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Serving others good for all

| May 18, 2018 1:00 AM

Have you ever damaged an arm, a leg, a hip or a shoulder? After it was repaired, was it immediately as “good as new,” or did you have to work hard to get it back into good shape? Yes, hard work was involved.

The same is true with our brains, folks, especially as we grow older. Associate professor Michelle Carlson of the Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore MD, affirms that “...brain health is a benefit of doing a good thing...

“Even though you’re aging,” she says, “your brain continues to need stimulation. As you get older, there are fewer opportunities for stimulation, and that (can lead) to a constriction in your life, which impacts your brain.”

Perhaps Dr. Carlson understands Aristotle when he affirmed that the essence of life is “to serve others and do good.”

A 2009 research effort at Dr. Carlson’s school studied older adults involved in a large mentoring program with children and youth. The findings suggested that “older adults who participated in (that program) made gains in key brain functions that support cognitive abilities important to planning and organizing one’s daily life.”

In a 2013 study at Carnegie Mellon University, they found “One key for deriving health benefits from volunteering is to do it for the right reasons … Participants who volunteered with some regularity lived longer, but only if their intentions were truly altruistic.

In other words, they had to be volunteering to help others ­— not to make themselves feel better.”

Wow. Helping others comes before “feeling good” yourself? Not necessarily. They might come along together, but primary motivation does matter for good brain health.

What happens may be attributed to the concept of generosity. Whether giving of ourselves through wealth, goods, or our very selves, generosity literally triggers some brain chemical activities. Another researcher, Stephen G. Post of Stony Brook University in New York, says that “the feel-good effects of giving begin in the brain.”

Ginna Maus, a social worker with Bonner Community Hospice, will invite us to discover good brain health at Tuesday’s Geezer Forum. Beca Orchard of Sandpoint Community Resource Center, will ask us to consider good brain health as we embrace the volunteering work we may already invest ourselves in.

To sweeten our experience of brain health and volunteering, the Community Development Office of Bonner General Health will invite us to an ice cream social to conclude our afternoon together. So join us Tuesday, May 22, 2:30-4 p.m., in the Community Room of Columbia Bank.

Oh, this Geezer Forum gathering will be the last for the school year. We will take a three-month summer recess, and resume again on Sept. 11, 2018. Join us then, too.

Paul Graves, M.Div., is lead geezer-in training for Elder Advocates, a consulting ministry on aging issues. Contact Paul at 208-610-4971 or elderadvocates@nctv.com.