Want free veterinary info & resources?
Join our Pack & keep up with ALL the best veterinary stuff in our weekly eNews
*Unsubscribe anytime!!
If you work in a veterinary practice or in the pet industry or in a business that supplies goods or services to the industry and you have something to say - why not become a 'Guest Blogger'?
For more information click here to read our: Guidelines for Guest Bloggers
The first reference to the concept of not being able to teach an old dog new tricks occurred back in the 1500s. This and the related saying, leopards can’t change their spots, are said so often that they must be true – change is impossible, especially if you have been doing the same thing for a long time. Right?
I am not so sure that we can get leopards to change their spots and I haven’t read the literature on brain change in dogs, but I am sure that we all know people that have changed – both for the better and the worse. And we may have read popular books such as Norman Doidges’, “The Brain That Changes Itself” or watched Todd Sampson redesigning his brain on the ABC and know that we can change – that our brains are plastic throughout our life span – and that we can form new neural connections and strengthen or weaken neural pathways provided that we see a need to do so and are motivated to make the change.
Ok – but what does that mean to me, I hear you say? I already know that I can learn to do a new surgery or how to better manage diabetes or how to interpret a profit and loss statement. Well, from my point of view, the really, super exciting stuff is around the changes that we can make to parts of our personality that many of us think are fixed – things like our ability to communicate positively and build relationships, whether we are optimists or pessimists, our tendency towards perfectionist thinking, or the degree to which we can self-regulate. The list of qualities that we can develop is long and growing. It also includes;
Our brain pathways can be compared to the well-worn track that this 4WD is travelling down. If the 4WD stays on track, then it can move quickly and easily. Likewise, our experiences to date will have created well-utilised fast neural circuits in our brains. Many of these will be very helpful and allow us to complete tasks quickly and efficiently.
The problem is that some of them may be creating repetitive patterns of behaviour that are not serving us particularly well and could even be causing us pain. It might be that we have got into a pattern of looking for the negatives in our life and barely notice, maybe even take for granted, the things that are going well. Our pattern may be that we work harder and harder without consciously realizing it until we get to burnout. We may keep repeating the same problems in our relationships. Or alternatively, we may limit our lives by wanting to control everything and or by wanting to do the things we do so perfectly that we stay right in our comfort zone and never venture out.
If we want the 4WD to veer off the well-worn track and go in a different direction, it is possible but it takes a bit of work. We might need to put a roadblock up on the old track and actively clear some space in the bush for a new track to be laid down. Just as we can move the 4WD off the track and send it in a new direction – we can deliberately starve neural pathways that are not serving us well and create new more useful pathways in our brains.
Changing to a new, more helpful path is not going to be easy – but if some of the old ones are causing problems, it is probably worth the effort.
So how do we make the changes?
Easy – huh? Of course, it is not. Changing the pattern of a lifetime is not going to be easy. But who wants easy? Fulfilled, happy and exciting sound way better. We will all start at different points and improve at different rates but the large, large majority of us can grow and change in many different aspects of our lives. Small, regular actions are the best to create lasting change and sometimes (maybe even often) we will need professional support to do this. Consider enlisting the help of a coach, counsellor or psychologist.
What will be your new trick?
If you have any questions to ask Cathy about neuroplasticity and successfully making changes, why not ask them in the Comments section below?
We've shared a version of this post since 2013 - each year we add more great ideas & resources 🙂 Veterinary Nurse & Technician Awareness Week 7-11 October 2024 Veterinary Nurse & Technician Day Friday 11th October 2024 We all know how essential Vet Nurses...