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The Place We Find Ourselves

1 Why Engaging Your Story Is The Best Thing You Can Do For Your Brain

The Place We Find Ourselves

Adam Young

Christianity, Religion & Spirituality, Health & Fitness, Mental Health

4.8 • 2.5K Ratings

🗓️ 24 March 2018

⏱️ 37 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

It turns out that the practice of reflecting on the story of your life actually promotes healing in your brain. There are two reasons for this:

Brain health is a function of the degree to which all parts of your brain are connected with one another.

The process of reflecting on your story, sharing your story with another, and hearing another’s reaction to your story connects neural networks that were previously separated.

In other words, the key to healing is connecting. Engaging the core stories of your life heals your brain by connecting regions that were previously not well connected.

Connecting Left to Right

When you experience harm, your thoughts about the experience become disconnected from the overwhelming emotions you had. Literally. The neurons holding your thoughts (stored in your left brain) become disconnected from the neurons holding your feelings (stored in the right brain).

Telling the story of the experience requires that

your brain link your

thoughts about the story (left brain)

with your

feelings about the story (right brain).

If you are able to tell your story while remaining connected to your emotions, then the neural networks in the left part of your brain will link up with the neural networks in the right part of your brain.

This is very healing.

It leads to what neuroscientists call integration, and what the Bible calls shalom.

Connecting Top to Bottom

Telling your story not only leads to left-right integration, but it can lead to “top-down” integration. “Top” refers to the portion of your brain that is behind your forehead—your cortical brain. “Bottom” refers to the portion of your brain that is lower and deeper—your limbic brain. The limbic brain triggers your fight-flight response and your shutting down response.

When you begin to reflect on harmful parts of your story—stories that hold shame, fear, or rage—your limbic brain reacts and you enter a state of fight-flight or a state of shutting down.

Do I Really Have to Tell It To Another Person?

Yes! If you are able to stay with the story in the presence of another person, two things happen (which are both very good for your brain).

First, the other person’s limbic brain regulates yours—which is to say, their limbic brain soothes and calms yours.

Second, as a result of their attunement and soothing, your cortical brain (top) forms connections and linkages with your limbic brain (bottom).

In other words, the presence of an attuned listener leads to changes in your brain.

Your brain develops neural pathways that connect your cortical brain to your limbic brain. This is very healing because these pathways enable you to self-regulate when you become overwhelmed by fear, shame, or rage.

My website: adamyoungcounseling.com
Contact me at adamyoung4@gmail.com.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome to the place we find ourselves, the podcast where we not only talk about all things related to story, trauma and therapy,

0:10.0

but also have the privilege of hearing some of the sacred real-life stories of interview guests.

0:16.5

I'm Adam Young and this is the very first episode of the place we find ourselves.

0:23.0

Today I talk about what it means that you have a story.

0:29.0

And more specifically, we'll get into why this story, the story of your life, may matter more than you think it does.

0:43.0

Let me begin with two very simple claims.

0:46.0

Number one, you've got a story and that story matters.

0:51.0

And number two, the only way to experience significant shifts in your heart is by engaging your story.

0:58.0

By addressing it, by looking at it, by reflecting upon it.

1:01.0

That's the only way to experience really substantive significant shifts in your heart.

1:08.0

Now what do I mean by story?

1:10.0

Well, a story has certain characteristics. All stories have setting. They have plot.

1:16.0

There are plot twists. There are characters. There are themes.

1:20.0

Have you ever thought about your life as an epic story?

1:25.0

The epic stories have tons of different settings. They cross decades, just like your life.

1:31.0

Think of all the different settings in your life.

1:33.0

The hospital room when you were delivered, when you first came into the world.

1:37.0

It's a setting, part of the story of your life, your kindergarten class.

1:42.0

The first soccer team you played on, your piano recital when you were 10 years old, junior prom.

1:48.0

The day that that really bad thing happened in your family that nobody ever talks about.

1:53.0

These are all settings. And the story of your life has many, many different settings.

2:00.0

And then there are all the characters that make an appearance in the epic story that is your life.

...

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