| The Neuroscience of Change: 3 Steps to Rewire Your Brain |
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Victor Frankel was a Jewish psychiatrist in a Nazi concentration camp during World War II. While death was certain, he observed that about 1 out of 25 of his fellow prisoners somehow managed to survive. He set about studying the characteristics of those who survived. He found that it was what the survivors associated to that made the difference in their survival. While 24 out of every 25 focused on their pain and inevitable death, those who survived created meaning – a purpose – for their suffering, rather than accepting their fate and wondering why God was allowing them to die. For example, they constructed a reason to survive so that they could tell their story to their children, to make certain that this kind of atrocity would never happen again. It changed the meaning of their suffering to something that would make a difference – a purpose that provided a will to live. (Man's Search For Meaning). What you link inside your head – the meaning that you give – determines your behavior. You can change your behavior when you change the meaning. You can reprogram your associations and rewire your brain. How do you condition yourself to make changes that last? When you change the meaning of an association (neural conditioning), you change your behavior. There are three key principles of neural conditioning to make lasting change. 1. Recognize what to change. You must get to the point where you feel you must change something, change it now, and that you can change it. Believe that change will ultimately bring pleasure. Recognize that not changing would be ultimately more painful than the immediate pain of the change process. Questions to Ask:
2. Identify the cues/triggers for the behavior. The meaning you attach to a trigger determines your behavior. Observe the cues (usually emotional) that trigger an automatic behavior pattern. For example, if you want to accumulate wealth, yet do not, you immediately associate money to some pain or negative meaning.
Questions to Ask:
3. Create a new association that empowers you. Condition a new, empowering association to the same cue. For example, if you have limited yourself or feel stuck in making more money, link making money with strength, power, and possibility. Questions to Ask:
The science of success is the neuroscience of neural conditioning – of reprogramming your mind to attach meanings to what you see that will generate success. Upcoming Licensed, Specialty-Certified trainings that integrate psychology, neuroscience, and quantum physics with strategic coaching include: New Life Story® Wellness Coaches Training www.MentorPath.com/training Begins 3.13/12 |
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