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Does travel keep the brain young?

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Does travel keep the brain young?

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Old Apr 15th, 2016 | 04:25 AM
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Does travel keep the brain young?

As someone with a strong family history of dementia, I was fascinated by this very good BBC TV programme which some of you may be able to catch up with. It made me reflect on the impact of travel on the health of the brain. In summary the programme suggests keeping physically active especially walking; continuing to learn new skills, and eating certain foods ie blackcurrants, blueberries and aubergines.

I am sure travel ticks many of the boxes as it encourages active exploration and the learning of new languages as a skill. Any other insights?

Now the link:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/guides/zgxq6fr
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Old Apr 15th, 2016 | 04:35 AM
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Only if you play table tennis while travelling .
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Old Apr 15th, 2016 | 05:09 AM
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Nothing is better than exercise. So if you stay home and walk or walk somewhere else it hardly matters, IMO.
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Old Apr 15th, 2016 | 05:31 AM
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You mean, there is hope for us?
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Old Apr 15th, 2016 | 05:47 AM
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We live in Austria and frequently visit the neighbors, and so we often move into and out of the respective cultures. Though we have learned a good amount of necessary phrases in Czech, Slovak, and Hungarian, shifting between them and our native English is challenging.

I think about, and mentally plan, our next holiday when walking the dog, walking to the market, and so forth, even if it is just the next weekend day trip. "What to see?," "What to do?," "Do we have enough local currency?"

I do not know if this travel keeps my brain young, but sometimes a weekend outing to the neighbors is more mentally stimulating than a staff meeting in my former working life!
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Old Apr 15th, 2016 | 05:50 AM
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Famously, London taxi drivers who've done "The Knowledge" and learnt all the officially-approved routes as well as their own favourite short cuts and back ways have some areas of their brain much more developed than is usual for others. So getting used to other people's languages, on however elementary a level, and currencies, and transport systems, and maps, and taps and toilet flushes.... it must all have some effect.
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Old Apr 15th, 2016 | 06:19 AM
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I'd say coping with unfamiliar circumstances keeps the brain active. A cruise won't help...
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Old Apr 15th, 2016 | 06:21 AM
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"Nothing is better than exercise."

That's absolutely NOT what the science shows. Diet, mental activity, and social interaction matter at least as much. And certain kinds of exercise (essentially: what keeps you nimble, rather than what makes you tough) contribute a great deal more to longevity than others

A couple of seconds reading questions on this forum demonstrates quite clearly that for some, travel can help in all these. And for others, it manifestly hasn't.

It's perfectly possible to spend your entire life travelling and going to gyms but still be a muscle-bound, socially inept, closed-minded, excessively sedentary self-poisoner.

I'd say that well over half the professional globetrotters I've worked with in megacorps owed their appalling health to the diet, constant sitting, isolated existence and limited mental hinterland that make for career success. While all the healthy nonagenarians of my acquaintance have scarcely left their village in the past 20 years.
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Old Apr 15th, 2016 | 07:04 AM
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I think it's the reverse: having a "young" brain keeps one traveling, learning, exercising, trying to eat a healthy diet.

It's only since I retired that I have really developed this desire to travel to Europe yearly. It's only since I retired that began seriously pursuing my attempt to become fluent in German. It's only since I retired that I began to study Spanish (and Italian, though I soon dropped that idea).

What has happened to me since I began regular travel is that I've become more willing to expand, to try new things, to go places that I've never gone before.
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Old Apr 15th, 2016 | 07:26 AM
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Well for me I hope to travel less when I retire.
But maybe I won't. I will stay longer in one place though.
This week I was in Bruxelles, then Shanghai than Paris now going to Bruxelles, next week Paris Venice. And I must plan a trip to Istanbul.
All that wasted... since I've got no brain...

I think that being out of your routine is excellent for your brain - not traveling. Or we should say traveling to places that are out of our confort zone.
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Old Apr 15th, 2016 | 08:28 AM
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Maybe my husband will learn to like aubergines now...I have found it's really good if you slice it very thinly and hide it under the cheese topping on a pizza...although that might not be good for the brain

I think learning most anything must be good exercise for the brain, although after 2 weeks in southern Italy, trying to communicate in my poor Italian, my head hurts..is that good or bad, I wonder...

Flanner, always an interesting point of view...
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Old Apr 15th, 2016 | 08:33 AM
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I will say, with nothing concrete to base it on, it depends.
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Old Apr 15th, 2016 | 09:15 AM
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Anything that uses the brain is good. My parents senior group had several presentations on this and they recommended playing scrabble and doing jigsaw and crossword puzzles as helping prevent memory issues. And obviously travel and learning - or relearning another language would be a big help.

Worked for my mom, she was completely lucid until the day she died at the age of 94.
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Old Apr 15th, 2016 | 09:25 AM
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I'm pretty sure it's mostly genetic. Everything else has, I suspect, very little impact. A little maybe, but not much, barring overt abuse of our systems.

Science gives us the proof-of-the-moment, published as unequivocal fact, then replaced down the line with the new "proven" facts. My personal belief is if we're having a good time, doing whatever we like to do, it's good for us.
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Old Apr 15th, 2016 | 10:16 AM
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The programme in question took groups of older people and gave them a baseline test. This week one group learned to play table tennis and the other group took brisk walks. In one test afterwards the walkers had improved the most but the table tennisers improved the most generally. Learning something new, involving exercise and social contract made a huge difference.

In fact the learning something new and social contact were probably the most important things.
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Old Apr 15th, 2016 | 10:43 AM
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From the link: "Social activity stimulates your brain in a similar way to activities like reading and doing crosswords."

As an introvert, while I occasionally wish I had the capacity for more social activity, since I don't, I choose reading.

And "people who are lonely are twice as likely to develop Alzheimer's disease and dementia."

Alone doesn't necessarily mean lonely. I hope even the extroverts realize that is true.

And "When it comes to the brain, a rich and varied life is the key to long-term health."

I would suggest again that, whatever having a good time is for each of us, translates into the researchers' "rich & varied".
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Old Apr 15th, 2016 | 11:01 AM
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Introvert or not plays no role
Not using your brain is not good. Introvert can use their brains in a variety of ways.
It takes when you sit do nothing and interact with nothing that it becomes pathological.
You stay in your bed 24/24 your muscles disappear. You do nothing with your brain... It atrophies.

Like life : you do nothing. You don't really live.
Have fun have wine have sex !
Hips.
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Old Apr 15th, 2016 | 11:34 AM
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I don't know if travel keeps my brain young, or if that is even one of my goals (a young brain?), but it certainly keeps me on my toes intellectually. Having to speak and read and understand foreign languages and navigate one's way through the laws and regulations and expecations of another culture, plus how to behave and interact - that all takes intellectual effort, which I can only imagine is good for neurological health.
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Old Apr 15th, 2016 | 11:39 AM
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Yes, traveling is good for the brain and better for the soul. My goal is to keep on traveling until I keel over and die at the Buza Bar with some wine and a beautiful sunset. That's what travel insurance is all about...plus I'll have great legroom on the return flight.

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Old Apr 15th, 2016 | 11:53 AM
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"...plus I'll have great legroom on the return flight."

Although headroom may be another matter.

Whathello, I think we agree. My point was only that the general does not necessarily wholly apply to the individual. One person's thrill is another's stress, and I think we agree that negative stress isn't good for us. Or maybe I should say, for me. This I know from experience.
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