How Stress Drains Your Brain — and What To Do About It | Nicole Byers | TED

171,884 views ・ 2023-12-13

TED


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I came home from vacation recently, jet-lagged, tired,
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after delayed flights and a lost bag,
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with my cranky preschooler
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and my husband trudging behind me,
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and I forgot the code to my front door.
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We've lived in this house for seven years.
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I'd put the code in the door hundreds of times before.
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And as I stood there, staring at the keypad, I thought,
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"Oh boy, I'm finally losing my mind."
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Our brains have an incredible capacity to store memory,
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but not all of that information is accessible at once.
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An article in “Scientific America[n]” estimates
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the human brain can store 2.5 million gigabytes of data.
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That's about 5,000 iPhones.
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But if you've ever forgotten a password before,
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you know that memory is not always easy to access
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because memory is not just one system.
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Those different systems have limits,
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and a number of factors in our daily lives can impact our memory efficiency.
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There was a famous neuropsychology case study
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of a patient referred to as patient HM,
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who became like a real-life Ten-Second Tom
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after brain surgery to treat a seizure disorder.
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In terms of his seizures, the surgery was a success.
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They were less severe and less frequent.
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But after his surgery,
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HM became unable to consciously learn new things.
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For example, he worked with the same neuropsychologist for years.
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He never remembered meeting her,
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he’d introduce himself each time.
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And he never remember doing the different tasks
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that she would bring to test his memory.
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But here's the interesting part.
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His performance got better on some of those tasks over time.
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He never remember doing them.
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He always thought he was doing them for the first time.
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But his brain had learned the procedures without him being aware.
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We learned from patient HM and others like him
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that there are different types of memory.
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Some memories come to mind almost automatically.
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Like if you're walking through a garden and you smell the flowers
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that your grandma used to keep on her kitchen table,
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and all of a sudden, you're thinking of your favorite memory with your grandma.
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But other memories take more brainpower and effort to recall.
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Like trying to remember my new computer password.
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Because some memories take more brainpower and effort to recall,
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they're also more prone to interference.
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You're at the grocery store,
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and you’re trying to remember 10 things that you need to pick up.
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But you run into your neighbor in the produce section,
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and after a few minutes of chit chat, hearing about their new car,
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you can only remember two of those 10 things.
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Even though our memory storage is pretty impressive --
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5,000 iPhones big --
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the short-term memory that you're using to keep track of your grocery list
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is more like seven, plus or minus two, bits of information.
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And it's really easy to throw that active short-term memory off track.
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The problem?
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We live in a very distracting modern world.
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You're at a meeting at work,
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and you're trying to remember all the details of a project
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that you're working on
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so that you can share it with your team.
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But at the same time,
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your brain is paying attention to what your colleagues are saying,
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trying to ignore all the email alerts popping up on your computer,
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distracted by text messages from your family
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asking what's for dinner,
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and wondering if they're going to take a break soon
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because you could really use some more coffee.
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Ignoring all those distractions and competing priorities
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takes up a lot of energy.
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When our brains are juggling 400 things,
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we're more likely to make a memory error,
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like forgetting a colleague’s name in a meeting
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or missing a key part of your presentation,
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and then beating yourself up for the rest of the day
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for making that mistake.
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Which brings us to another brain-draining habit
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that can mess up your memory
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and make it hard to remember where you left your keys:
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stress.
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Doesn't have to be huge or major stressors, either.
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All those day-to-day stresses, pressures and deadlines take up brain space, too,
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and force our brain to do a bunch of mental multitasking.
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Last summer, I locked myself in a stairwell twice in the same week
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because I was trying to do this mental multitasking.
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I was packing up at the end of the day,
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and at the same time,
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I was thinking about phone calls I needed to make tomorrow,
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and ideas for a project that I was working on
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and what I was going to make for supper that night
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and whether I should pick up my daughter before or after I get groceries.
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And I left my keys in my office.
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Twice in the same week.
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Apparently, door locks aren't my thing.
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An article from Queen's University estimates we have 6,200 thoughts each day.
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That's a lot of potential for distractions.
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There was a study at the University of California
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that found when we're interrupted, like with distractions or multitasking,
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we try to compensate by working faster.
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But this makes us feel more stressed.
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And as you can imagine, it's not very efficient.
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We've all been in situations where we feel a bit stressed out
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and overwhelmed by our never-ending to do lists.
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Between emails and phone calls and Zoom meetings and project deadlines,
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we’re coming home from work feeling tired, and our brains are burnt out.
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There was an article published in the journal “Science of Learning”
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that showed stress not only impacts our memory retrieval,
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so it's hard to remember that door code when you need it,
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stress also makes it hard for our brains to problem-solve
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and think of creative solutions,
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like how I'm going to get into my house when I can't remember my door code.
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We know all those day-to-day stresses, pressures
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and deadlines can mess up our memory.
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But what about bigger stresses,
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like the uncertainty and change of living through a multi-year pandemic,
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financial pressure, family stress?
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These stresses drain brain resources, too,
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making us more likely to make mistakes
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and making it harder to remember the things we need to remember.
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So memory errors are normal,
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especially when you’re tired, overworked
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or stressed out.
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That's great to know,
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but I still need to get into my house at the end of my vacation.
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How do we boost our memory in these situations
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and recharge those brain cells?
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It's tempting to try and just think harder,
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but that doesn't always work.
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Have you ever been trying to think of the name of a movie or an actor,
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and it's right on the tip of your tongue, but you can't quite remember it?
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And then four hours later, you're driving home from work
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and that name comes to you out of the blue?
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Yeah, me too.
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Totally normal.
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When it comes to our memory,
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thinking harder doesn't always work.
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Because of a process of competitive inhibition
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of the neurons in your brain.
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Basically, when you try to think too hard about one super specific piece of memory,
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like a name or a code,
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the brain cells in that part of your brain get overloaded and blocked.
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They need time to recharge.
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That’s why, four hours later, that memory comes back to you.
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It's still there, still in your memory storage,
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just the access route has been exhausted and needs time to reset.
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Plus, remember how stress makes our brains less efficient?
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When we're worried about making mistakes,
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we're more likely to make more mistakes.
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Do this instead:
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if you’re feeling more forgetful than usual,
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or your brain feels stuck
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and you can't seem to find the memory you need,
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it might be a sign that your brain needs a reset.
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Can’t remember a code or a password, standing at your door like me,
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and you can think of every four-digit code you know,
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except the one you need?
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Think about something else for a few minutes.
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Anything else.
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Chat with the store clerk at the grocery store about the weather
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instead of staring at the debit machine,
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trying to remember your bank code,
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or pull out your phone and scroll social media for a few minutes.
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This works because instead of exhausting the brain cells
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you need to find that memory,
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you activate other parts of your brain,
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giving those memory centers a chance to recharge and reset.
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Making more mistakes than normal at work,
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you can’t seem to send an email without a typo
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or you’re stumbling over your words in a meeting ...
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get up and take a real break.
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Go for a walk around your office
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or do something fun for a few minutes.
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These micro breaks refresh your mental resources
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and give your brain back the energy and focus it needs
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to find that information.
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Memory errors aren't a sign you're losing your mind.
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They might be a sign your brain needs a little break and a reset.
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Thank you.
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