Page 21 - Power Up Your Mind Learn faster,work smarter
P. 21

12                                            Power Up Your Mind


                                  even simple creatures like reptiles have. It governs your most basic
                                  survival instincts, for example whether, if threatened, you will stay to
                                  fight or run away. It seems also to control other basic functions such
                                  as the circulation of your blood, your breathing, and your digestion.
                                        Now retrieve the smaller of the two “brains” that you took
                                  off earlier. It is shaped a bit like a collar and fits around the reptil-
                                  ian brain. It is sometimes referred to as your limbic system, after
                                  the Latin word limbus meaning border. This is the part of your brain
                                  that you share with most mammals. Scientists think it deals with
                                                    TEAMFLY
                                  some  of  the  important  functions  driving  mammals,  for  example,
                                  processing emotions, dealing with the input of the senses and with
                                  long-term memories.
                                        Finally, pick up the outer, third brain. This is the part that sits
                                  behind  your  forehead  and  wraps  around  the  whole  of  your  mam-
                                  malian brain. (Think of one of your hands held horizontally and palm
                                  downward, gripping your other hand that you have clenched into a
                                  fist.) You probably recognize this bit! It is the stuff of science fiction
                                  movies to see its crinkled and lined shape swimming in a glass jar of
                                  liquid.  It  is  the  most  advanced  of  your  three  brains,  your  learning

                                  brain. It deals with most of the higher-order thinking and functions.
                                        In evolutionary terms, your small, reptilian brain is the old-
                                  est  and  the  outer,  learning  brain  is  the  most  recently  acquired.
                                  Thinking  about  the  brain  in  this  way  helps  us  see  how  human
                                  beings have progressed from primitive life forms. It also helps to
                                  explain  in  a  very  simple  way  why  we  cannot  learn  when  we  are
                                  under  severe  stress.  In  such  situations  it  is  as  if  a  magic  lever  is
                                  pulled telling our outer learning brain to turn off and retreat, for
                                  survival’s sake, to our primitive brain. Here the choice is quite sim-
                                  ple, flight or fight. It leaves no room for subtlety of higher thinking.
                                  At various stages throughout this book you will be able to find out
                                  how to avoid creating just such an unhelpful response.
                                        Scientists  are  increasingly  sure,  however,  that  Maclean’s
                                  theories, sometimes known as the idea of the triune brain, are an
                                  oversimplification of the way the brain works. In fact, it is much
                                  more “plastic” and fluid in how it deals with different functions.
                                  Many parts of the brain can learn to perform new functions and
                                  there is much unused capacity.



                                                                  ®
                                                         Team-Fly
   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26