Neuroplasticity. Sounds like a disease, or some form of toxic waste, or something else you’d seriously want to steer clear of. Well, not only is neuroplasticity something you want; it’s something you’ve got!
“ Neuro” anything refers to the brain. Neuroplasticity means the brain remains malleable, changeable — “plastic”. On the micro level, this means that your brain can keep creating new pathways of learning. It can continue to grow and change itself right into old age. This is not what brain scientists once thought. The old belief was that most brain growth occurs when you’re young. However your brain grew is pretty much locked in place by the time you reach adulthood. Not so!
The brain’s ability to keep changing itself has so much significance it, well, boggles the mind! But today I want to narrow the focus to a topic related to eating disorder recovery that I took up in my last post: self-regulation. Self-regulation means the capacity to calm and soothe yourself and to tolerate even very intense emotions or impulses.
Last time, I reported that self-regulation gets bundled in when you take in the comforting of attuned caregivers in infancy. The bad news is that the special openness of an infant brain to receiving the self-regulatory download recedes by toddlerhood. The goods news is that, thanks to the wonders of neuroplasticity, your brain can still install the skills of self-regulation as a grown-up. It won’t happen through passive reception the way it does for an infant. It takes a lot of conscious effort. But in time, with enough practice, your brain will get the hang of it. It will become your familiar way of handling what life brings you and the feelings that get stirred up. This means you will no longer need your eating disorder, which has been trying hard to fill in for this missing skill.
If you’d like to read more about ways that grown-ups can consciously acquire the skills of self-regulation, check out my posts “Coping Beyond Distraction: Expanding Skills for Living in Eating Disorder Recovery,” “Recovery from the Top Down or the Bottom Up?” and “Resourcing Your Way Through Recovery.” Discover what your brain is ready, willing and able to do for you!















