"Listen to Stephen Pierce's In Seach of Heroes Interview--I think having the right attitude and engaging in the right processes is important." by Ralph Zuranski
I think having the right attitude and engaging in the right processes as far as visualization, understanding what your beliefs are, being congruent as far as what you believe with your actions and everything else, I believe that can help accelerate you getting there. But, you’re going to still have tests.
It’s interesting. The tests become much easier to deal with and understand the tests when you’re in the right frame of mind. I think that right frame of mind can be stimulated by being optimistic consistently and understanding that you are here for a greater cause.
Anybody who is trying to prevent you from getting to where you ultimately want to be, that’s going to help impact and change other people’s lives, may have disqualified themselves for a relationship.
There is a quote from one of my mentors, Mike Murdock that says, “People are like currents. Relationships are like currents. They’re taking you towards the pit or they’re taking you towards the palace.”
You have to kind of evaluate your relationships and understand the relationships that you have. Where are they moving you towards? The people in your life, are they making deposits or are they making withdrawals? Who are the people who are just sucking the life out of you and not contributing anything back?
You have to make some hard decisions at times to understand the relationships you need to cut back or completely cut off for the sake of the vision, for the sake of the mission, and for the sake of the greater cause and the reason and purpose that you’re here for and the things that you ultimately want to achieve and contribute to life.
"Listen to Stephen Pierce's In Seach of Heroes Interview" by Ralph Zuranski
Stephen Pierce's Brain University
Zapping sleepers' brains boosts memory
Applying a gentle electric current to the brain during sleep can significantly boost memory, researchers report.
A small new study showed that half an hour of this brain stimulation improved students'
performance at a verbal memory task by about 8%.
The approach enhances memory by creating a form of electrical current in the brain seen in deep sleep, the researchers suggest.
Jan Born at the University of Luebeck in Germany, and colleagues, recruited 13 healthy medical students for the study and gave them a list of word associations, such as "bird" and "air", to learn late in the evening. Afterwards, researchers placed two electrodes on the forehead and one behind each ear of the volunteers and let them sleep.
The students' various sleep stages were monitored using an electroencephalogram (EEG) machine. When the students entered a period of light sleep, Born's team started to apply a gentle current in one-second-long pulses, every second, for about 30 minutes.
The EEG readings revealed that this current had put students into a deeper state of sleep.
The next morning, the students performed about 8% better on the word memory test than when they underwent the same type of memory experiment without brain stimulation.
Nerve firing
Born believes this memory boost was due to the pattern of the applied current mimicking that seen in naturally occurring deep sleep, where memory consolidation is thought to take place.
Strong brain currents in this stage of sleep probably cause more intense nerve firing, he says, which might enhance activity in the brain's memory centre, the hippocampus.
Some researchers are skeptical of Born's "mimicking deep sleep" theory, however. Felipe Fregni at the Harvard Center for Non-invasive Brain Stimulation in Boston, US, says that he and other scientists have shown that brain stimulation with non-sleep-type currents can produce similar memory enhancements.
Potential side effects
There is growing evidence that brain stimulation might one day help improve memory in patients with dementia or other forms of cognitive impairment, experts say.
"It could be very useful to restore function in people with brain injury," says Daniel Herrera at Weill Medical College of Cornell University in New York, US, who has studied the effects of brain stimulation in rats.
Healthy people might eventually try using this approach to maximize their brainpower, Herrera says:
"I think every single medical student in the country might want to plug into this type of device at home or in the dorm."
But he stresses that applying electrical currents to the brain might have unwanted side effects.
Born also says he would be "a little hesitant" to regularly use brain stimulation during sleep to boost
memory: "In the end we don't know if there are adverse side effects that we just don't recognize at the moment."