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Brain Training: Neuroplasticity for Personal Transformation. Understanding How Your Brain Rewires Through Experience and What Actually Creates Lasting Change

Par : Thalia Brookstone
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  • Nombre de pages202
  • FormatePub
  • ISBN978-3-565-23694-7
  • EAN9783565236947
  • Date de parution11/02/2026
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Taille2 Mo
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurEmphaloz Publishing House

Résumé

This book explores neuroplasticity-the brain's ability to reorganize itself-by examining what genuinely supports neural rewiring versus what remains optimistic oversimplification. It investigates the science behind how repeated experiences shape neural pathways, and what this reveals about why change feels difficult even when we intellectually understand what we need to do differently. Rather than promoting brain training as a quick fix, this book reframes neuroplasticity as a gradual process requiring consistent conditions, emotional safety, and patience with incremental progress.
It examines the neuroscience of habit formation, the role of attention in strengthening or weakening neural connections, and why knowledge alone cannot override patterns established through years of repetition. It explores how stress and trauma affect the brain's capacity for change, what conditions support neuroplasticity versus what inhibits it, and the difference between wishful thinking about transformation and the actual work of creating new neural pathways. Through compassionate inquiry, the book navigates the frustration when change feels impossibly slow, the skepticism toward promises of rapid rewiring, and the challenge of sustaining new patterns long enough for them to become established.
It offers insight into recognizing what aspects of yourself can genuinely shift through intentional practice versus what requires acceptance, and how to work with your brain's natural learning mechanisms rather than against them. This is an invitation to approach personal transformation through a neurobiological lens-understanding that change is possible but never instant, that your brain needs repetition and safety to reorganize, and that honoring this process matters more than forcing outcomes.