Changing the Brain

anxietyby Mitch Horowitz

Since the 1990s, an intriguing courtship has emerged between certain branches of quantum theorizing and psychology. Neuroscientists and research psychiatrists, notably Jeffrey M. Schwartz, M.D., of UCLA, have been studying what has been termed neuroplasticity. Brain scans show that patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) who repeatedly and effectively redirect their thoughts from intrusive or ritualistic impulses not only alleviate symptoms, but over time can actually change their brain biology by rewiring neural pathways.

The necessary formula is this: When an obsessive thought or ritual begins to take hold, the individual immediately redirects his thinking to something else that is pleasurable and diverting, such as listening to music, watching a favorite TV show, or performing a desirable physical activity. After a time, researchers find, the repeated diversions actually create new nerve-cell structures in the brain, which replace the electro-neural pathways associated with OCD.

I propose, Schwartz writes, that the time has come for science to confront serious implications of the fact that directed, willed mental activity can clearly and systematically alter brain function; that the exertion of willful effort generates a physical force that has the power to change how the brain works and even its physical structure.

Schwartz linked his UCLA findings to developments in quantum physics. The implications of direct neuroplasticity combined with quantum physics, he wrote in his 2002 book The Mind and the Brain, cast new light on the question of humanity’s place, and role, in nature. The co-emergence of the two fields, he argued, suggests that the natural world evolves through an interplay between two causal processes.

Hence, if our thought process can alter the pathways through which electrical impulses travel in the brain, and permanently change behaviors that are produced, then brain biology can be understood as the product of thought, as much as the other way around. This process, Schwartz claims, allows human thoughts to make a difference in the evolution of physical events. And the method at the back of it, he writes, is what I call directed mental force.

Brain imaging and several years of clinical study support the findings of neuroplasticity. Yet the same insight existed instinctively – and with virtually the same methods and exercises – in early New Thought. Between 1909 and 1911, minister and philosopher John Herman Randall issued a series of pamphlets that explored the ideas of positive thinking and the new mental therapeutics. He collected them in his 1911 book, A New Philosophy of Life, in which he described an intriguing method to escape nagging thoughts. Randall called it substitution.

He wrote:

Divert your mind from the discordant thought by thinking in other channels. Do not wait a moment, when the wrong thought gets into your mind, but turn to the magazine or the book, and read until your mind is filled with other thoughts. Or, take up some task that calls for all your energy, and forces you to concentrate your mental activities along other lines. It may be a little difficult at first, but I want to tell you, on the experience of multitudes of men and women [that this approach] if persevered in, will succeed in every life.

Randall’s technique and terminology foreshadowed the precise method of neuroplasticity as it relates to OCD.* People fail to devise constructive new habits, Randall wrote, because they are not persistent and patient enough in forming the new brain centres from whence must be permanently expressed the new life, that may in very truth be born in them… And elsewhere: Our thinking must be turned into other channels than those which we know will lead to the worrisome thoughts – the remedy being to substitute some new line of thought, anything that gets us out of narrow restricted grooves. Randall’s insights anticipated the language and findings of twenty-first-century neuroplasticity.

*In 1904 the Nobel-winning Spanish neuro-anatomist Santiago Ramón y Cajal also had the insight that thoughts repeated by mental practice would reinforce neural pathways, though the brain imaging that would prove his point did not yet exist.


The above article is an excerpt from the new book One Simple Idea: How Positive Thinking Reshaped Modern Life by Mitch Horowitz. It is printed here with permission. Mitch Horowitz is vice president and editor in chief at Tarcher/Penguin, the division of Penguin USA dedicated to metaphysical literature. He is the author of Occult America (Bantam), which received the 2010 PEN Oakland/ Josephine Miles Award for literary excellence. Horowitz frequently writes about and discusses alternative spirituality in the national media, including CBS Sunday Morning, Dateline NBC, All Things Considered, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post and CNN.com. He and his wife raise two sons in New York City. He is online at MitchHorowitz.com and twitter.com/MitchHorowitz.