoughtful questions, keep the conversation moving in a meaningful direction, and you never interrupted. I really love the way you just let the silence hang while she deliberated her answers. It really created space for thoughtful answers. Incredible job.

  • @AnneMB955
    @AnneMB955 4 месяца назад +300

    Walking every day at 68. Daughter bought me a gorgeous Golden Retriever for motivation. Both parents died with Dementia in their early 80s. Hopefully my activity will help. Great interview. 👏🇦🇺

    • @brushstroke3733
      @brushstroke3733 4 месяца назад +11

      My guess is that walking is the best exercise overall and can only help you slow or prevent dementia. However, I also have a feeling that more intense exercise once or twice a week may be equally or even more beneficial to your brain than just regular walking. You may not be able to sprint anymore, but is there something else you could do that would raise your heart rate more and thus circulate blood even more? Maybe squats or shoulder press exercises or lap swimming? Or dance?

    • @Gina-Montana
      @Gina-Montana 4 месяца назад +3

      ⁠@@brushstroke3733I completely agree that higher intensity is probably warranted. I don’t mean a 75 year old should be doing the same as a 35 year old. Just whatever would be considered intense for that individual. I’ve had two family members pass from dementia/Alzheimer’s. Before we knew of their diagnoses, they were escape artists, wandering miles from home to complete what was in their minds, important errands. In reality, their missions had no real importance. They would walk at distances and paces almost unbelievable for their ages. This was a common occurrence with one of them even after she went into assisted living. Yet, they both continued to decline until neither of them could walk at all or feed themselves. I’ve just gotten my mom (70) into riding a stationary bike daily and I’m really working to encourage her to do at least light resistance training.

    • @usedscar
      @usedscar 4 месяца назад +4

      You are so fortunate to have a pup! My best friend passed and the next year my new best friend was stolen. It has been very hard to take off and walk without them!

    • @keto4life197
      @keto4life197 4 месяца назад +4

      Me to from the couch to the coffemachine and back again

    • @grazynkatodisco4916
      @grazynkatodisco4916 3 месяца назад +4

      I was a bit surprised when she said that they don’t know what is responsible for dementia.. Life style is not only exercising, but what we eat.
      I already heard from other scientists (don’t remember names now)…that our guts are the second organ after the brain.. the most important part of our nervous system. They are not connected, but they communicate throughout our microbes. Our good microbes in the guts are crucial for our health and decides our fate. Bad microbes are responsible for our health and mental illness that includes dementia.They made experiment in 2013..? when they sterilised mouse guts . Mouse with Parkinson’s disease and that mouse was cured from this disease. There was a woman who had beginning first set of Alzheimer and they changed her microbes as well. They transplanted (poop)… from a healthy person into her guts. She got much better very quickly. So it looks like what we eat…. is our life style:))

  • @liv.larsen
    @liv.larsen 3 месяца назад +219

    Love this. I lost my husband last week and in the midst of grief. However, I would not take a pill to remove it. The depth of grief is the depth of love, as Dr Wendy Suzuki so wisely said, and so comforting.

    • @Valeria-sx7uv
      @Valeria-sx7uv 3 месяца назад +5

      I think pills are for situations, when people really can't function at all without them...

    • @PeaceIsYeshua
      @PeaceIsYeshua 3 месяца назад +7

      Beautifully said, Liv, and I’m so very sorry for your great loss. What a blessing to have had a husband you loved so much. I pray strength, peace and supernatural comfort for you. 🙏🏻❤️

    • @marial2382
      @marial2382 3 месяца назад +3

      Im so sorry for your loss 😢

    • @nhanho1688
      @nhanho1688 3 месяца назад +4

      My condolences

    • @ticklemebreathless1394
      @ticklemebreathless1394 3 месяца назад

      May you be surrounded by love and comfort during your most vulnerable times in life. May the rain remind you of rainbows, may the sun provide you warmth when you are cold, and may peace be with you on your journey.
      My grandmother died last year. It's not the same, of course, but I feel that too. Grief is a reminder of the love we share, and it holds an important place in our lives. My grief comforted me. I hope you are doing as well as you currently can.

  • @Flightdevildoc
    @Flightdevildoc 4 месяца назад +207

    This is a superb interview. As a retired combat veteran, scientist, aerospace and operational physician as well as psychiatrist, I heartily believe that this video is the BEST and most significant to watch by every human being in this world. It should be televised everywhere to spur conversation and make positive changes in our lives. Dr. Suzuki's down to earth, clear explanation of such complex topics was exceptionally simply logical, personally honest and hopeful. The world needs to see and heard this message more nowadays than ever. Her ability to relate medical complex topics back and forth from neuroanatomy, research data to then everyday life and human experience is the mark of a true genius.
    Furthermore, Steven, as always, your questions were so thoughtful and very relating to what anyone would ask. This video deserves an award for the improvement of the human condition (in my mind.. a Nobel Prize). Again, language may not truly express how great this video truly is; however, personally, this is a the best human exceptional learning video, that I have ever seen in my 65 yrs of living in this planet.. hands down.. a piece of art. I am sharing this video w/ my family, relatives, friends , including my patients. Bravo. Oraah, Semper Fi.

    • @MasterSwisher
      @MasterSwisher 4 месяца назад

      THIS!!!!

    • @SWEAR2CARE
      @SWEAR2CARE 4 месяца назад

      Arf arf arf
      it's Wendy,
      not him.

    • @KellyEllenHealth22
      @KellyEllenHealth22 4 месяца назад +7

      Agree, she’s phenomenal. You should watch her interview with Andrew Huberman 🌟🏆

    • @richpickard1680
      @richpickard1680 4 месяца назад +4

      You people are crazy you wrote a whole Lotta gibberish that wasn’t specific at all just like her hour and a half of basic common sense soon as she said, we have no idea what causes Alzheimer’s that’s where I know she’s guessing at everything one thing I’ve noticed, and I go to a lot of seniors homes as people that are sugar attics high fructose to the brain causes fuzzy thinking and Leeds to Alzheimer’s. I know smokers that have been smoking and they’re in their 80s and as sharp as a tack but smokings is easy ones you can just say that’s bad for everyone because it’s on the bad bandwagon.

    • @renelovemetal
      @renelovemetal 3 месяца назад +1

      @@richpickard1680 So on point! Respect!

  • @fahmiperwira
    @fahmiperwira 2 месяца назад +6

    Well, i meditate 5 times a day. One before dawn, one when the sun reached its peak, one before dusk, one after sunset, and one an hour-ish after the sunset. 1 meditation lasts about 10-15 minutes per session, focusing on myself and my Creator, and pray to Him for the best from the world that He can give me and pray for the afterlife.

  • @crackpothunter
    @crackpothunter 4 месяца назад +2409

    The fact that a neuroscientist discovered the positive impact of exercise on brain by a serendipity and not through her academia proves how modern medicine is deeply stuck with prescription pads.

    • @KJ99otis
      @KJ99otis 4 месяца назад +39

      THIS ☝🏽

    • @dp4640
      @dp4640 4 месяца назад +29

      Yessss 👏🏻👏🏻

    • @MuadiDibinga
      @MuadiDibinga 4 месяца назад +55

      Say it louder for the people in the back!👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾

    • @agaa3971
      @agaa3971 4 месяца назад +114

      Yes... scientists stating what can be experienced by anyone. Yet people need to be told because they lost their own internal compass, out of touch with life

    • @thinkmirror8507
      @thinkmirror8507 4 месяца назад +33

      And vaccines 💉

  • @corinapermatabunda2009
    @corinapermatabunda2009 3 месяца назад +201

    To remember things better :
    1. Repetition
    2. Association
    3. Novel (suprise)
    4. Emotional Resonance

    • @anushkaraikwar30
      @anushkaraikwar30 3 месяца назад +7

      ​@@JincoWillin brief, Our brain system reacts on surprises or on surprising things that's why we remembered things that's novelty (surprise)

    • @meryllamistoso
      @meryllamistoso 2 месяца назад +4

      @JincoWill it should be novelty, not novel. and novelty is noun for new. in simple words, novelty is newness. introduce new things to your brain, change things a little bit so u remember things better

    • @jamestabugoc2134
      @jamestabugoc2134 2 месяца назад

      @@JincoWill It's when we expose ourselves to new things, new learnings, discoveries, or new experiences.

  • @medronhos
    @medronhos 3 месяца назад +151

    I started university studies at the age of 34 and boy did my brain improve! Not only memory and creativity, but also my mood and spontaneous social skills

    • @BeanSprouts02
      @BeanSprouts02 3 месяца назад +9

      This gives me hope! I have a very persistent brain fog for years now and I keep thinking it's too late even though I've been trying to stay positive... But stories like this truly encourage me

    • @onesteptogreatness1336
      @onesteptogreatness1336 3 месяца назад +1

      Did University give you a big loan credit on shoulder too?

    • @eygs493
      @eygs493 3 месяца назад

      brah

    • @medronhos
      @medronhos 3 месяца назад +7

      @@BeanSprouts02 O Dear, by experience and also according to my functional medicine doctor, brain fog is directly associated with poor gut health. Fix your gut, brain fog will be fixed by itself. Every person is different, so i would advise you to search guidance on that. In my case, this was also causing me auto-immune problems. Good courage!

    • @medronhos
      @medronhos 3 месяца назад +1

      @@onesteptogreatness1336 Sorry, i don't see what you mean. If you want to explain it, please do;

  • @sashmartin9050
    @sashmartin9050 Месяц назад +5

    Usually I don't go through the entire interview, but this one was a real joy to watch. That you both for pushing the limits sometimes in your conversations, those were most beautiful moments for me personally. Thank you Dr. Suzuki for not keeping your answers always strictly in the realm of current science.

  • @robertaaugustini4091
    @robertaaugustini4091 3 месяца назад +580

    My mom lived 103+ years. She walked 5 miles to work and then from work for years. Had 7 living children, She stopped driving at 85.. at my insistence, but walked every day with her sister for miles after children were grown. .. walked, avid reader and active in community, bingo, playing different card games, cooking for groups, traveling. When she couldn't walk as well she sat, did word games. Puzzles..
    She had general memory problems but never forgot a grandchild, her family, and friends' names. Refused most drugs, except BPressure and cholesterol meds, though I forced that.. vaccines were stopped, no vitamins or even aspirin. She was an insomniac.. which she blamed us 7 kids! Doctors agreed that she knew more about staying alive than most of us would ever know. Loved garlic, mushrooms, olive oil, and real food. She was a sunworshipper..
    had 3 bad weeks when she decided she'd had enough and just wouldn't get out of bed. She did it her way

    • @susandurry9079
      @susandurry9079 3 месяца назад +19

      I have questions. 😎 Did she pass away after staying in bed? Was that the end of the story?

    • @mistletoe4961
      @mistletoe4961 3 месяца назад +10

      I would be curious about that as well. What occurred that caused her to decide to stay in bed for so long? Definitely out of character for her, it would seem.

    • @debra5211
      @debra5211 3 месяца назад +29

      And, why did you "force" her to take the BP and Cholesterol Medications...
      Not shaming, here. But for Your future and health...these are not good options.
      Please. Do your research for wholistic ways to handle both without the rx. The meds really are not good right now...

    • @abooaw4588
      @abooaw4588 3 месяца назад +28

      My uncle former Unesco President born march 1921 still enjoying is now 103. His mantra love life fall in love with the sun. Walk walk walk, talk talk talk, work love people.

    • @Peekaboo-Kitty
      @Peekaboo-Kitty 3 месяца назад +14

      I would never want to live that long! Everyone I love is already dead so I am all alone now.

  • @43warriormode98
    @43warriormode98 3 месяца назад +382

    I love my solitude I feel it heals my body Brain and soul ❤I'm not lonely ...just love being alone ...studying praying gym..68 and so healthy so grateful ☝️

    • @elmifriends7319
      @elmifriends7319 3 месяца назад +33

      I also love living alone, and have done so since my husband died just over 25 years ago. I was very active when I was younger but never ever "exercised". Since turning 80 I have taken it very easy next month I turn 89. All that needs doing I attend to such as paying my bills and shop upto till today. NO person scientist or not can prove that they can predict when any person can get alzheimers or not

    • @sillymissivo1670
      @sillymissivo1670 3 месяца назад +1

    • @SupraSav
      @SupraSav 3 месяца назад +27

      Good for you, love to hear it. I will be 35 next week. After a childhood of abuse, I only know how to be at peace alone. Physical activity and keeping the mind busy are most important. I very much enjoy it, being lonely and being alone are not the same thing!

    • @galaxyglitterlatte4664
      @galaxyglitterlatte4664 3 месяца назад +17

      😊😊😊😊😊 I ❤ being alone. Other people can be energy vampires. I do like being around people to a certain extent but I REALLY enjoy solitude!!!

    • @genevajohnson9083
      @genevajohnson9083 3 месяца назад

      M​@@sillymissivo1670

  • @aeconiglio
    @aeconiglio 3 месяца назад +109

    Her students are SO lucky!! She's an incredible storyteller and educator. What a fascinating video from a fascinating woman!

  • @Brndlbrdl
    @Brndlbrdl Месяц назад +8

    I loved this interview. Wendy is such a delightful person and so intelligent. I especially appreciated her honestly and humbly admitting that she is a spiritual person and that religion in our lives has real value! Especially at a time wihen people are putting less value on it. Thanks for a great interview! Awesome

  • @jraj700
    @jraj700 4 месяца назад +184

    Found this fascinating!
    4 things that make memory stick:-
    1. Repetition
    2. Associations- associates name and face
    Helps who is married to each other
    Memory palace - picture a special location like your childhood home - associated with memories
    3. Novel - brains interacts with novel things they go into background- perks people up - surprise students so they can learn better
    4. Emotional resonance solidifies memories

    • @dreamboxchinese7527
      @dreamboxchinese7527 3 месяца назад +3

    • @mgsa5722
      @mgsa5722 3 месяца назад +2

      Don't see anything new

    • @marisol033
      @marisol033 3 месяца назад +1

      @@mgsa5722 These things do not work for me...repetition has it limits within me....its easier for me memorize animal behavior...anything out of that gets more time...my brain is weird....i love animals...but also want to explore more of the human side of life(i am not social with other people)...but my memory does not help because i get nervous around people

    • @askanka7600
      @askanka7600 3 месяца назад +4

      I consider myself to have a very good memory. I remember a lot of things that happened 15-20 years ago, especially conversations with people. I recently got a math tutoring job (having had jobs in other fields before), and everything I teach is from what I learned 15 years ago as a student. This is how I applied association in my life: I always liked numbers, and when my parents would ask me to buy things from the store (pre-mobile phone era), I would remember the number of items and what my mom wanted to cook. This is how I memorized the items, so practice is very important to improve your memory. Nowadays, we rely so much on our phones that we don't need to memorize phone numbers, street names, or important dates because everything is saved in our phones. My advice is to use either novelty (the excitement of learning something new) or association for anything that seems difficult to memorize. If neither works, then repeat it until you know it. My son likes to enter the computer password every time he turns on the laptop, so I decided to change the password to my husband's phone number because knowing your parents' phone numbers is a safety measure for any child 😊

    • @jenniferlemmon6808
      @jenniferlemmon6808 3 месяца назад

      Explain emotional resonance, give example, please.

  • @leslieaharden6183
    @leslieaharden6183 3 месяца назад +71

    I love the way Wendy believes and smiles optimistically. I love the way she thinks about each question.

  • @vanesagoodwin7711
    @vanesagoodwin7711 5 дней назад

    This woman’s energy is so infatuating and infectious. As an undergraduate student with dreams to become a neuroscientist, it makes me so happy seeing someone so passionate and excited to share information about something they love. I see a lot of myself in her within this interaction, you can feel the joy and excitement radiating from her every time she is asked a question. It’s making me day dream (or for better terms, procrastinate) at my silly little GP office job about being in a similar position to her someday and being able to share my passion and knowledge with the world.

  • @mboxrumah8931
    @mboxrumah8931 3 месяца назад +196

    Dr. Wendy Suzuki, you are my hero. I stopped daily exercise during the pandemic because office works became 24 hours, had 2 panic attacks during work, my office's driver had to picked me on the street because I felt like my systems were down. I got angry and stressful in the office and home. Then in a health examination my blood pressure was diagnosed as pre-hypertension, doctor told me to meet a specialist for medications, but the nurse, which is a friend of mine, recommended exercise. So I started moderate (Zone 2) exersice everyday for a year now. And amazingly not only my blood preasure went down but also I feel happy and relax everyday, my brain solves problem more efectively. So I'm proof of your sience Dr. Wendy.

    • @ClientRescue
      @ClientRescue 3 месяца назад +3

      I've never listened to one of your video podcasts from start to finish because I didn't find them useful. But this, this I found that my time was well used. It actually got me out of the house to walk around outside and I'm in Phoenix, Arizona and it's hot. It's really hot and it motivated me to go outside and I'm sweating and I'm unhappy that I'm sweating but I feel less stressed. Thank you

    • @eleanor5585
      @eleanor5585 3 месяца назад

      Love this ❤❤❤

    • @antonvannelli9085
      @antonvannelli9085 3 месяца назад

      100%. I have seen extremely similar results with clients over the years in regards to the power of the nervous system. Learning how to regulate your nervous system can have incredibly positive results. Beautiful story. Exercise absolutely can greatly improve nervous system state, as long as it can be done without pain/dysfunction. This is only possible if you have strong activation/connectivity to muscular systems on a neuro level. For example, if you try to flex your bicep... do you feel the bicep? Or do you feel the shoulder? This is the problem. The brain does not have default connectivity to our physical systems like we would assume. This is also why exercises that PT's give that should work to strengthen imbalances, don't always work. The brain does not always have the ability to reconnect to weak/disconnected systems without powerful direct input to the nervous system directly.

    • @lawpilot8526
      @lawpilot8526 3 месяца назад

      Correction: don’t write/say “in regards,” it’s “in regard,” or “with regard.” Google the distinction. 5/29/2024.

  • @Raspberryswirl8
    @Raspberryswirl8 4 месяца назад +83

    My parents supported me to learn instruments (piano mostly) and paid for my lessons. This was one of the greatest gifts they have ever gave me. Playing piano not only supports brain memory, but is a meditative process.

    • @JV-oi6ch
      @JV-oi6ch 4 месяца назад +5

      I play the guitar and enjoy it for the same reasons you do the piano. I am glad I learnt the guitar and not the piano because it is so portable.

    • @kitcat2449
      @kitcat2449 3 месяца назад +1

      It's also fun!

  • @fionazerbst5771
    @fionazerbst5771 3 месяца назад +41

    You just FEEL better when you do all the healthy things...it's a virtuous cycle. I am 54 and still do HIIT, yoga, swimming, hiking, and I eat a Mediterranean 'diet'. No alcohol or cigarettes or drugs. My parents both lived to 90 and were mentally clear. My mom had better cognitive faculties than anyone else I know! Love this video. Thank you.

    • @ML-te6qv
      @ML-te6qv 3 месяца назад +1

      Alcohol is not good at all, wish more people would stay away from that garbage

  • @marjamerryflower
    @marjamerryflower 2 месяца назад +6

    ❤Thank you, Stephen and Wendy for this conversation. It was eye-opening. I sat down last night and did my version of the tea ceremony that Wendy told us about. It felt so good. So calming. Thanks for your honesty, Stephen, about being phoneaddicted. I am too. Aren't we all... And the honesty about why we cling to our phones ...in order to not be alone with our thoughts. We really need the superpowers of physical exercise and compassion and time for rest and digest. Very powerful stuff. So yes. Thank you both❤

  • @bertie6346
    @bertie6346 4 месяца назад +159

    Another excellent video. I am quite an extreme introvert and now in my 60s but spent decades trying to fit in with what society expected and used to worry that I would suffer emotionally because I did not have friends. I became anxious and slightly depressed so saw an excellent therapist who said that I was anxious and depressed because I was going against my innate nature and I should embrace, appreciate and start loving my ability to be blissfully happy when alone. It changed my life. I had always preferred my own company from a very young age; hated parties and family gatherings but continually tried to fit in. I now know it was damaging to do that. I have a couple of friends and quite a few acquaintances but always, without exception, feel happier, more relaxed and only truly myself when alone. I feel sorry for folk who are listening to this who are worrying that they may get dementia because they are lonely. when they could be happy embracing their solitude, not loneliness. Please remember that we are all different and not everyone will benefit from having friends and more importantly, they will not suffer because they are alone. I would love Dr Wendy Suzuki's opinion on this subject.

    • @GalacticEgg
      @GalacticEgg 4 месяца назад +25

      I'm an introvert as well, though I wonder if it is truly my nature to love solitude or if I have just learned other people are unsafe.

    • @bertie6346
      @bertie6346 4 месяца назад +10

      @@GalacticEgg Yes, I agree that could be the case. My childhood was abusive and I never trusted adults so you make an interesting observation. Than you.

    • @kirstenbaisner215
      @kirstenbaisner215 4 месяца назад +19

      I spend a lot of time with my own thoughts. I stay curious and do my own research. I find some people interested in listening, learning or caring. I am not lonely when I sit alone. I also love my dog.

    • @agnieszkalatka6841
      @agnieszkalatka6841 4 месяца назад +25

      Solitude isn't the same as loneliness! If we're happy in our own company or in small groups I'm confident our brains will be just fine 😊 There is so much peace and contentment to be found in time alone.

    • @carolecarolas
      @carolecarolas 4 месяца назад +16

      I had the same thought. I am 67, married with adult children and so I spend a lot of my time alone (husband is away all day at work). I am content to pursue my own interests. I'm glad to be surrounded by my children at family gatherings, but feel exhausted afterwards even though I have a great time with them. So I was a little worried about not having constant interactions, or seeing friends often. I like my time alone with my funny little shih tzu. I do need to exercise more though.

  • @terryjarnigan489
    @terryjarnigan489 4 месяца назад +310

    I look forward to finish this in the morning after I give my big fluffy brain 8 hours of sleep.

    • @Mushroom321-
      @Mushroom321- 4 месяца назад +9

      AAWW!!, SOUNds good !! 😊❤🧠😂😅

    • @alexwright4944
      @alexwright4944 4 месяца назад +5

      Me too!

    • @kathygann7632
      @kathygann7632 4 месяца назад +8

      It. Is about 7:30. Welcome back?

    • @terryjarnigan489
      @terryjarnigan489 4 месяца назад +7

      @@kathygann7632 Thank you, looks like I'm right on time!

    • @AlyssaIrvine
      @AlyssaIrvine 3 месяца назад +3

      "My big fluffy brain" 🧠 ❤

  • @aureliaana4814
    @aureliaana4814 3 месяца назад +103

    I had meningitis many years ago and it affected my cognitive and motor skills. MRI shows my cerebellum was damaged and sort of shrunk? I asked a neurologist how to make it better he said none. It’s not like it’s a muscle that will get tougher when you workout…😢
    Hearing Dr.Suzuki tonight and say otherwise, actually gives me hope. Thank you for the very informative and thoughtful talk!

    • @Maruzzela-l1u
      @Maruzzela-l1u 3 месяца назад

      Ok....thenthe question remains ..is it like a muscle you can work or is it not like a muscle...I mean those are 2 opposite opinions

    • @frankdux9254
      @frankdux9254 3 месяца назад +8

      You can train and improve your motor skills. I played football for some years but was lacking in motor skills. Then I practised Taekwondo for 3 years and it improved my skills and balance a lot. Returning to football I felt remarkable improvement.
      Also it has been proved that climbing and crawling on floors improve motor skills, which share part of the brain for functions of reading and comprehending. Children who walk to fast from birth sometimes also need to practise climbing and crawling to improve that part of the brain, which again improves their academic skills in School.

    • @sugarfree1894
      @sugarfree1894 3 месяца назад +2

      Go for it. What have you got to lose? Perhaps treat is an experiment? Good luck!

    • @movingnow3041
      @movingnow3041 3 месяца назад +2

      ​@frankdux9254 I never heard that about crawling...but I have been hearing about grou ding lately, and when one is crawling the hands are 2 extra points of contact with earth...very interesting concept!

    • @Rain9Quinn
      @Rain9Quinn 3 месяца назад

      Yea new studies emphasize the importance of crawling while a baby for developing a particular old, brainstem region part of the brain. This who didnt get to crawl have a variety of issues later, including focus trouble. I dont know where the cerebellum is vs the hypocampus, but the hypo campus can grow (or shrink) in response to behavior &emotional thoughts. Not sure what if any other parts of brain can, too.

  • @raushanmyrzasheva2117
    @raushanmyrzasheva2117 28 дней назад +1

    That blend of an intelligent and honest podcast author with a delightful and absolutely enthusiastic speaker neuroscientist has made me catch every single word they have pronounced! Speaking of focus, this is a statement: this information made me focus for 1,5 hours which is such a rare occasion these days! Aand as a non native English speaker, what a beautiful language they spoke! The rich vocabulary, the descriptions of ideas and thoughts! Purely magnificent!

  • @ChildofGod98765
    @ChildofGod98765 3 месяца назад +279

    I will overcome as I struggle to provide for my children, I’m a single mother. Both of my sons special needs, and require much from me but I know God will give me the strength and courage that I need to continue to keep going. So while I struggle to buy groceries and while I struggle to pay rent. I will keep faith. Always. Amen Praise God! ❤️

    • @lauraanderson5407
      @lauraanderson5407 3 месяца назад +14

      May God bless you and your family with comfort and strength for your future.

    • @margaretmarshall3645
      @margaretmarshall3645 3 месяца назад +8

      May God bless you and give you strength. I love your username, by the way! Nice job leaning on your faith and staying positive through this challenging time in your life.

    • @cutechiangels
      @cutechiangels 3 месяца назад +5

      God bless you! Keep the courage up, and try to enjoy the pleasureable moments in your days, if you can. Take care. 🙏🤍🌟

    • @T-Gunnn
      @T-Gunnn 3 месяца назад +2

      Did you get vaccines while pregnant ? Just curious

    • @mandyharewood886
      @mandyharewood886 3 месяца назад +7

      ​@@T-GunnnReally?

  • @Sherry1092
    @Sherry1092 3 месяца назад +201

    I don’t have any close bonds with people simply because of how my life has unfolded, I know people and enjoy my time with them, say at work in the office, but my life does not revolve around people. It does however have something special. I have a strong connection to myself, my higher self and my source, call it god. I have A powerful spiritual life. I very rarely ever feel alone. I feel full and at peace most of the time.. I cultivated this deep relationship later in life at 50yo. After a very tumultuous life of struggle, heartbreak, and loneliness got the best of me. I can now experience joy and happiness without depending on another person or animal companion . And I love that! It gives me a sense of power and complete freedom 🎉😊

    • @tonidelisa8185
      @tonidelisa8185 3 месяца назад +7

      Same same

    • @OliverDixon-kb4si
      @OliverDixon-kb4si 3 месяца назад +10

      Good for you! Impressive to have turned your life around at 50. I’m happy you’re happy and at peace with yourself. Simply being a positive individual around others is the most important thing even if you don’t socialise with them. Everyone’s life is hard in it’s own way so just by being you, you’re making peoples lives just that little bit better.

    • @gracepetersen1442
      @gracepetersen1442 3 месяца назад +1

      So is there a difference between listening and watching you give this teaching in person or on my phone?

    • @Gud-y2s
      @Gud-y2s 3 месяца назад +25

      There is a lot that can be said about love and loneliness. I do firmly believe that this is completely individual. Depending on heredity and upbringing etc. I had a great childhood, in a small village. There were few kids in my age there. The world was small in people, but big in freedom and nature. Then in school you naturally end up in larger and larger schools and classes. I never liked it. I always felt consumed by the constant social play and that led me to seek peace, freedom, solitude.
      Unfortunately there is a huge stigma in our society about this. We are constantly taught that "loneliness" is unhealthy, that you in fact should feel miserable and depressed if you are not a social person, if you don't have close friends, don't have a relationship. This causes people to feel a lot worse than they have to. Personally i almost never feel "lonely" although i'm almost always alone in my free time. The times that i do feel "lonely" is when it becomes impossible to disregard the stigmatisation, usually around the holidays. Not because of solitude, but because of the stigma.
      I'm 50 years old now. I have had periods of more friends and a long relationship. But i know my true nature. That is freedom.

    • @Michelle-ye6nh
      @Michelle-ye6nh 3 месяца назад +2

      That is amazingly awesome

  • @part.time.grandmaster
    @part.time.grandmaster 4 месяца назад +392

    As someone with ADHD, having exercise as a key component for mental (and brain) health was a no-brainer (pun not intended).

    • @se7ensavage707
      @se7ensavage707 4 месяца назад +5

      Works for me too!

    • @DarkshadeMusic
      @DarkshadeMusic 4 месяца назад +4

      Same!

    • @adss4340
      @adss4340 4 месяца назад +4

      Same

    • @adss4340
      @adss4340 4 месяца назад +12

      First thing in the morning works best for me for the hit of dopamine

    • @chumleyk
      @chumleyk 4 месяца назад

      I believe ADHD can protect you more from dementia because of the mental exercise it produces.

  • @mmschwager
    @mmschwager 15 дней назад +1

    I thoroughly enjoy watching this woman be so passionate about her findings and smiling as she explains everything. I have learned so much from this video! Thank you for sharing!

  • @thehealthinsight4587
    @thehealthinsight4587 4 месяца назад +51

    I loved this podcast. It was technical, compassionate, vulnerable, transparent, authentic, humble, incisive. From both Stephen and Dr Suzuki.

  • @jorcelangelo
    @jorcelangelo 4 месяца назад +61

    I loved the fact that she said that compassion is the most important trade in humankind.

  • @Kenoji8
    @Kenoji8 4 месяца назад +53

    I love her energy and love for neuroscience. She has a great smile and an infectious positivity that I think we all could use. Thank you Steven for having her on as a guest! This was very informative and I am always happy to be a part of these podcasts. My mother has dementia and it has been hard seeing her decline, too, so this episode hits at the heart of one of the biggest issues in our time right now. I hope this episode reaches people far and wide, and I hope this helps The Diary of a CEO gain even more attention and traction than ever before.

  • @sevenpi
    @sevenpi 29 дней назад +2

    summary notes:
    *Regular physical activity change brain areas(hippocampus, prefrontal cortex)
    which improves mood, focus, attention, better memory
    *same as physical activity changes muscles, it does as well change brain function and structure
    (brain plasticity)
    outer brain cortex gets thicker, synaptic conduction (motor, touch, vision) get better
    evidence: experiment done on rates in 1960
    *Intense learning changes brain function and structure (eg. better memory)
    evidence: experiment done on London cap drivers

    *3 walks or more in a week is 30% less likely to develop dementia
    *The longer you stay active in physical activity, the less you are susceptible to dementia
    *whenever you are in physical activity, you are releasing a whole bunch of neurochemical(serotonin, dopamine, noradrenaline,endorphin), this gives a growth factor, new cells grow in the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex
    *At any age where brain change is possible
    *We do not yet know what causes Alzheimer's and dementia
    *walking is a powerful tool that protects from aging and Neurodegenerative disease
    *Techniques that help to have better memory:(
    repetition, association(memory palace), novelty, emotional resonance (sadness, happiness))
    * kind of exercises for optimal brain functioning:
    aerobic activity that gets your heart rate up (eg. power walking, soccer )
    * 2/3 activity per week of 45 minutes duration aerobic activities is enough for optimal brain
    * The more you exercise the more you have brain change, every drop of sweat counts
    * workout and excise boosts:
    mood boost
    focus and attention
    shorter response/reaction
    * Cold shower release adrenalin gives you a mood boost
    * coffee: the level of intake matters
    *bad for your brain:
    not getting enough sleep
    processed food
    limited social connection, interaction, and relationship (more people)
    smoking and alcohol
    increased social media

    * Her brain routine:
    Tea meditation and mindfulness
    30-minute cardio workout
    hot/cold contrast shower
    medeterain diet

    * stress/physiological harm can result from social media comparison/toxic messaging/
    *social media dopamine is not good like gambling dopamine does: prevents you from achieving real-life goals
    * social media anxiety/stress response is full body is same as real life response
    * lessen anxiety/stress: exercise and deep breath mediation

  • @manflynil9751
    @manflynil9751 4 месяца назад +64

    I love listening to this woman. Her energy, enthusiasm and knowledge of her subject are contagious.
    PS my uncle, Tony Flynn , was one of the youngest London cabbies to pass the test for The Knowledge, back in the 80s.

    • @brushstroke3733
      @brushstroke3733 4 месяца назад +5

      I used to deliver Chinese food back in my 20s, before the existence of Door Dash, etc. There was something super satisfying about getting to know all the streets and addresses and routes in my small city. I imagine that attaining The Knowledge is extra super satisfying. When someone gives you an address and you immediately know the cross streets and best routes to get there (considering time of day and special event traffic for concerts, sporting events, etc.) you feel amazing!

    • @recuerdos2457
      @recuerdos2457 4 месяца назад +2

      GPS has made us put no effort to remember how we get places!!

    • @adventures_ofa_dreww
      @adventures_ofa_dreww Месяц назад +1

      It's true! Very satisfying. I love knowing my own city, brings familiarity to home. I don't know addresses as well as routes to locations and landmarks, but that's good enough for me (:

  • @BrainiousPodcast
    @BrainiousPodcast 4 месяца назад +178

    For my husband and I, exercise (gym) became not just a routine, but also a bond, we always encourage one another and discuss science there as well. We even started our own Podcast channel due to the many ideas related to lifestyles and health.

    • @FarukEczanesi-ps3qx
      @FarukEczanesi-ps3qx 4 месяца назад +4

      Checked your channel, u guys cute

    • @UltradianRealm
      @UltradianRealm 4 месяца назад +6

      @@FarukEczanesi-ps3qx Agree exercise helped me a lot especially made me less depressed

    • @MimiTheFirst627
      @MimiTheFirst627 4 месяца назад +3

      Have subscribed!

    • @wmp3346
      @wmp3346 4 месяца назад

      No plugs allowed

  • @rosejacks8662
    @rosejacks8662 4 месяца назад +192

    My Aunt just turned 100 she never exercised. She only walked to work when she was a school teacher. She is still very coherent and physically fit. She just walks slower. I asked her why didn't you exercise, she said, she didn't want to get injured.
    I believe a healthy longevity is about 3 areas lifestyle, genetics and luck!

    • @tomikola1864
      @tomikola1864 4 месяца назад +14

      Spot on, especially the genes part

    • @kupewataaka6917
      @kupewataaka6917 4 месяца назад +39

      so walking is not an exercise? What your body needs is any kind of consistent body movement. Also if you looked back at the kind of life your aunt lived as a child, you will realize they did not need exercise. So many things were not automated 100 years ago, people actively moved their bodies, even when doing home chores so there was no need to go to make shift body moving spaces call gyms like we do today. If she is 100 years then she must have been born in a time where there was barely any cars and no delivery guys to deliver everything to them at door steps. Our daily lives today are extremely sedentary! You can choose to spend the whole day in the house watching TV and the food will come to your door step!

    • @BlackHatProductionsx
      @BlackHatProductionsx 4 месяца назад +15

      That's one person out of billions, it might work for one, but not everyone. Anecdotal evidence is dangerous in these cases.

    • @henryokonkwo2093
      @henryokonkwo2093 4 месяца назад +1

      Lol

    • @dandybufo9664
      @dandybufo9664 4 месяца назад +13

      Too bad she didn’t exercise she could have lived to 112

  • @rachel2717
    @rachel2717 2 месяца назад +3

    The grace, the poise, the brilliance, the beautiful mind that she has.. just to name a few ❤ thank you so much for this lovely , insightful and great episode!❤

  • @jodywhite8388
    @jodywhite8388 4 месяца назад +545

    I am canceling Netflix and Max . All they have is negative, violence and sex , and rest is literally stupid. I come home from work lay on my yoga mat , after walking the dog and listen to podcasts . This one is one of my favorites!

    • @gloriaroman1106
      @gloriaroman1106 3 месяца назад +21

      I disconnect my TV. Very very happy about that

    • @tonytran7382
      @tonytran7382 3 месяца назад +18

      You are doing great but please do yourself a big favor and drop yoga immediately, its extremly detrimental and you dont know what you are getting into

    • @ziwer1
      @ziwer1 3 месяца назад +34

      @@tonytran7382 Elaborate - don't just say stuff like that.

    • @AmandaPerks-e9h
      @AmandaPerks-e9h 3 месяца назад

      Sounds like the perfect life😀

    • @DM-zq8qy
      @DM-zq8qy 3 месяца назад

      Watch SELECTIVELY. Documentaries and history can be very educational. If we ever stop learning, we stop growing.

  • @takura_m4802
    @takura_m4802 4 месяца назад +80

    Dr. Suzuki is an exceptional explainer. She speaks huge details without saying a lot.

    • @angeladawn805
      @angeladawn805 4 месяца назад

      That's every single comm from HO

  • @Bartholo_mew_33
    @Bartholo_mew_33 4 месяца назад +148

    Stephan is precious. "Everything this person worried about, their thoughts, favorite color, university, saw and remembered, anxiety....even their last days before they died... is captured in this tiny little ball of tofu"

    • @CopingwithGrattitude
      @CopingwithGrattitude 4 месяца назад +8

      Wasn’t that great? Display of wonderful awareness.

    • @rexjantze296
      @rexjantze296 3 месяца назад +12

      Steven is having his "Hamlet" moment. 👑

    • @unique5413
      @unique5413 3 месяца назад +3

      @@rexjantze296 °😁💯%

    • @MeganSlatteryYoga
      @MeganSlatteryYoga 3 месяца назад +1

      He really is just so precious in that moment. Stephen is a special human. I love his insights, the long pauses he allows for space for his guests and his vulnerability.

  • @s-qc9ns
    @s-qc9ns 19 дней назад +2

    My grandmother used to walk around 1.5km every single day to her place of worship and back. But she still devloped dementia at the age of 75 and is living with us now.

  • @thomanderson7981
    @thomanderson7981 3 месяца назад +81

    You have to make e excise a lifestyle. It may ebb & flow like a tide, but don't ever stop completely. The body recovers quickly from a sedentary state. Keep it moving 💯

  • @michellefilby
    @michellefilby 4 месяца назад +516

    After a back injury and then a knee injury I can confirm that depression, anxiety and brain fog sets in when you can't move around freely 😢

    • @nonpareilstoryteller5920
      @nonpareilstoryteller5920 4 месяца назад +30

      Try chair exercise. You’d be amazed what exercise you can do from a sitting position, even weights, whilst being careful with the hurt places. Don’t despair.

    • @sickgeezersully8751
      @sickgeezersully8751 4 месяца назад +2

      Stop being lazy go walk

    • @tassie2348
      @tassie2348 4 месяца назад +17

      After a double knee replacement, prior to that being a gym junkie, i can concur. It's misery.

    • @tassie2348
      @tassie2348 4 месяца назад +30

      ​@sickgeezersully8751 cruel and clearly no idea about long term pain.

    • @MatyasImp
      @MatyasImp 4 месяца назад +14

      I agree. Also don t forget to drink water. Dehydration leads to brain fog

  • @margaret3239
    @margaret3239 4 месяца назад +28

    I love this neuroscientist. She’s so engaged with the subject matter. It’s such a pleasure to listen to her! I have fought anxiety and depression off and on my whole life and as an adult I have always exercised because I chose doing exercise to help myself rather than take medication and I am a retired nurse .Right now I do strength training, Zumba classes ,gardening and did tai chi for five years. Moving is a must! Thank you for having her on.

  • @TamaraPhiri-r8p
    @TamaraPhiri-r8p 2 месяца назад +4

    I went off social media for months. When my friends asked why, i told them i felt my neurons dying prematurely. Good to know i was right 😅

  • @xyllos
    @xyllos 3 месяца назад +45

    Just listening to her already made my brain healthier

  • @teresapadilla1958
    @teresapadilla1958 3 месяца назад +358

    When I hear scientists talk about how our body works and functions, especially the brain. I can only think of Psalms 139:14 "I praise you because in an awe inspiring way, I am wonderfully made." As far as learning about our body, it is definitely awe inspiring that we are still learning and have only scratched the surface!

    • @BarbaraWilliams-pw7he
      @BarbaraWilliams-pw7he 3 месяца назад +20

      Our God bid an awesome God.

    • @LocutorBritanico
      @LocutorBritanico 3 месяца назад +8

      Totally agree with you.

    • @clariswald4802
      @clariswald4802 3 месяца назад +6

      Our God is in control!

    • @yarncraftee
      @yarncraftee 3 месяца назад +5

      Indeed! The Master of the universe designed us in such a detailed manner.

    • @patrick_karimi
      @patrick_karimi 3 месяца назад +9

      Sure. How can someone not see a Creator behind this awesome, co-ordinated functions of the body? Sure, the fool says in his heart, 'There is no God.'

  • @dogmom2016
    @dogmom2016 3 месяца назад +36

    She has such a refreshing delivery . All the tips and explenations of how to keep our brains and body as healthy as possible and how she explained her reason for her faith as a Christian was also beautiful. She cares about others and their health as well as her own and her smile is infectious. Thank you for this great and refreshing interview.

  • @nelmanmanalo3877
    @nelmanmanalo3877 2 месяца назад +4

    This is probably one of the best podcast ever. I never thought "brain" as a topic would be this interesting. 5th time watching it and still find it very interesting. The answers given by Wendy Suzuki is very scientific, honest, relatable and from the heart. ❤❤❤

  • @meepo262
    @meepo262 4 месяца назад +34

    Going to the gym has such an incredible effect on my feelings of self worth, my discipline, and actually setting and achieving small goals. I have gotten off of antidepressants and alcohol after 13 years of daily drinking. I believe everyone needs a form of exercise in their life.

  • @teresahart9776
    @teresahart9776 4 месяца назад +29

    So informative. He is an amazing interviewer. He doesn’t interrupt and lets his guest just speak.

  • @montahasana2210
    @montahasana2210 3 месяца назад +154

    this podcast is amazing! i love it. as a Muslim person i realized that most of things that i do as a Muslim benefits my brain for example i have to pray 5 times a day its like meditation, one of the prayers is early in the morning before sunrise. also i am not allowed to drink alcohol or consume foods that destroy my health and so much more actions in a true Muslim lifestyle. i love god and thank god for giving me a brain to think and life to live.

    • @kaylasabrina3509
      @kaylasabrina3509 2 месяца назад +2

      Yes..agree

    • @shhh7871
      @shhh7871 2 месяца назад +2

      Alhamdullilah!!!!!

    • @tasneemhayati092
      @tasneemhayati092 Месяц назад +1

      Alhamdullillah😊

    • @rumabegum1450
      @rumabegum1450 Месяц назад +3

      Agree. This is so much in line with islamic way of life. We pray five times a day, this includes physical movement and being fully conscious, showing our gratitude to the creator. Reading quran daily and memorising a verse also changes brain dynamics. We are not allowed to consume things that cause harm e.g. alcohol and bad food items that are known to cause harm

    • @rumabegum1450
      @rumabegum1450 Месяц назад +2

      Also, daily adhkar and dhikr (islamic meditation) helps control the subconscious mind 'nafs' and this can change a person's personality completely!

  • @Anqi1984
    @Anqi1984 День назад

    I llove her and her showing vulnerability in the public was such a gesture. Especially sharing her struggle with her lost and how to find the wisdom in it. ❤

  • @cakeproSherri
    @cakeproSherri 3 месяца назад +30

    I've never watched any DOAC podcasts nor have I ever heard of Dr. Suzuki, but this was on autoplay after finishing another video but not pausing/stopping YT quickly enough. It took all of about those first 3 minutes of half-listening to draw my full and entire attention to this incredibly intelligent and insightful woman who was just radiating joy. The last part of the interview made me shed tears. I know unfathomable grief and I also know the wisdom that comes from enduring it. I too have come full circle to Christianity, and her answer about compassion being the most valuable trait of humanity was the perfect closer for this interview. I intend to replay her profound words about how and why to grow my brain every day and will use this as my fuel for digging deep and exercising, even though I equally know both how powerful it is for life & healthspan as well as loathe doing it. It's up to me. What a gift this interview was.

    • @asyrafatarhim
      @asyrafatarhim 2 месяца назад

      Yeah sometimes i do love RUclips algorithm.

  • @BoitumeloEM
    @BoitumeloEM 3 месяца назад +48

    She said grief helps us appreciate our joyous moments.

  • @airving2
    @airving2 3 месяца назад +17

    Amazing job interviewing Dr Suzuki. I'm an occupational therapist and dementia practitioner. I appreciate the passion that comes through in this interview and you two speaking about the brain in your hands brought me to tears. Thank you.

    • @renee3148
      @renee3148 3 месяца назад

      Being a dementia practitioner....what does your job entail? I have not heard of that role.
      My mum, early onset sees a psychiatrist but I feel I'd prefer her to see a geriatric doctor, potentially more specialised in the field of aging diseases like Alzeimers 🤔

  • @Babygirl758
    @Babygirl758 2 месяца назад +9

    she’s so interesting to listen to, can’t get enough.. so engaging

  • @zamfirraluca9937
    @zamfirraluca9937 3 месяца назад +243

    Wow, when she said she is Christian towards the end, and the fact that not everything that is real can be scientifically proven, I was in schock, a good shock. More and more scientists start to recognize that there is something out there bigger than us, and we.re talking here about the most logical minds on earth. This is such precious information, I want to talk my parents into exercising more, and also talk myself into that. Amazing podcast!!

    • @melianna999
      @melianna999 3 месяца назад +20

      I gave my health into one pair of hands. God's hands.

    • @kimlaaldin2026
      @kimlaaldin2026 3 месяца назад +1

      ❤pp

    • @kimlaaldin2026
      @kimlaaldin2026 3 месяца назад

      😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊0😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊0😊😊😊😊😊😊0😊😊😊😊q😊😊😊😊😊😊😊⁰😊😊😊😊0😊😊😊😊😊⁰aaaaaaaààaàààaa

    • @yarenot9878
      @yarenot9878 3 месяца назад +8

      I love that. You realise that exercise and all these things we do are great. But there are things they can't help you against that Jesus' power is more than enough for. Isaac Newton was also a Christian. 💙

    • @augustagootee6254
      @augustagootee6254 3 месяца назад +6

      Love this because some things are just left to power of God amazing

  • @Rainasilverman
    @Rainasilverman 4 месяца назад +43

    My husband is going through exactly what Dr. Suziki's father experienced. The rapid decline is absolutely terrifying. This gives me hope!
    Thank you for the amazing interviews!
    I love your show...

    • @ericalewis9047
      @ericalewis9047 4 месяца назад

      Check out the studies on keto and Alzheimer's.

    • @elliemueller
      @elliemueller 4 месяца назад

      ​@@ericalewis9047no

  • @sharonsabraroseivanov489
    @sharonsabraroseivanov489 4 месяца назад +13

    This woman's beauty brought me to tears of joy that there's ppl in the world like her! GOD BLESS her please! And congrats on ur podcast Steven~ one of my favs...

  • @dietzyfly
    @dietzyfly 2 месяца назад +3

    Wow!! I learned so much....I can only imagine what kind of professor Dr. Suzuki must be--creative, challenging, humble and so inspiring!! What a gem.

  • @mauwaus
    @mauwaus 3 месяца назад +21

    What a great interview! I almost shed a tear when Wendy spoke about spirituality. What a lovely and empathic person.

  • @PanamaLiveGoodonaFarm
    @PanamaLiveGoodonaFarm 4 месяца назад +40

    This really hit home for me as i take care of my 89 year old mother with vascular dementia. We live on my organic farm and i make sure she walks every day with her walker. Thank you for this wonderful video.

    • @nonpareilstoryteller5920
      @nonpareilstoryteller5920 4 месяца назад +6

      Well done you! And they say human beings are becoming disconnected and divorced from community and family. Not so. I cared for my grand mother (as a child would you believe) who had vascular dementia. I still miss her.

  • @Dojustdoandbe
    @Dojustdoandbe 4 месяца назад +23

    So glad you mentioned sleep because sometimes that has to trump an exercise session. My mum always walked for her job and always ate healthy food and still has dementia but she’s fit and healthy with almost no short term memory due to shrunken hippocampus. So many variables that can lead to the condition.

  • @PowerOfTens8420
    @PowerOfTens8420 9 дней назад

    She's such a boss!!! So intelligent, well articulated, and joyful! I love hearing her speak.

  • @ginaescober6663
    @ginaescober6663 4 месяца назад +13

    I stumbled on her Ted Talk a few years back. It’s when my parent was diagnosed with treatment resistant depression/ early dementia.
    This interview is extremely informative and profound as it has helped me gain empathy towards my parent. Caregiver fatigue and resentment exists. Thank you for helping me gain back control of my caregiver journey.

  • @eviestas
    @eviestas 3 месяца назад +189

    My Mom died from dementia . She was taking water aerobics and walking in the park with my Dad . Gone by 78. My Dad lived until 92 no dementia . Passed away at 92. I was taking care of both of them . I did get cancer when my Mom had dementia. But cancer free 16 years and lost 22 pounds .

    • @jeremiahh.3383
      @jeremiahh.3383 3 месяца назад +4

      Are you saying that the exercise doesn't seem to matter?

    • @kittens135
      @kittens135 3 месяца назад +6

      ​@@jeremiahh.3383That would be jumping to conclusions. Excercise is crucial, but so is a good metabolic health, as in not having insuline resistence. People from blue zones don't really work out, but move throughout the day, have a social life and don't eat processed foods. And by excercise I don't mean going to a gym, but moderate movement all day long. By a social life I don't mean going to a golf court with other old people, but: still working, taking care of your family members, that kind of things.

    • @gideonmajor9230
      @gideonmajor9230 3 месяца назад +3

      Gabor Mate has some interesting things to say about Carers and Cancer ! May not apply to you but might be worth looking at !

    • @eviestas
      @eviestas 3 месяца назад +4

      No I just pointed out that my Mom was exercising but still got Dementia. She had thyroid cancer in her early 60’s as well . That could have caused it .

    • @BdeJJG
      @BdeJJG 3 месяца назад +2

      Bless you ❤️🙏🏽🫡

  • @PeaceIsYeshua
    @PeaceIsYeshua 3 месяца назад +33

    What a beautiful soul!!! ❤ She radiates compassion and kindness, and it was such a pleasant surprise at the end to learn she’s a Christian! 🙌🏻

  • @raoSENSEI
    @raoSENSEI 20 дней назад +4

    Wendy is an Angel who inspires millions.
    Please listen to her if you hate exercise or neurology.
    Her enthusiasm will get your ass and brain moving.