Neuroscience of Ocean Exposure

light sand beach with emerald waters depict neuroscience of blue mind that shows how being near, in, on or under water makes you happier, healthier, more connected and better at what you do.

Neuroscience of Ocean Exposure

I love this article by Sherri Hayden, Neuropsychologist, sharing her first hand experience with surfing and how ocean exposure can help regulate “fear and stress”, as well trigger “rest and restore” responses. Her story is one of personal transformation, transcending fear, building strength and pushing beyond self-limiting talk; how engaging in new experiences in well supported environments has been a catalyst, positively impacting her life. Her story represents what W.J. Nichols has coined BlueMind: “how our exposure to the ocean can make us happier, healthier, more connected and better at what we do.”

NeuroLeadership coaching facilitates positive change by improving thinking. When combined with novel new experiences (like surfing, stand-up-paddling, and yoga with an ocean view) insights abound, self-development accelerates, and new thinking drives solutions, actions, and results. SwellRetreats integrates all these elements to deliver a powerful personal blue mind experience.

Written By Sherri Hayden

Published in the Barnacle Babes ~ The Blue Healing Issue

My relationship with water has been a complicated one. Although my earliest memories are of joyful play in the water, fear experiences would subsequently present themselves in my life. The most memorable fear experience being a near-death drowning in the Old Man River of the Kananaskis, southwestern Alberta, when I was seventeen. Had my brother failed to pull me from those river rapids that moment would have been the end of my relationship with water. Luckily, the experience just left me with a debilitating fear of running/moving water that resulted in a degree of avoidance throughout much of my adult life.

Despite this trauma, I went on to pursue my vision of clinical practice as a neuropsychologist serving patients with dementia and traumatic brain injuries. I have felt honoured to share the journey for those facing end of life or with traumatic change to their brains. However, after twenty-five years of secondary exposure to the trauma of others, the weight of their suffering was taking its toll on my own health. This was compounded, around age fifty, with several personal stressors (i.e., a seriously ill child and sudden retirement of my husband), which served to demand more self-care be incorporated in my life.

Strangely, these crises brought me back to the moving water I feared so much from my past as I impulsively signed up for a women’s yoga and surf retreat with SwellWomen in Maui. This experience, which I had initiated to escape my life stress, actually served as exposure therapy (exposure to the source of anxiety/fear in a controlled context in order to help overcome the distress) for my fear of moving water. I emerged from the week with a greater sense of balance and bravery to face the stress I was returning to at home. Since then I have surfed various locations throughout North and Central America with many remarkable women from around the world who also are challenging their own limits in their own way.

My background in neuroscience subsequently brought me to explore our understanding of ocean exposure effects on our brains. For instance, studies suggest ocean sounds activate our prefrontal cortex (the most evolved and complex part of the brain and includes the center for regulation of our stress response). Ocean waves sounds have also been found to play a role in balancing serotonin levels and in reducing cortisol, both involved in regulating mood and stress response. This seems demonstrated in therapeutic surfing programs, such as those geared towards veterans with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. In my own experience, this ocean environment not only provided much needed exposure therapy for my fear of moving water but also engaged my prefrontal cortex to enhance regulation of my high levels of stress. With this framework, I can imagine the process of surfing provides opportunity for my prefrontal cortex to regulate both the “fight-flight” response with the surge of catching a wave or being tumbled by one, as well as the “rest and store” response, triggered by sitting on the board feeling and listening to the rhythm of waves between rides.

However, this is not the only potential benefit. There is growing attention to the concept of neuroplasticity, our brain’s ability to change, such as creating new neural pathways. What we now know of neuroplasticity in aging is that novel experiences may help set new neural pathways, which likely strengthen and perhaps provide a protective effect for neural tissue. This is why new experiences throughout our lifespan may be a means of ‘beefing up’ our brain tissue. This concept brought me to become certified as an open water diver this year at age fifty-five. Once again, fear presented itself during the certification process with thoughts about I’m too old to learn something new and fear of being forty feet under water with only a regulator to keep me alive. However, as my sixteen-year-old son wanted to pursue this goal, I persisted to complete the requirements in order to share the experience with him. This not only strengthened my relationship with my son, but also with the ocean and the amazing creatures within it.

Recently, I had opportunity to attend a workshop of Mind Body Medicine in Ucluelet, BC which inspired my hope to integrate understanding of neuroscience with the healing powers of the ocean and other lifestyle factors for brain health and healthy aging. In reflection on this, I find it is interesting to consider that the three animals with the greatest potential life longevity are sea creatures, such as the Greenland shark, bowhead whale and Galapagos giant tortoise). As we seek greater understanding for healing of our body, brain and mental health, it seems we should turn our minds to the ocean. Certainly, in my own life, the ocean has been a revelation for its power to help me to manage stress, both personally and at work. For this, I am grateful.

Be The Change You Wish To See… One Country, One Community, One Toilet at a Time.

Coach Laurel Marshall with Founder of World Toilet Organization Jack Sim at Opening Night of his film in Santa Monica, California, to showcase leadership and impact of large scale change, one country, one community, one toilet at a time.

Be The Change You Wish To See... One Country, One Community, One Toilet at a Time.

WHO IS MR. TOILET?

I had the pleasure to attend the opening night of “Mr. Toilet, the World’s #2 Man” last night in Santa Monica. The WTO, or “World Toilet Organization” is near and dear to my heart. I had the opportunity of a lifetime to partner up with Singapore-based Jack Sim, better known as “Mr. Toilet,” and founder of the WTO and BOP Hub during my years living in Singapore, as an executive sponsor through the Hewlett Packard / Schwab Foundation. Living and working overseas affords a unique perspective into a whole new world of culture and doing business, not to mention, personally assimilating and learning how to be effective outside the bubble of the US where I was born and educated. What was personally transformational, was experiencing life through Jack Sim’s world of social work and activism around sanitation.

THE SANITATION CRISIS

Jack’s mission to raise awareness, mobilize resources, and affect change on a massive scale is unfathomable – UN stated that 60% or 4.5 billion people do not have access to a toilet at home or one that safely manages human waste – and the daunting challenge of affecting large scale change for something that much of the world takes for granted, having grown up in societies where sanitation practices were embedded as young children, and shiny porcelain thrones are abundant in our homes. The size of the challenge Jack has committed his life’s work, is enormous, dually noted by Goh Chok Tong, former Prime Minister of Singapore. Jack lives and breathes his mission and purpose, by thinking globally and acting locally; a fine balancing act, a bit of art and science, but one of the most critical skill sets and state of mind needed to approach such a behemoth aspiration and set of goals. I have huge respect for this ethos, experiencing and learning when I see it in action, as Jack balances the culture, rituals and beliefs in India, and China, and navigates through the sea of never ending hurdles, bureaucracy, politics, governments and customs to pave the way toward the goal that Prime Minister Modi has enlisted his help drive his campaign to build 100 million toilets. His film profiles in a serious situation, yet with his all so delightful sense of humor, that is distinctly “Jack.” His film portrays his trials, tribulations, setbacks and successes, to create awareness and change within India and China (not to mention the world beyond).  These two countries represent two of the largest opportunities to change behaviors through shifting “poop culture to pop culture,” and increasing toilet access to make strong progress toward the 2030 UN target of ending open defecation. His approach to destigmatize how we talk about poop; making the toilet an “object of desire” and the bathroom the “happiest place in the house,” makes his approach powerful and humanizing.

LESSONS FROM MR. TOILET & HIS FILM

Reflecting upon lessons learned from Jack’s labor or love, stories of setback and success from so many places across the world, and reflections on my time collaborating and working with Jack and his WTO team in Singapore, I’ve learned a ton of insights for leading change. Several characteristics of leading large scale change and transformation transcend Jack’s social work and activism world, and can equally apply to the worlds we all live in both professional and personal, where change is a constant and requires focus, self development and commitment:

  • Create an Inspiring Vision: dream big, and and build a shared picture to bring others along the journey with you
  • Lead Positive Change: day in and day out, be the positive force for everyone around you
  • Create Compelling Goals: milestones are critical and allow us to measure small inspired steps and wins every day
  • Courage is Key: to take risks, be a bit irreverent, and ask forgiveness later
  • It’s a Marathon, Not a Sprint: patience, persistence, fortitude and resilience are all required capabilities to lead
  • Never Give Up: if at once you don’t succeed, keep an open mind, surround yourself with great minds, improve your thinking and stretch to new and uncomfortable paradigms – a breakthrough and insight could be just around the corner
  • Flow With It: strategies and actions evolve, shift and adjust as you go, as you learn, to incorporate insights learned out of hardships, setbacks, challenge and success
  • Be Mindful of Your Wellbeing: take time for self care, nurturing yourself and those important people around you. Now, Jack is one of those energizer bunnies that never seems to run out of batteries, but in the film, you can see the toll that his sense of urgency to fulfill his noble vision takes on himself, his family and the WTO team. Having worked with Jack and his team several years ago, I can say this is a critical factor that anyone embarking on change needs to focus on. It’s part of the training required for the marathon.

     

    For all who feel compelled to join Jack’s cause and support the vision:

  • Generate awareness with your colleagues, friends and family
  • Engage your local communities to take inspired actions
  • See Jack’s Film in Santa Monica through November 14th, or in New York: Mr. Toilet The Worlds #2 Man Film
  • Participate in local activities on United Nations World Toilet Day, November 19th!