Those aggravating things that go wrong in the day and those irritating things that go bump in the night – disrupting routines and interrupting sleep – all have a cumulative effect on your brain, especially its ability to remember and learn. As science gains greater insight into the consequences of stress on the brain, the picture that emerges is not a pretty one. A chronic overreaction to stress overloads the brain with powerful hormones that are intended only for short-term duty in emergency … [Read more...]
How Do You Respond to Noise? – WOMEN in RECOVERY
November 16, 2012 by Team Celebration
Filed Under: CONTRIBUTORS, RECOVERY Tagged With: Acoustic stress, bioacoustician, brain disorders, Brain Function, cardiovascular deaths, degradation of the immune system, Dopamine, Elizabeth von Muggenthaler, Fauna Communications Research Institute, High blood pressure, How Do You, impairment of learning, including ADHD, neurotransmitter, noise, Noise Stress, North Carolina, Parkinson's Disease, peptic ulcers, PFC cognitive function, psychiatric disorders, Respond to Noise, startle response, stress impairs, strokes, Sudden Arrhythmia Death Syndromes, suicides, tigers, women and noise, women in recovery, women.