Dancing Makes You Smarter!

Use It or Lose It: Dancing Makes You Smarter Richard Powers
For centuries, dance manuals and other writings have lauded the health benefits of dancing, usually as physical exercise.  More recently we’ve seen research on further health benefits of dancing, such as stress reduction and increased serotonin level, with its sense of well-being. Most recently we’ve heard of another benefit:  Frequent dancing apparently makes us smarter. A major study added to the growing evidence that stimulating one’s mind by dancing can ward off Alzheimer’s disease and other dementia, much as physical exercise can keep the body fit.  Dancing also increases cognitive acuity at all ages. You may have heard about the New England Journal of Medicine report on the effects of recreational activities on mental acuity in aging.   Here it is in a nutshell. The 21-year study of senior citizens, 75 and older, was led by the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City, funded by the National Institute on Aging, and published in the New England Journal of Medicine.  Their method for objectively measuring mental acuity in aging was to monitor rates of dementia, including Alzheimer’s disease. The study wanted to see if any physical or cognitive recreational activities influenced mental acuity.  They discovered that some activities had a significant beneficial effect.  Other activities had none. They studied cognitive activities such as reading books, writing for pleasure, doing crossword puzzles, playing cards and playing musical instruments.  And they studied physical activities like playing tennis or golf, swimming, bicycling, dancing, walking for exercise and doing housework. One of the surprises of the study was that almost none of the physical activities appeared to offer any protection against dementia.  There can be cardiovascular benefits of course, but the focus of this study was the mind. There was one important exception:  the only physical activity to offer protection against dementia was frequent dancing.

Reading – 35% reduced risk of dementia Bicycling and swimming – 0% Doing crossword puzzles at least four days a week – 47% Playing golf – 0% Dancing frequently – 76%.   That was the greatest risk reduction of any activity studied, cognitive or physical.

            Neuroplasticity What could cause these significant cognitive benefits? In this study, neurologist Dr. Robert Katzman proposed these persons are more resistant to the effects of dementia as a result of having greater cognitive reserve and increased complexity of neuronal synapses.  Like education, participation in mentally engaging activities lowers the risk of dementia by improving these neural qualities. As Harvard Medical School psychiatrist Dr. Joseph Coyle explains in an accompanying commentary:  “The cerebral cortex and hippocampus, which are critical to these activities, are remarkably plastic, and they rewire themselves based upon their use.” Our brain constantly rewires its neural pathways, as needed.  If it doesn’t need to, then it won’t.

            Aging and memory When brain cells die and synapses weaken with aging, our nouns go first, like names of people, because there’s only one neural pathway connecting to that stored information.  If the single neural connection to that name fades, we lose access to it.  As people age, some of them learn to parallel process, to come up with synonyms to go around these roadblocks. The key here is Dr. Katzman’s emphasis on the complexity of our neuronal synapses.  More is better.  Do whatever you can to create new neural paths.  The opposite of this is taking the same old well-worn path over and over again, with habitual patterns of thinking and living. When I was studying the creative process as a grad student at Stanford, I came across the perfect analogy to this: The more stepping stones there are across the creek, the easier it is to cross in your own style. The focus of that aphorism was creative thinking, to find as many alternative paths as possible to a creative solution.  But as we age, parallel processing becomes more critical.  Now it’s no longer a matter of style, it’s a matter of survival — getting across the creek at all.  Randomly dying brain cells are like stepping stones being removed one by one.  Those who had only one well-worn path of stones are completely blocked when some are removed.  But those who spent their lives trying different mental routes each time, creating a myriad of possible paths, still have several paths left. As the study shows, we need to keep as many of those paths active as we can, while also generating new paths, to maintain the complexity of our neuronal connections. In other words: Intelligence — use it or lose it.             Intelligence What exactly do we mean by “intelligence”? You’ll probably agree that intelligence isn’t just a numerical measurement, with a number of 100 plus or minus assigned to it.  But what is it? To answer this question, we go back to the most elemental questions possible.  Why do animals have a brain?  To survive?  No, plants don’t have a brain and they survive.  To live longer?  No, many trees outlive us. As neuroscience educator Robert Sylwester notes, mobility is central to everything that is cognitive, whether it is physical motion or the mental movement of information.  Plants have to endure whatever comes along, including predators eating them.  Animals, on the other hand, can travel to seek food, shelter, mates, and to move away from unfavorable conditions.  Since we can move, we need a cognitive system that can comprehend sensory input and intelligently make choices. Semantics will differ for each of us, but according to many, if the stimulus-response relationship of a situation is automatic, we don’t think of the response as requiring our intelligence.  We don’t use the word “intelligent” to describe a banana slug, even though it has a rudimentary brain.  But when the brain evaluates several viable responses and chooses one (a real choice, not just following habits), the cognitive process is considered to be intelligent. As Jean Piaget put it, intelligence is what we use when we don’t already know what to do.             Why dancing? We immediately ask two questions:

  • Why is dancing better than other activities for improving mental capabilities?
  • Does this mean all kinds of dancing, or is one kind of dancing better than another?That’s where this particular study falls short.  It doesn’t answer these questions as a stand-alone study.  Fortunately, it isn’t a stand-alone study.  It’s one of many studies, over decades, which have shown that we increase our mental capacity by exercising our cognitive processes.  Intelligence: Use it or lose it.  And it’s the other studies which fill in the gaps in this one.  Looking at all of these studies together lets us understand the bigger picture. The essence of intelligence is making decisions.  The best advice, when it comes to improving your mental acuity, is to involve yourself in activities which require split-second rapid-fire decision making, as opposed to rote memory (retracing the same well-worn paths), or just working on your physical style. One way to do that is to learn something new.  Not just dancing, but anything new.  Don’t worry about the probability that you’ll never use it in the future.  Take a class to challenge your mind.  It will stimulate the connectivity of your brain by generating the need for new pathways.  Difficult classes are better for you, as they will create a greater need for new neural pathways. Then take a dance class, which can be even more effective.  Dancing integrates several brain functions at once — kinesthetic, rational, musical, and emotional — further increasing your neural connectivity.             What kind of dancing? Do all kinds of dancing lead to increased mental acuity?  No, not all forms of dancing will produce the same benefit, especially if they only work on style, or merely retrace the same memorized paths.  Making as many split-second decisions as possible is the key to maintaining our cognitive abilities.  Remember: intelligence is what we use when we don’t already know what to do. We wish that 25 years ago the Albert Einstein College of Medicine thought of doing side-by-side comparisons of different kinds of dancing, to find out which was better.  But we can figure it out by looking at who they studied: senior citizens 75 and older, beginning in 1980.  Those who danced in that particular population were former Roaring Twenties dancers (back in 1980) and then former Swing Era dancers (today), so the kind of dancing most of them continued to do in retirement was what they began when they were young: freestyle social dancing — basic foxtrot, swing, waltz and maybe some Latin. I’ve been watching senior citizens dance all of my life, from my parents (who met at a Tommy Dorsey dance), to retirement communities, to the Roseland Ballroom in New York.  I almost never see memorized sequences or patterns on the dance floor.  I mostly see easygoing, fairly simple social dancing — freestyle lead and follow.   But freestyle social dancing isn’t that simple!  It requires a lot of split-second decision-making, in both the Lead and Follow roles. At this point, I want to clarify that I’m not demonizing memorized sequence dancing or style-focused pattern-based ballroom dancing.  I sometimes enjoy sequence dances myself, and there are stress-reduction benefits of any kind of dancing, cardiovascular benefits of physical exercise, and even further benefits of feeling connected to a community of dancers.  So all dancing is good. But when it comes to preserving (and improving) our mental acuity, then some forms are significantly better than others.  While all dancing requires some intelligence, I encourage you to use your full intelligence when dancing, in both the Lead and Follow roles.  The more decision-making we can bring into our dancing, the better.             Who benefits more, women or men? In social dancing, the Follow role automatically gains a benefit, by making hundreds of split-second decisions as to what to do next, sometimes unconsciously so.  As I mentioned on this page, women don’t “follow”, they interpret the signals their partners are giving them, and this requires intelligence and decision-making, which is active, not passive. This benefit is greatly enhanced by dancing with different partners, not always with the same fellow.  With different dance partners, you have to adjust much more and be aware of more variables.  This is great for staying smarter longer. But men, you can also match her degree of decision-making if you choose to do so. Here’s how:

    1) Really pay attention to your partner and what works best for her.  Notice what is comfortable for her, where she is already going, which signals are successful with her and which aren’t, and constantly adapt your dancing to these observations.  That’s rapid-fire split-second decision making. 2) Don’t lead the same old patterns the same way each time.  Challenge yourself to try new things.  Make more decisions more often.  Intelligence: use it or lose it.

    The huge side-benefit is that your partners will have much more fun dancing with you when you are attentive to their dancing and constantly adjusting for their comfort and continuity of motion.  And as a result, you’ll have more fun too.             Full engagement Those who fully utilize their intelligence in dancing, at all levels, love the way it feels.  Spontaneous leading and following both involve entering a flow state.  Both leading and following benefit from a highly active attention to possibilities. That’s the most succinct definition I know for intelligent dancing: a highly active attention to possibilities.  And I think it’s wonderful that both the Lead and Follow role share that same ideal. The best Leads appreciate the many options that the Follow must consider every second, and respect and appreciate the Follow’s input into the collaboration of partner dancing.  The Follow is finely attuned to the here-and-now in relaxed responsiveness, and so is the Lead. Once this highly active attention to possibilities, flexibility, and alert tranquility are perfected in the art of dance partnering, dancers find it even more beneficial in their other relationships, and in everyday life.             Dance often The study made another important suggestion: do it often.  Seniors who did crossword puzzles four days a week had a measurably lower risk of dementia than those who did the puzzles once a week.  If you can’t take classes or go out dancing four times a week, then dance as much as you can.  More is better. And do it now, the sooner the better.  It’s essential to start building your cognitive reserve now.  Some day you’ll need as many of those stepping stones across the creek as possible.  Don’t wait — start building them now.

December 28th and upcoming schedule.

Free Form Dance Dance
All of the following dances are at Northgate Community Center:

December 28th
January 4th (Jon’s Birthday Dance)
January 11th
January 18th (one year anniversary dance!!!)
January 25th

10am doors open. 10:20 dance begins.

“Dance is a doorway to the wisdom of the body.”

Move on!
Jon

July 13th Dance Dance and August Schedule!

Come dance with us at F2D2. Northgate Community Center
Please use the south entrance. Doors open at 10:00.
Music begins around 10:20.
$10.00

Dance Cards on Sale… sliding scale … 11 dances for $50 to $99 … $100 normal price.

No more dances in July (the center is rented and I have a memorial service to go to).
Upcoming schedule:
July 13th – Northgate
August 10th – Northgate
August 17th – Northgate
August 24th – Northgate
August 31st – Northgate

Extra Special Dance 7/6/2013

So very excited to celebrate about six months of this dance—and one year of marriage for the facilitators! We will have a very special surprise happening. And of course an amazing set list that has the ALWAYS included classic funk, a swing era tune, something from the 80s, something current, something old, something new, something borrowed, something ROCKIN.

We celebrate with joy, love, laughter, playfulness, and very upbeat and wide range of music for 90 minutes. A journey of pleasure and joy, movement in the body, authentic expression. All people are welcome, inexperienced or professional dancers.

10:15 am Northgate Community Center, Seattle. Same parking lot as the library, south entrance. We have the whole gorgeous community center to ourselves, and the dance studio is absolutely exquisite, full of light, glass, space.

Only $10. We’ll go have lunch at Masala Indian buffet afterwards—come join us.—Grace and Jon

 

 

Next Dance!

Here are the next 3 dances, dates and places.

Saturday June 22 – Northgate Community CenterSaturday June 29 – Northgate Community Center
Saturday July 6 – Northgate Community Center

Door open at 10:00.  Please use the south entrance to the building as the north door is locked.
Dance begins around 10:15.

Dance cards are on sale – buy 10 get one dance free.  Normal price $100.  Sale price $50 to $99 sliding scale.

Come and play play at the Dance Dance!

love, Jon and Grace

MONTH OF MARCH DANCE MADNESS – $5 for first 20 people

Bring a friend! Time to get this party hoppin’–it has definitely already started. We want you! 

This is a new dance and we are ready to heat up. This is an experience beyond just a dance workout or weekly activity.

This is about magic, community, and your natural expression. This is inspiration, manifestation, laughter, joy, pain, sadness, being the real you in physical form, dancing.

This is a natural physical prayer, a community of spirits, a time to move your body and make subtle or enormous shifts in perception, energy and direction.

COME LIGHT YOUR FIRE OF CREATION, DESIRE, ACTION.

Seriously, it works. Bring a friend.

Our vision: 50 people every week. It will happen. Be a part of the beginning.

This dance is a service to our community, the people we live with in this world. This is not a money-making venture, if that matters. The space is gorgeous and big and costs $200 every week, and then we have other expenses plus MUSIC to buy.

We give to you, the ripple spreads, the joy comes back like a boomerang. Come join us.

Bring it! WE WANT YOU!—Grace Bell and Jon Elizondo, dancers in the Free Form Field