WO Magazine Fall 2013 | Page 51

BY: LIZ FLEMING are endless memory-based games available online but you can create one yourself using a simple deck of cards. Choose eight pairs (queens, jacks, kings, tens etc.), shuffle and lay the cards out in four rows of four. Set a timer and see how quickly you can match up the pairs by turning over two cards at a time. Keep a record and try to improve your time each day – then add more pairs to the layout. STEP? TWO: FOCUS Focus, focus, focus…yep…attention flutters in at number two on the brain strain list. If you’re like me and have the attention span of a gnat, you’re to be excused. Life is filled with stimulation and we’re bombarded on every sensory level. Radios blare, cell phones hum, televisions squawk, laptops vibrate with work demanding to be done. The task faced by your brain is to sort and separate all the various competing stimuli so you can focus on important elements one by one. Again, you can easily find an array of online games that will challenge you to sort and separate but to strengthen that cerebral muscle, all you really need is the timer on your microwave and a dishwasher full of clean dishes. Set the timer for four minutes and start emptying. See how quickly you can get things into their proper places (with a minimum of breakage!) and then strive for quicker scores each day. STEP? THREE:?COMMUNICATE The third major task for your brain is language – strong communication is key to almost everything we do. Sadly, email and twitter are eroding our written skills while cell phones and text messages are making it all too easy to communicate in monosyllables a chimpanzee could manage. To battle back to strong language skills, try reading more, choosing topics with which you’re unfamiliar. If the headlines are usually all you scan, try something indepth in the business or science section. Look up words you don’t recognize and then bore your spouse to death by offering a recap of what you’ve read over dinner. Set a moratorium on texting for a day and insist that you and your family communicate only verbally, either in person or on the phone. Your kids will hate you, but your brain will benefit. STEP? FOUR: PRACTICE Visual-spatial skills are the fourth boxcar on the brain train and they’re the ones all you White Oaks members probably value most. People with strong visual-spatial skills are killers on the squash and tennis courts because they know where the ball’s going to be before it gets there. Practicing sports that rely on hand-eye coordination is a great way to train your brain but there are other methods that involve only mental sweat. Try this: close your eyes and try to visualize the layout of the Pen Centre. Try to remember which stores are beside one another. Where are the kiosks and what are they selling? Next, try to visualize your best friend’s living room. What’s on the coffee table? How many table lamps are there and on which tables do they sit? Going crazy now, wondering how accurate you’ve been? Call your friend and check. STEP? FIVE: PLAY The final task on the brain’s to-do list is what scientists refer to as ‘executive functions’. Whether you’re a high-powered legal eagle or a happy retiree, you still make logical, strategic decisions all the time so those particular brain muscles need to stay fit. (Your kids are going to love this bit…) One of the best challenges you can set yourself, according to brain fitness experts, is a daily dose of video gaming. Choose a game that involves working your way through various levels by solving challenges, finding lost items and (take a deep breath) battling nasty opponents whose nefarious plans for you must be discovered and foiled. Yes, you’ll feel like a bit of an idiot begging the kids to let you have a turn at the controllers, but your brain will thank you! LIZ FLEMING IN ADDITION TO EDITING WO, LIZ FLEMING IS ALSO THE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF OF CRUISE & TRAVEL LIFESTYLES MAGAZINE, THE MANAGING EDITOR OF NATURALLYINNIAGARA.CA AND A REGULAR CONTRIBUTOR TO THE TORONTO STAR, AND TORONTO SUN. SHE’S THE AUTHOR OF TWO AMAZON EBOOKS “SINCE YOU’RE HERE, WE MIGHT AS WELL SHAG” AND “207 TRAVEL TIPS BECAUSE 101 JUST WOULDN’T HAVE BEEN ENOUGH. fall 2013 | wo magazine | 49