How Mindfulness Affects the Body & Brain

Healthy Mind – Mindfulness – The Science Behind It

The Science Behind Mindfulness

Written by Team BLOOM

  |  Reviewed by Em Morrison

If you want to understand the mechanics behind how mindfulness can positively affect our mind and body in so many different ways, there is some really cool and really exciting new brain and body science showing just that — how mindfulness can actually change and optimize the structure and functioning of our brain, also known as neuroplasticity, and regulate the nervous system (i.e., help us stay calm in stressful situations). Scientists are learning that our brain is plastic and that it will change and adapt to our life experiences on its own. With practices such as mindfulness meditation, there are ways to take matters into your own hands to boost brain function and overall health. How? Well, the more the brain does a certain task, the stronger that neural network becomes, which makes the process more efficient each time you do it. With this, it is easy to understand how powerful a positive practice like mindfulness can be when we do it every day.

Scientists who study the brain have used various techniques such as EEG (electroencephalogram) and MRI (magnetic resonance imagery) to take pictures and measure activity of different areas of the brain while someone is practicing mindfulness meditation. And what they have found is pretty interesting!

To make it simple, the parts of the brain that help a person learn, make memories, and set goals lit up, or showed activity, when the person practiced mindfulness meditation. Also, the parts of the brain that help a person respond when they are afraid or stressed (i.e., fight, flight, freeze response) did not show activity, or showed reduced activity, when the person practiced mindfulness meditation.

If you’re interested in learning more about the parts of the brain and how it is thought this all works, here’s more detail (and check out the image below, too).

How It Works

When a person practices mindfulness, a really interesting interplay of brain activity happens, where certain areas of the brain become more active and larger, the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus, while other areas, the amygdala, become less active. This is important because the areas that become larger and/or more active are the areas of the brain responsible for learning and memory (hippocampus) and executive functions (prefrontal cortex) like making wise decisions, dealing with emotions, planning actions related to a person’s goals, and impulse control. With mindfulness meditation, you are exercising your brain, which changes its structure and functioning, just like when you exercise your body. This in turn creates a cascade of positive effects on your brain and body.

While the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus increase in size and activity, another part of the brain, the amygdala, shrinks, is soothed, and becomes less active with mindfulness practice. The amygdala is responsible for responding to stress, fear, and anxiety with a built-in evolutionary response known as flight, fight, or freeze.

The fight, flight, or freeze response is how your brain evolved to instantly and automatically react to imminent danger and increase your chance of survival when threatened. This built-in response was incredibly useful when humans lived in primitive societies (think being chased by a saber-toothed tiger) but is far less needed (most useful only in true emergencies now) in our modern everyday life.

When the amygdala is activated, it overrides the functions of the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus and you lose the ability to use some of the higher brain functions like self-regulation, memory, mental flexibility, and reasoning. So the soothing effect of mindfulness on the amygdala helps you react to stressful situations with a sense of calm and focus, and allows you to still be able to access and use the decision-making parts of your brain, the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus.

Our modern world can be a source of a lot of stress and mindfulness is a very important tool you can use to take back control, optimize your brain functioning (e.g., react calmly and think clearly in stressful situations), and help you live a healthier, happier, and more fulfilled life.

Effects of Mindfulness on your Nervous System

The positive health effects of mindfulness don’t just happen in your brain either. They reach far into your body through your nervous system. Your brain and nervous system control your whole body. This includes what you think and feel, how you learn things, what you remember, the way you move and talk, and how you experience the world around you. They also control things you’re less aware of and don’t have to think about doing, like your breathing, the beating of your heart, and the digestion of your food.

You can think of your brain as a computer that controls all the body’s functions and the nervous system as the network that relays messages back and forth from the brain to different parts of the body to tell it what to do. It communicates these messages through the spinal cord, which runs from the brain down through the back. The spinal cord contains threadlike nerves that branch out to every organ and part of the body.

When your brain sees a threat, danger, or stress (think being chased by a saber-toothed tiger, again), the amygdala rings the alarm bells in your body through the autonomic nervous system (the parts of your body that work without you having to think about it, automatically), activating the first branch of your autonomic nervous system, the sympathetic nervous system. This is what sets off the fight, flight, or freeze response.

This causes your heart to race, blood pressure to increase, a flood of stress hormones like cortisol and epinephrine to be released, all with the goal of providing greater blood flow to the muscles, heart, and brain to help you think or act quickly in the face of danger. Once the danger has passed, the natural feedback loop from your brain activates the second branch of your autonomic nervous system, the parasympathetic nervous system, to counterbalance the event and regulate your body back to homeostasis, allowing it to resume its natural and necessary functions of rest, recovery, and digestion.

These two branches of the nervous system, the sympathetic and parasympathetic, working together to balance each other based on what we experience, are essential to our survival. They have served our ancestors well throughout history. Yet this built-in evolutionary response to stress can also have serious consequences and be damaging to your health if your body reacts in a big way to every stress. This can happen when living in a modern world full of demands, pressures, and stressors. Many of these everyday types of stress (e.g., work obligations, tests, conflicts with friends and family) look like that saber-toothed tiger to the amygdala part of our brain, triggering our flight, fight, or freeze response from our sympathetic nervous system. This can result in being stressed all the time, even for “no reason.” You or your young person might be experiencing real-world dangers and threats too. If there is violence in your house or neighborhood, if it’s hard to find food to eat, or if your young person is being bullied, these stressors are handled by our amygdala. Mindfulness is not a cure for these kinds of issues. If you or your young person feel on high alert a lot of the time or shut down (emotionally numb), we suggest you find a counselor, therapist, or doctor to talk to. It’s okay to ask for help. We all need help at times throughout our lives and there are people out there who want to help.

Nervous system dysregulation is when those two branches of the nervous system (the sympathetic and parasympathetic), instead of balancing one another, go out of whack and get stuck. It’s like if two people were playing on a see-saw, and one just got up and walked away. This nervous system dysregulation can be caused from having a lot of stress impacting our bodies for a long period of time. It can show up as feeling out of control emotionally (emotional reactivity), having thoughts you don’t like and can’t control, having mood swings, depression, feeling scared or anxious often, or emotionally shutting down and feeling totally numb. If any of this resonates with you or feels like it may apply to your young person, it can be helpful to talk about it with a counselor, therapist, or your doctor. If you or your young person are experiencing any of these things, be sure to reach out for help.

Some stress is just part of being human. To stay healthy, we want to take care of our brain and our nervous system, so that after stressful events happen, we can bounce back. With mindfulness meditation, you can calm your amygdala and help turn off its alarm bells in your brain. This turns off the sympathetic nervous system and turns on the parasympathetic nervous system, putting your body back into balance. With time, this practice of mindfulness meditation can help us deal with the stresses of life better, without sending our body on a roller coaster of activity.

In addition to mindfulness meditation, other exercises that can create a stronger, more flexible nervous system, one that can bounce back easily after stress include: breathing exercises, yoga, and learning a new skill, among others. Many of these exercises train your nervous system to experience discomfort without being pushed into the extreme fight, flight, or freeze response. This allows your nervous system to learn how to tolerate the stressors and rebound back to homeostasis more effectively and quickly. Every person has the capacity to learn how to develop a more resilient nervous system which leads to greater emotional, physical, and spiritual health.

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