The Mind Is Just Like A Muscle: A Self-Help Books For Teens On Growing Up in Modern America
By Sara Salam
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About this ebook
We live in a crazy time. On top of that, you're trying to figure out who you are and how to find your place in this ever-changing world. You're building your plane while flying it.
The Mind Is Just Like A Muscle is a self-help book for teens that makes this daunting task not as intimidating. Through examples from science, history, and psychology, you learn about the unique qualities that make us human and how those qualities act as a filter for our experiences growing up in modern America.
You learn why things - people, places, ideas - that aren't familiar to us can feel scary or create fear. You build awareness around how our brains shape our experiences, and how the increasing interconnectedness of the modern era in turn affects us on an individual level and on a societal level.
This book encourages you to exercise your brain by building awareness of your life both inside and outside your household. Like any other muscle, the human brain needs exercise to get stronger. This book shares exercises and insights to help you make that happen.
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The Mind Is Just Like A Muscle - Sara Salam
Also by Sara Salam
If Water Were Fire, A Novel
If Love Were Salt, A Novel
My Truth Journal
Love Isn’t Linear: A Collection of Poems About Modern Love
My Newport: A Collection of Poems About Newport Beach, California
Remember When: A Collection of Poems By A Lovestruck Teen Who Had The Courage to Dream
Copyright © 2020 Sara Salam
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used in any manner whatsoever without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations and reviews.
ISBN: 978-1-953636-00-3 (Paperback)
ISBN: 978-1-953636-01-0 (Hardcover)
ISBN: 978-1-953636-02-7 (eBook)
Library of Congress Control Number: 2020916690
Teen- Young Adult
Self-Help
STEM
History
Diversity
Unconscious Bias
Book cover design by Aspen Denita.
Author portrait by Christina Wehbe.
Edited by Anna Alger.
Icons from the Noun Project:
Airplane by Egorova Valentina; Thinking by ProSymbols; Levitating brain by Dairy Free Design; House by Andi Nur Abdillah; Brain by Eucalyp ; Workout by Becris; Dishware by Olena Panasovska; Lightning by Martial Red; Earth by Serhii Smirnov; Brain Technology by Vectors Point; Ship by kareemovic2000; Bun by Flatart; Bubbles by Serhii Smirnov; Projector by Econceptive; Gender symbol by Anagaja Design; Heart by Alena Artemova; Helicopter by angga firdaus; Rosie the Riveter by Katunger; Hen by Vectors Point; and Question Mark by Gabriele Malaspina; and Magnifying Glass by Elizabeth Lopez.
Printed by The Peacock Pen Press in the United States of America.
First Printing Edition 2020.
2020 Sara Salam
www.bysarasalam.com
@bysarasalam
Sara Salam
Contents
Preface
Introduction
Part I: The Human Brain
Part II: Inside & Outside The Household
Part III: Taking Action With Exercise
Concluding Words
Thank You!
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Appendix: Notes from My Blog
References
A close up of a logo Description automatically generatedPreface
At the time of this book’s publication, the state of the world is one of unprecedented confusion and chaos. For context, I started researching and writing the content of this book in January of 2020.
How 2020 unfolded didn’t change the scope of what I wanted to write, but it did illuminate, more than ever before, how living in such an interconnected world affects the ways we manage relationships, both on an individual level and on group levels (family, friends, classmates, co-workers, government, etc.). One could argue it’s because of the world’s interconnectedness that we are living in a state of crisis, across many dimensions, in the first place.
The key point is, there is so much unknown, which can be really scary. We are still learning how to best navigate through it all. We’re building the plane while flying it, to a certain extent.
The goal of this book is to explore:
Why what we don’t know scares us
How to overcome (or at least acknowledge and mitigate) these fears
The idea for this book was planted by a good friend who, upon reading one of my novels, suggested I write a self-help book to help young people feel less alone in navigating this complicated world. Here we are, twenty thousand-plus words later.
At the end of the day, information is our greatest armor. Granted, too much information and the wrong information can be devastating, so we need to be mindful of our sources and how we apply the knowledge we gain. It’s about collecting and analyzing the data, and using our brains to make the most educated choices about how to solve the problem at hand. We need to use our tools responsibly, so they don’t inadvertently become weapons.
A close up of a logo Description automatically generatedIntroduction
Everyone is going through it
We live in a torrential time. Everyone is confused, overwhelmed, and/or stressed—more often than not, some combination of the three. The speed at which the world is changing is unlike any other time in the history of humankind.
There are the things that are intangible, yet visible to the naked eye. We’re living in the midst of an infotech and biotech revolution, complete with an alphabet soup of AI, AR, VR, machine learning, blockchain, cryptocurrency. All these developments are products about twenty years (give or take) in the making.
There are the things we see plain as day in the news and in our neighborhoods. We’re living in a time where much is visible and reaches our brain almost as quickly as they happen.
Why do we feel so stressed out?
Quite simply, our brains are having trouble keeping up with all the excitement. The capacity of our biology, i.e. our brains, is not equipped to evolve quickly enough to keep pace with these changes.
Does that sound like nonsense? Take a look at this graph, which illustrates the relationship between the year (x-axis) and the world population (y-axis). It maps the evolution of the brain alongside the technology advancements of the world since the first agricultural revolution.
This graph is by no means all-inclusive. It captures critical achievements in the history of human invention and shows how the pace of human invention has recently sped up (recently
is a relative term, as we’ll see). The rate at which the brain evolves, though, has not.
The neocortex, for example, is a new-ish part of the brain that has evolved within the last 20,000 years. Compared with the existence of modern man, or homo sapiens, which dates back about 2.5 million years, this is a relatively recent development.
The takeaway: if history is any indication, the pace of our brain evolution is not prepared to keep up with the pace of technological advancement. There is a serious lag, and it’s showing up in how we experience the world; notably in various forms of stress, including violence, exhaustion, disease, and other debilitating consequences.
The lesson: as our biology evolves—often in response to the world we live in—so do our brains. Today, the pace of evolution just isn’t as fast as modern technology.
Sometimes we forget the brain behaves a lot like a muscle.
(According to the most up-to-date research, the brain is not anatomically a muscle. It’s actually made of 60% fat! In fact, it is the mind—the product of our brain activity, or our cognitive ability—that acts like a muscle. Distinguishing between the brain and the mind is the subject of another book entirely, so to make things more straightforward, in this text we’ll treat the brain and the mind as two parts of the same whole.)
Why does this matter? Because muscles need exercise to get bigger and stronger. Just like your biceps or quads, the brain needs workouts
to grow . For the biceps, this could be dumbbell curls or push-ups. For the brain, it could be reading a news article or solving a puzzle. The more we exercise our brains, the stronger they