The UltraMind Solution (86 page)

The problem in our culture is the chronic, unremitting, unrelenting stress and endless stressful inputs to our nervous system, including our nutrient-depleted toxic diet, environmental toxins, electropollution, and loss of a sense of control and community.

This puts us in a chronic state of alarm. In his book
The End of Stress as We Know It
, pioneering neuroscientist Bruce McEwen explains how chronic levels of stress lead to wear and tear on our systems. He calls this the “allostatic load.”
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Think of it as the sum total of all the stressors on your system over a lifetime.

 

All of these excess stressors—stressors we were not designed to deal with on a chronic and repetitive basis—lead to overactivation of the sympathetic nervous system and stress response, followed by burnout.

Dr. Sapolsky has mapped out the way in which this chronic stress damages the brain. High levels of cortisol, the major stress hormone, damage the hippocampus.

 

When considered from an adaptive point of view, when we are in dangerous or stressful situations, we want to remember everything about it. That’s a good thing; it helps us avoid the situation in the future.

Figure 15: Allostatic load

That is why there are so many receptors for cortisol in the hippocampus, the memory center of the brain. Since we need to remember dangerous situations to avoid them in the future, our body is perfectly designed to help us do this.

However, in the modern world this system is overactivated. We don’t need to remember every situation we perceive as stressful. And high levels of cortisol over the long term injure the hippocampus, leading to impaired memory,
5
dementia, and depression.
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Sonia Lupien from McGill University has also shown how stress shrinks the memory center and has damaging effects on our brain function and cognition.
7
;
8

Stress literally eats away at your brain.

The effects of stress can be seen quite clearly in those who suffer post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), an anxiety disorder that is the result of exposure to some traumatic event and causes the person who experienced the trauma to live in a state of hyperarousal. This condition affects about 15 percent of those who experience a major trauma such as war, violence, or abuse. It changes your brain and rewires your response to stress. Many who went through the trauma of 9/11 experienced PTSD.
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Chronic stress has many negative effects on the body and mind that help explain the widespread problems with obesity, health, and brain function in today’s world. All the feedback from the body and the feed “down” from the brain works through the over or under activity of this important HPATGG system (the communication network that connects your brain with your entire body).

 

So any “stress,” whether it is physical danger, a thought, perception, toxin, allergen, infection, or even abnormal gut bacteria, has negative effects throughout this system. These effects are widespread and can be very powerful.

HOW THE BRAIN CONTROLS AUTOMATIC FUNCTIONS

Your body governs your stress and relaxation responses through your autonomic nervous system. This system controls all of the automatic functions in your body, and is divided into two parts:
the sympathetic nervous system
and
the parasympathetic nervous system
.

You don’t have any control over the sympathetic nervous system, and it’s a good thing you don’t. It controls critical bodily functions like your heartbeat and the flow of your blood. Imagine what might happen if you could stop your heartbeat or your blood flow just by thinking about it!

However, you
do
have some control over the parasympathetic nervous system. This part of your body is partially automated, but it is also responsive to your thoughts. For example, the blinking of your eyes is connected to your parasympathetic nervous system. You have some control over it (you can stop blinking your eyes for a while), but not full control over it (keep them open long enough and your eyes
will
blink).

The hypothalamus is the command and control center at the top of this entire chain of events. Its job is to control all “automatic” functions. Stress, as I mentioned above, is controlled by your sympathetic nervous system. You have control over the inputs that cause stress, but you have no control over the response itself. If you perceive stress, your body will react.

Relaxation, on the other hand, is something you
can
control. It is governed by your parasympathetic nervous system, so you can consciously engage “the relaxation response,” as I will discuss below.

Chronic stress affects all of your autonomic functions negatively, but relaxation helps balance all them. These functions include:

1.
Control of blood pressure and electrolyte balance.

2.
Control of energy metabolism and metabolic rate.

3.
Regulation of body temperature.

4.
Control of reproduction and sleep cycle.

5.
Regulation of the stress response (and relaxation response) via autonomic activity coordination.

What an Overactive Stress Response Does to You

Here is a short list of the effects of an overactivated stress response over the long term.
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I list these here just to show you the extent of the research and our understanding of how stress negatively affects us and our brains. Chronic stress over time:

Increases inflammation and inflammatory cytokines (TNF-α, IL-1, and Th1 immune response), which have all been linked to depression, bipolar disease, autism, schizophrenia, and Alzheimer’s.

Reduces the natural relaxation and anti-inflammatory calming, memory-enhancing neurotransmitter called acetylcholine.

Increases depression and anxiety.

Damages the hippocampus, leading to memory loss and mood disorders.

Increases “excitotoxicity” and activation of the NMDA receptors (the on/off switch for your cells) leading to cell death.

Reduces serotonin levels.

Reduces BDNF (the brain’s healing and repair factor necessary for the formation of new brain cells).

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