Thursday, November 14, 2019
This is the science behind why dancing is good for your brain
This is the science behind why dancing is good for your brain This is the science behind why dancing is good for your brain Is there anything more fun than a good dance party? Whether youâre finding yourself in the middle of a crowded dance floor with friends and family at a wedding or have grabbed some gal pals for a night on the town jumping up and down to the hottest beats, thereâs really nothing better. Youâre singing along at the top of your lungs, spending QT with people you care about, and generally having the best time. Itâs all kinds of wins.Follow Ladders on Flipboard!Follow Laddersâ magazines on Flipboard covering Happiness, Productivity, Job Satisfaction, Neuroscience, and more!And maybe you werenât looking for more reasons to dance, but weâve got âem for you, anyway: According to UC Berkeleyâs Greater Good Science Center, the chemicals released while dancing are actually really good for your brain. A recent report from GGSC on the combination of chemicals cleverly coined by Daybreaker CEO and co-founder Radha Agrawal as DOSE (dopamine, oxytocin, serotonin, and endorp hins) - states that dancing âuniquely benefits health and happiness.ââThere are so many studies done around dance and happiness and the science of dance as a healing modality,â Agrawal tells us. âItâs the most healing modality that exists on the planet. When you dance, it releases your DOSE.âHereâs the science behind DOSE, the special combination of chemicals that comes together when youâre breaking it down on the dance floor.Dopamine: According to the report from GGSC, dopamine is all about rewards. Itâs released in the brain when we anticipate, enjoy, or remember pleasurable moments. Listening to music that we like increases dopamine levels, and since music is necessary for a good dance party, youâre setting yourself up for a dopamine release any time you start moving to the beat. Dopamine is also tied to spontaneous body movements - hello, dancing!Oxytocin: The O in DOSE stands for oxytocin, which is the connection hormone. âYou get it from the contact high of being shoulder to shoulder on the dance floor,â Agrawal says. âItâs actually a natural high that we can release by being in a room with multiple people around us. Itâs a beautiful way to release your oxytocin.â Basically, the more, the merrier, the more oxytocin.Serotonin: Per the GGSC, serotonin is credited with allowing for emotional contentment and ease - and itâs where the exercise side of dancing comes into play. Any workout can increase the level of circulating serotonin, and a high-energy dance sesh is no exception. Healthy serotonin levels help prevent anxiety and depression, improve sleep quality, and slow the aging of the brain.Endorphins: Like serotonin, endorphins have to do with exercise. Youâve likely heard the release of endorphins described as a ârunnerâs high.â Endorphins take your brain a step further than serotonin, though, by limiting feelings of tiredness and pain. They free up your energy to focus on the fun of dancing instead of the fact that itâs making you sleepy and maybe even a little sore.If you still need proof of the wonders that dance can do for your mind and body, Agrawal can help. âWhen people say seated meditation is the only way to meditate, theyâre so wrong,â she says. âYou can totally meditate and dance. Thatâs how I meditate - Iâm on the dance floor, dancing and meditating, reconnecting to myself, getting present to myself. Itâs true therapy.âThis article originally appeared on Brit and Co.You might also enjoy⦠New neuroscience reveals 4 rituals that will make you happy Strangers know your social class in the first seven words you say, study finds 10 lessons from Benjamin Franklinâs daily schedule that will double your productivity The worst mistakes you can make in an interview, according to 12 CEOs 10 habits of mentally strong people
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