StreetWise
42.5K posts

StreetWise
@SWisdom718
If you find yourself searching MY profile in order to defend YOUR comments & or positions - you’ve already lost YOUR argument LEARN TO THINK BEFORE YOU ENGAGE







Your brain goes dark when you sit still. Dr. Chuck Hillman at the University of Illinois put people in brain scanners and measured neural activity after 20 minutes of sitting versus 20 minutes of walking. The difference was notable. The sitting brain showed lower activation in key cognitive control areas. The walking brain showed increased activity across attention and executive networks. Twenty minutes. Same people. Completely different brain responses. What you’re seeing in these scans reveals something unsettling about modern life. We’ve built a world that systematically limits optimal brain function. Every chair, every car ride, every hour spent motionless is missed neurological enhancement happening in real time. The enhanced zones in the walking scan represent areas responsible for executive function, spatial processing, memory formation, and creative problem solving. These regions show stronger engagement when you move. Movement doesn’t just change your body. Movement turns on your mind. The implications go far beyond fitness. Every major decision you make while sitting is being made without the full acute boost that prior movement can provide. Every problem you try to solve from a desk is being processed with cognitive resources that benefit from activity. Every creative project you attempt while sedentary is running with added support available from movement. Think about where our most important mental work happens. Board meetings around conference tables. Students taking exams in classroom chairs. Writers staring at screens. Programmers debugging code. Therapists conducting sessions. All of it happening in environments designed to minimize movement. Hillman’s research suggests we’ve accidentally limited cognitive potential through environmental design. The walking brain and the sitting brain show meaningful functional differences. One operates with enhanced cognitive control. The other runs without that acute boost. Ancient humans walked 12 miles daily while thinking, planning, and problem solving. Their brains evolved under constant movement. Our brains carry the same neural architecture but we’ve imprisoned it in furniture. The most productive people throughout history understood this instinctively. Aristotle taught while walking. Darwin took daily thinking walks. Dickens walked 30 miles through London every night. Tesla walked 10 miles daily to stimulate ideas. They weren’t just exercising. They were unlocking cognitive potential that remains less activated when stationary. The business world talks endlessly about optimizing performance through better tools, systems, and strategies. Meanwhile, the most powerful cognitive enhancer costs nothing and requires no equipment. Just get up and move. Every step triggers a neurochemical cascade that increases BDNF, boosts dopamine, and activates neural networks that show less engagement during stillness. The effect peaks around 20 minutes and persists for hours afterward. You can literally watch improvements in cognitive performance turn on and off depending on whether you’re moving or sitting. The next time you face a difficult decision, a creative block, or a complex problem, pay attention to your position. If you’re sitting, your brain may be operating without the full acute boost available. The solution might require neural resources enhanced by activity. Stand up. Walk around. Let the enhanced zones activate. Your best thinking happens when your brain has the support of movement.





Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain.









🇮🇷 Iran’s Health Ministry says the Pasteur Institute, a key hub for vaccine and infectious disease research, was hit in an attack. They call it “a direct assault on global health security,” violating the Geneva Conventions. The century-old institute is part of the international Pasteur network. Source: @iranintl

🇺🇸🇮🇷 Trump claims the U.S. already achieved regime change in Iran "by accident": "I never liked the idea of regime change because it's too complex. But we got it." The old Supreme Leader is dead, sure. But the new one literally just posted a statement pledging to continue the exact same policies. If the ideology, the IRGC, and the resistance doctrine all survive, calling it regime change is like replacing the sign on the building and claiming you renovated the whole thing... Source: @clashreport





