Exposure to nonstop negativity actually impairs brain function. Here's how
to defend yourself.
Do you hate it when people complain? It turns out there's a good reason:
Listening to too much complaining is bad for your brain in multiple ways,
according to Trevor Blake, a serial entrepreneur and author of Three Simple Steps: A Map to Success in Business and
Life. In the book, he describes how neuroscientists have
learned to measure brain activity when faced with various stimuli, including a
long gripe session.
"The brain works more like a muscle than we thought," Blake says. "So if
you're pinned in a corner for too long listening to someone being negative,
you're more likely to behave that way as well."
Even worse, being exposed to too much complaining can actually make you
dumb. Research shows that exposure to 30 minutes or more of
negativity--including viewing such material on TV--actually peels away neurons
in the brain's hippocampus. "That's the part of your brain you need for problem
solving," he says. "Basically, it turns your brain to mush."
But if you're running a company, don't you need to hear about anything that
may have gone wrong? "There's a big difference between bringing your attention
to something that's awry and a complaint," Blake says. "Typically, people who
are complaining don't want a solution; they just want you to join in the
indignity of the whole thing. You can almost hear brains clink when six people
get together and start saying, 'Isn't it terrible?' This will damage your brain
even if you're just passively listening. And if you try to change their
behavior, you'll become the target of the complaint."
So, how do you defend yourself and your brain from all the negativity?
Blake recommends the following tactics.... Read more
"There's a big difference between bringing your attention to something that's awry and a complaint..." "Typically, people who are complaining don't want a solution; they just want you to join in the indignity of the whole thing. You can almost hear brains clink when six people get together and start saying, 'Isn't it terrible?' This will damage your brain even if you're just passively listening. And if you try to change their behavior, you'll become the target of the complaint."A tip of the Canterbury cap to TitusOneNine
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