Stepping Stones

Lessons on Intentional Living with Lisa McGrath

Stress Can Sabotage Your Memory

 Stress Can Sabotage Your Memory

Do you know how stress can affect your body – making it difficult to sleep so you’re groggy during the day, and it can lead to depression, anxiety and an inability to focus on work and other tasks. Your physical health isn't the only things that can be affected, your memory can also be highly affected by chronic or extreme stress.

The memory works by processing information we acquire through the pathways of the brain. We can retain and recall experiences and things we’ve learned in the past through the neural pathways.

It's not just students that need to incorporate brain exercises and memory skills into their lives, but all of us need to practice daily for the benefits good health and memory bring.

Short-term memory (working memory) is what we notice or think of first when we’re reading or memorizing something. Then, it’s processed into the long-term memory – if conditions are healthy in your brain. Here are the three stages that information goes through before it’s processed into the long-term memory:

  1. Encoding – Encoding happens when you listen or observe something. You must move on to the next two stages for it to stay in your memory.
  2. Consolidation – Much like you would burn a CD, consolidated information becomes burned into your memory so you can move on to the next stage.
  3. Retrieval – The part of your brain which allows you to recall the information you encoded and consolidated.

Stress may interfere with either or all of these memory processing stages in the following ways:

  • Interference – Stress can interfere with any of the above processes by distracting what you’re trying to remember. For example, if you’ve just memorized some important information and then experience a stressful situation, you’re not likely to remember the data you were trying to process.
  • Not finishing the process – If you don’t complete all three of the stages to process memories you probably didn’t encode it in the first place. For example, if you forget an important business meeting, you likely just heard the date and time, but didn’t write it down or think of it in ways to remember it and store it in your long-term memory.
  • Stress hormones – Stress can create stress hormones that may prevent passage of memories through the neural pathways. These hormones interfere with the chemical balance of your brain and can greatly reduce your recall ability.

A certain amount of stress can actually be good for you – especially when it’s involved with emotions. You can probably remember some traumatic event that happened in your life because it was an emotional experience and your brain recorded every detail.

We’re born with a certain amount of this ingrained emotional memory ability because of the “fight, flight, freeze, or fawn” response we had to develop early on when survival depended on it. We learn from our experiences and try to move away from pain. Think about the stress in your own life... how might it be affecting your memory recall and your overall health?

I've been sharing different strategies about brain health, exercises, and food choices to help you "air" out your four rooms. If you've missed these posts, I'd encourage you to check them out. Also, if you could share them with a friend, it would be greatly appreciated.

Cheers!

Lisa

P.S. Make sure you like, follow, and share our social media: www.facebook.com/ahousewithfourrooms and www.instargram.com/ahousewithfour.rooms

 

The life philosophy of A House With Four Rooms suggests thinking of yourself as being four rooms: physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual rooms. It advocates for doing something daily for your physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual well-being.

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