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Reclaim Your Brain: How to Calm Your Thoughts, Heal Your Mind, and Bring Your Life Back Under Control PDF

261 Pages·2015·1.54 MB·English
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For Dianne, Chris, and Elizabeth Contents Title Page Copyright Dedication Foreword by Daniel G. Amen, M.D. Acknowledgments REINING IN THE BRAIN Introduction 1. Balancing the Brain MANAGING THE MIND 2. Conquering Negativity 3. Rewriting Your Stories 4. Becoming Mindful 5. Righting Relationships ADDRESSING SPECIFIC ISSUES 6. Bored Brains, Excitable Brains: ADHD 7. Heart Matters: Anxiety 8. Mood Matters: Depression 9. Getting Unstuck: OCD 10. Branded in the Brain: Emotional Trauma and PTSD 11. Balance Your Brain, Boost Your Willpower: Addiction 12. Healing the Hurting Brain and Body: Brain Injury and Medical Problems Conclusion: Beyond Mind and Brain Appendix A: Nutritional Supplements Appendix B: Medications Annotated Bibliography Index Foreword I first met Dr. Joseph Annibali at a five-day conference I was teaching on applying brain SPECT imaging, the brain-imaging tool we use at Amen Clinics. A highly trained psychiatrist and psychoanalyst who had already spent decades in clinical practice, Joe isn’t one to rest on his laurels. He continually seeks out knowledge that will help his patients: people who are hurting, from all walks of life, who come to see him from far and wide. I was so impressed by his broad knowledge, kind heart, and open mind that I asked him to join our medical staff. Within a short time Joe became the chief psychiatrist in our Reston, Virginia, clinic, just outside of Washington, D.C., and is now a powerful leader and mentor among our staff of thirty medical professionals. Our story at Amen Clinics began in 1991 when I ordered my first brain SPECT scans on patients with conditions like ADHD (attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder), severe aggression, and unresponsive anxiety and depression who had not improved with standard treatments. Over the years, with Joe’s help, we have built the world’s largest database of brain SPECT scans, now well over 115,000 scans on patients from 111 countries. These scans have significantly changed how we help our patients at Amen Clinics. We’ve learned that psychiatric illnesses are rarely single or simple disorders. Giving someone the diagnosis of depression is exactly like giving them the diagnosis of chest pain; the diagnosis does not tell you what the problem is and how serious it might be. Treatment needs to be tailored to the underlying problems in individual brains, not a cluster of symptoms. Significantly, with our approach our patients understand that their problems are medical rather than moral, which has increased their willingness to follow the treatment plans and decreased their stigma about having a psychiatric disorder. The most important lesson we’ve learned from our treasure trove of scans, and the lesson that has kept Joe and me excited about this work each day, is that you are not stuck with the brain you have. As Joe discusses in this crucial book, if your brain is busy or racing out of control, if your brain is dysfunctional, you can reclaim it. In many thousands of cases, we have seen that you can improve brain function, even if you have been really bad to your brain. For example, Amen Clinics did the world’s first and largest brain-imaging study on active and retired NFL players, where we saw high levels of brain injury. That was not a surprise. Your brain is soft, about the consistency of soft butter, and it is housed in a really hard skull with multiple sharp bony ridges, so it is easily damaged. All of the news about concussions in sports has been bad, with an increased incidence of depression, suicide, and dementia. But what really excited us with our NFL study was that on our program to help the players reclaim their brains, the same one Joe will outline in this book, 80 percent of our 170 players showed high levels of improvement, especially in their mood, memory, sleep, and brain function. When Joe and I were in medical school in the late 1970s and early 1980s, we were taught that the brain doesn’t heal. But now we know that is wrong. If you put the brain in a healing environment, often it can get better, much better, but it requires forethought and a great plan. And this healing is not just for football players. We have seen improvement in brain function for people with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), anxiety, depression, obsessive- compulsive disorder (OCD), post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), Lyme disease, addictions, and even improvement in some people with Alzheimer’s disease. In this book, Joe shares many of the important lessons we have learned, while at the same time giving you his unique perspective on healing. I encouraged Joe to write this book because of his extensive experiences and perspective as a master psychiatrist who integrates the latest thinking about the mind with our work on looking at and optimizing the brain. Reading this book will be like sitting on the psychiatrist’s couch of the future. In recent years Joe has also become an expert on the effects on the brain of Lyme disease, in part because his own daughter has had it. Both Joe and I believe infectious diseases, like Lyme, will play a significant role in how psychiatrists will help people in the future, which you will learn about. Joe is also an expert on Irlen syndrome, a visual processing disorder, which can be associated with headaches, anxiety, learning challenges, and irritability. One of the key ideas of this book is that you need first to heal (an injured brain if present) and balance the brain before other interventions can work well. Too often people see therapists to help their minds, when they first need to help their brains work better. Readers will learn a lot about what they can do to help themselves from the tools and approaches presented here. Most readers will not need to come for a SPECT scan to benefit from the information given in Reclaim Your Brain. The book is a great illustration of how much anyone can improve and heal when we pay attention to the mind and brain at the same time. Reclaim Your Brain is your road map to a better brain and a better life. It is packed with useful information, powerful stories, and a completely new way of thinking that can help you feel better quickly as you heal and balance your busy brain, while at the same time teaching you how to protect the most important part of you (your brain) for many years to come. I am excited for you as you embark on reading and applying the principles in Reclaim Your Brain. They have changed my life and the lives of many others. With Dr. Annibali’s expert guidance, I know they will help you change your life for the better. Daniel G. Amen, M.D. Author of Change Your Brain, Change Your Life June 2015 Acknowledgments T his book would not exist without the encouragement, support, friendship, and advice given to me by Daniel Amen, M.D., to whom I am deeply grateful. I have profound admiration for Dr. Amen’s trailblazing work, his clinical genius, and his courage. Thank you, Daniel. I am also grateful to the Washington Psychoanalytic Institute, where I spent five stimulating years becoming a psychoanalyst and a number of years afterward as a faculty member. Freud may be dead, but many of his fundamental ideas live on, nourishing those like me who wish to understand other human beings most deeply. Gary Moak, M.D., has been my devoted friend and sounding board for both personal and professional matters for more than forty years. I am grateful for our friendship, which started during our college days at Penn, and for his advice and encouragement about this project that started long before my book proposal ever saw the light of day. Gary reviewed many of the chapter drafts, giving useful feedback that helped enormously to improve areas where my writing and thinking were unclear. Robert Licata, M.D., has been a colleague and dear friend for more than twenty-five years. Bob’s pithy conceptualization of the relationship between the prefrontal cortex and the limbic system gave birth to a number of the ideas I explore in this book. He also graciously reviewed a number of chapter drafts. For many years, Bob and I were members of a study group with our colleagues Dave Gebara, M.D., and Larry Spoont, M.D. In this study group we discussed a number of seminal books and papers and worked over many of the ideas that I explore in this book. I am grateful to Madame Renelle Gannon, my French tutor of more than a decade, for far more than my reasonably proficient command of the French language. I am indebted to Madame Gannon for her encouragement and support, and for fascinating twice-weekly discussions about language, art, politics, history, philosophy, religion, and spirituality, always in French, certainement. My sincere thanks are due to my agent, Celeste Fine, who remarkably obtained for me a book contract in no time flat, and her associate John Maas. This work would not have seen the light of day if my editor, Caroline Sutton, had not stuck with me through my early abortive attempts to learn how to write a book. I am grateful for her confidence in me and in the ideas I wanted to write about. Thank you as well to her associates Brittney Ross and Brianna Flaherty. Whatever coherence and lucidity exist in this book are due in large part to Dedi Felman, writer and editor extraordinaire. She, too, was encouraging as she helped me wrestle my meandering ideas into a conceptual whole. During my moments of discouragement when I came face-to-face with how little I knew about writing a book that tells a clear story, Dedi told me to “trust the process,” which I did. Thank you, Dedi. In addition to Daniel Amen, M.D., many other individuals within Amen Clinics have given me help and support. Dr. Rob Johnson reviewed the chapter on addiction and gave helpful input on that chapter and on the spiritual themes I discuss in the conclusion. Sue Johnston, M.S.W., L.C.S.W., our clinic’s mind- body therapist, reviewed the manuscript and gave helpful feedback. I have been wonderfully blessed by the devotion of my wife and children. My wife, Dianne, has gifted me with her love and positivity, showing me how a loving relationship can heal a wounded soul. A beautiful heart can bring things into your life that all the money in the world couldn’t obtain. For her love, encouragement, and support—both during the writing of this book and throughout our long relationship—I am eternally grateful. Dianne sacrificed in many ways so that I could have the time and energy to work on this book. My son, Chris, and my daughter, Elizabeth, have also been enormously supportive of me as I wrote this book. I have learned so much about life and love from them. It is a wonderful thing to see your children turn out wiser and smarter than you could ever be. I have the most interesting job in the world. I get to talk to people about the things that matter to them most, as we work to find ways to manage their minds, balance their brains, and unleash their healing processes. I am grateful to the thousands of patients with whom I have had the privilege to work during my career of thirty-plus years. At times I’ve felt that I learned and benefited more from our relationships than they did. There are many patient stories in Reclaim Your Brain. In all cases, the patients I write about have been thoroughly disguised and/or melded into composites to protect their privacy.

Description:
A prescriptive guide to restoring cognitive calm, based on Amen Clinic Chief Psychiatrist Dr. Joseph Annibali's three decades of treating patients who suffer from overloaded, over-stimulated brains. Dr. Joseph Annibali has treated thousands of people with overloaded, over-stimulated brains. Some p
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.