For the first two years of our
marriage, Harold and I drank our morning juice out of mustard-colored
Tupperware juice glasses. One day, I noticed some stunning crystal goblets
shoved to the back of the cabinet. I knew they had never been used because they
still had the stickers on them. Now, wouldn’t my tomato juice and his apple
juice look so much better in those glasses?
After using the glasses about six
months, I managed to break the stem off one of them. I threw it away and took
another one down. A few days later, I told Harold, “I broke one of the juice
glasses.”
He shook his head and said, “I bet
I’ve had those glasses twenty years.”
“Well, look at it this way,” I, the
optimist, said, “since we started using them for juice glasses, you’ve gotten
more pleasure out of them than you did during the entire twenty years you had
them.” Really? How much good is something if you never use it?
Anyway, this little incident caused
me to think about the expression, “use it, or lose it.” That expression can be
taken a couple of different ways. Like so many people my age, I’ve accumulated so
much stuff that I don’t use a lot of it. I basically flunked out of minimalist
class because I couldn’t seem to “lose” enough stuff.
There is another way that use it or
lose it applies to our health. Lack of exercise is damaging to our minds and
bodies. Oh, sure, we all know about going to the gym to exercise, but do we
think about exercising our brains?
We lose a certain amount of
physical and mental agility as we age. When we exercise our bodies, it helps
keep us physically agile. When I was much younger, I went to a wellness
seminar. One woman said, “I walk so that I am able to walk.” She had severe
arthritis and said that unless she kept moving, she wouldn’t be able to.
When I don’t feel like moving, I am
most motivated to do it. A few days ago, Carolyn and I were walking into
exercise line dancing class and we were talking about our aches and pains. But
we were both there and ready to dance. Amazingly, I felt better by the end of class.
Mental agility works the same way.
Use it or lose it. Keeping your mind active doesn’t guarantee that you won’t
develop Alzheimer’s, but it may reduce your risk.
We all know how to exercise our
bodies, although we may not do it. You might be a little puzzled as to how to
exercise your brain. As with physical exercise, if mental exercise isn’t fun,
you won’t do it!
To decide on the brain exercise that
will work for you, think about the things you always wanted to do, but never seemed
to find the time or the motivation to follow through.
Here are a few ideas:
1.
Take a class. Have you fallen behind on technology? Check
out online or community college classes. Many colleges offer short courses on a
variety of interests.
2.
Learn a new skill or hobby. After going to a few
“painting parties” my sister discovered she had an artist’s eye. She’s learning
and expanding her skill canvas by canvas. I decided to try to learn to play the
ukulele. I may never be great at it, but I have a lot of fun and at least my
dog enjoys hearing me play.
3.
Read, read, read. Read for pleasure and for learning.
With a library card, reading must be the least expensive pastime ever! I don’t
even need to spend gas money to read. I browse hundreds of library books online
and check them out on my Kindle.
4.
Working puzzles is another inexpensive hobby. I buy
crossword puzzle books and Sudoku books at the dollar store. I also work the
puzzles in the newspaper. Heck, I’ve already paid for the paper, so the puzzles
are free. A good way for me to ease into the day is to work on a puzzle while
drinking my first cup of coffee.
Exercising your brain is a way to
lower your risk of Alzheimer’s disease and enrich your life at the same time. Make
your own list filled with things you enjoy.
My goal is to have as much mental
agility throughout my lifetime as my ninety-year-old mother has. The only way
to reach that goal is to think, plan, and take action to use my brain every day.
Copyright © July 2017 by L.S.
Fisher
http://earlyonset.blogspot.com
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