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Rewire Your Brain for Love

Rewire Your Brain for Love
Valentine's Day can be the bane of any person's year. It can fling daggers of loneliness, rather than gentle arrows from Cupid. Instead of dreading another February 14th, use the science of mindfulness to make a healthy relationship resolution and rewire your brain for love.

Valentine's Day can be the bane of any person's year. It can fling daggers of loneliness, rather than gentle arrows from Cupid. Instead of dreading another February 14th, use the science of mindfulness to make a healthy relationship resolution.

Clinical psychologist and neuropsychologist, Marsha Lucas, PhD, author of Rewire Your Brain for Love: Creating Vibrant Relationships Using the Science of Mindfulness, suggests her clients download a new operating system for their relationship brains, what she calls Love 2.0.

Luckily, the latest neuroscience – from researchers at Harvard, UCLA, MIT, Princeton, Stanford, and Cambridge — supports her theory that we can literally rewire our brains.

Here's Marsha's advice for any lover just in time for Valentine's Day. _____________________________

Cultivating new or better relationships isn't about admonishing yourself to stop yelling, or putting little sticky notes on the mirror about how wonderful you are. You've might have (repeatedly) tried scores of ideas like those, and your relationships still don't cut it – the same old problems keep resurfacing.

Here's the thing: The way your brain is wired is mostly what helps – or hurts – when it comes to satisfying, healthy relationships. You need a wired-in "Operating System" that supports better relationships from the ground up — the kind of OS that supports "apps" for keeping your anxiety or anger from hijacking disagreements, or increasing your resilience when it comes to your emotional reactions. I'm sharing here my list of the most important apps for better love – the skills that seem to be the most powerful in creating and sustaining a healthy, vibrant relationship. Best of all, these are acquirable apps, skills you can develop and grow within yourself, within your brain, starting with the most basic and getting progressively more sophisticated:

·         Better management of your body's reactions

·         Regulation of your response to fear and stress

·         Increased emotional resilience

·         More flexible responses to relationship challenges

·         Improved insight (self-knowing)

·         Healthy, balanced empathy and attunement—within yourself and with others

·         A perspective shift from "me" to "we"

Installing and running these love apps isn't about resolving to be, say, more empathic, or to practice stress management. Trying to install these apps won't really work if you haven't dealt with your underlying "relationship OS." All of us who've struggled with self-improvement or self-acceptance—or any other method for trying to make healthier relationships with ourselves and others possible—often fall into the trap of trying to get our cortex, the intellectual, insightful part of our brain perched way up top, to make changes in the way the deep, lower parts of our brains drive our relationships. But if you have a faulty OS trying to get those two areas to work together as a team – it's a bit like trying to get an iPhone app to work by typing in DOS commands. It's just not gonna go well.

Sorry to say that there's a bit more bad news: most of your brain's relationship OS was developed unbelievably early in your brain's history—before you were about two years old. Your first experiences with relationships—those you had with your parents—have a huge influence on how you deal with relationships throughout your life. The your-parents-to-you relationship covertly operates in important, behind-the-scenes ways in your later you-to-your-partner romantic relationships.

But — you can rewire your brain for better relationships, starting now, with your Valentine's Day resolution. You can rebuild your OS for love.

How? Recent studies by leading neuroscientists and biobehaviorists—researchers from Harvard, UCLA, MIT, Princeton, Stanford, and Cambridge, to name a few—have shown that the practice of mindfulness meditation promotes changes in the brain in areas and ways that can promote healthier relationships with yourself and others.

And it doesn't take years of practice—many beneficial effects are seen in the earliest stages of practice, in as little as a few weeks of practicing 20 minutes a day.

Can't do 20 minutes? That's perfectly okay; start with two.

Now, if you're not finding the love of your life, or if you're in a crummy relationship, you don't usually say to yourself, "Hey, I know – I need to start meditating!" But let me share this perspective with you: I've been practicing psychotherapy for over 20 years. I've always felt deeply honored to help people as they dig in and do the often difficult work of creating better lives for themselves. And since I began using mindfulness meditation with my patients, I've been privileged to witness some of the most amazing shifts and improvements. It has been the single most remarkable and elegantly simple way to update your OS that I've ever seen, and the neuroscience evidence backs that up.

By practicing mindfulness meditation, you can rewire your brain's relationship operating system, get the amazing love apps—and make this Valentine's Day the beginning of Love 2.0.

Marsha Lucas is a clinical psychologist and neuropsychologist in Washington DC, and author of Rewire Your Brain for Love: Creating Vibrant Relationships Using the Science of Mindfulness (Hay House, February 2012).

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