Change Your Brain Every Day - How to Ease the Three Major Types of Grief
Episode Date: March 1, 2021In Dr. Daniel Amen and Tana Amen’s new PBS special ‘Overcoming Anxiety, Depression, Trauma & Grief’ they discuss the dragons from the past that breathe fire on the emotional centers of the brain.... Perhaps one of the most prevalent of these dragons during the pandemic is the Grief and Loss Dragon. In this episode of The Brain Warrior’s Way Podcast, Dr. Amen describes the three major types of grief, what triggers them, how they manifest, and what you can do to ease the resulting negative feelings. Watch the brand new TV special from Dr. Daniel and Tana Amen "Overcoming Anxiety, Depression, Trauma & Grief" on PBS now! Check you local listings for showtimes.
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Welcome to the Brain Warriors Way podcast.
I'm Dr. Daniel Amen.
And I'm Tana Amen.
In our podcast, we provide you with the tools you need to become a warrior for the health
of your brain and body.
The Brain Warriors Way podcast is brought to you by Amen Clinics, where we have been
transforming lives for 30 years using tools like brain spec imaging to personalize treatment to your brain.
For more information, visit amenclinics.com.
The Brain Warriors Way podcast is also brought to you by BrainMD, where we produce the highest quality nutraceuticals to support the health of your brain and body.
To learn more, go to brainmd.com. Many of you know, I did the big NFL study when the NFL was
struggling with traumatic brain injury and football, but I just saw so much pain in retired players' families
that I knew I had to do something.
But we're not talking football tonight.
It's not a big topic for us.
We're going to talk about grief and loss. And I know they're feeling it in Kansas
City, but quite frankly, people are feeling it all around the world. And our older population, Some of you think I'm in that group. No, no, no.
Our older population is suffering more than I can remember them ever suffering because of the isolation and the loneliness.
And the younger population is suffering more than ever. In my house, I have an 11 year old,
almost 16 year old and a 17 year old.
And last year, this year, they've lost a lot.
And it's critical to know how to deal with it.
And I was on Headline News today, CNN Headline News.
I was really fun with my friend, Lynn Smith.
We were talking about my new book,
Your Brain Is Always Listening.
It is coming out March 2nd. And in the book, I talk about
what your brain is always listening to. And I use the metaphor of dragons. The first section
is dragons from the past that still breathe fire on your emotional brain.
And we've talked about a herd of dragons so far,
but tonight we're gonna talk about the one
that just bites people so often,
and that is the grief and lost dragon.
All the dragons, I had an artist render them for me.
And it's more complicated than most people think.
I mean, yes, when I lost my dad last May, partly because of COVID. I mean, there was just such sadness associated with that.
And that's what people often think when they think of grief, that it was a spouse or a parent or a child or a loved one.
But there are three big categories to grief. or a separation, or a divorce, or a breakup, or a friend, or a peer group,
a partner that has dementia, and they don't recognize you anymore, you lose children.
Now, the worst thing is losing a child to death. But when you have an empty nest, that's a loss. And so many patients that
I've treated over the years, I wife, is just a great mother.
She has been a great mother.
And one of the reasons I think she's great
is she caused Chloe to be very independent
and she doesn't need her as much at 17.
And that's sort of the point.
I mean, that's what you want to do.
But I could just see the sadness and the grief.
You might lose something important.
So the first category is someone important.
The second one is something important, such as your health.
So women with breast cancer who've had a mastectomy.
I was an army psychiatrist for a long time.
Someone lost a limb, a job, finances, even a beloved pet.
I have seen severe grief reactions
and it's like, well, why?
It's like my dog Aslan loves me virtually no matter what.
I can't say that about anybody else in my life.
And so having that kind of love and attachment is so important.
So someone important, something important.
Or you lose the attachment to an idea, to what could have been, to your identity, such as with retirement, or you lose a loved
one to an addiction, or if you have a handicapped child that you had this hope for your relationship with this child and it just takes a complete right turn.
Um, you know, I also see this a lot with the athletes and musicians and actors and actresses that I've seen that they lose the trajectory of going toward a goal. And if they
don't make new goals, they often get lost in themselves. And what can trigger grief and loss?
Any reminder of the loss, a sight, a song, a routine, making coffee in the morning, an
anniversary, anything.
Today's Sunday. Sundays often trigger loss for me
because for the last five years, virtually every Sunday, I went
over to my dad's house and he and I worked out together. We
lift weights, and he was almost 91 when he died. He could do a
plank longer than I could it was irritating i mean
seriously irritating i'd like go let's do a minute and he go let's do two i'm like okay
he goes let's do four and i'm like oh no he could do a six minute plank at 90.
Pretty weird actually.
But every Sunday or every time I do a plank,
I think of him.
And early on, it was a lot of pain for me.
And so how do we react? Early on, it was a lot of pain for me.
And so how do we react when we experience grief and loss
or when the grief and loss drag and breeze fire
on our emotional brain? Well, it can be shock, anger, sadness, guilt, numbness,
anxiety, insomnia.
I remember when I lost someone, it was about 16 years ago.
I mean, someone I really cared about.
And she went away and for like six months i was completely not normal probably most people
know me go well he's sort of never normal but i wasn't myself i couldn't sleep i had chest pain and diarrhea. It was just like my whole nervous system was out of whack.
And that's how people react.
It's like your brain is still looking for something
that's not there.
Loneliness, physical stress symptoms,
and chest pain's very important to get assessed.
So I had chest pain when I went through that period of grief
and I went to the cardiologist and my heart was just fine.
What happens with grief, it's a different kind of stress
that causes your ventricles, one of the
chambers of your heart, two of the chambers of your heart, to beat erratically. And that's what
causes the chest pain. But my heart was fine. My assistant, who I adore, Kim, while she's working with me, her fiance died of a heart attack in her arms.
And she had crushing chest pain.
And my first thought was, it's grief.
But the first thing I said is, it's probably grief.
You need to go to the cardiologist.
Well, we actually found out she had 95% blockages in her coronary arteries.
His death likely saved her life.
And so if you get chest pain, it's really important to get it assessed. And the chronic exposure to cortisol stress hormones actually shrinks the cells in your hippocampus, one of the major memory structures of the brain. And so having memory problems during periods of grief and loss are very
common. So what to do? How to tame the grief and loss dragon? dragon. Let's talk about seven things. One, you want to start healing as soon as possible.
I knew when my dad died, I wasn't just going to feel bad for a long time. I was going to feel bad.
In fact, I sat, this is in my office, in the chair I write write in and i just played his voicemails and i played them
over and over again um i wanted to feel the how much i loved him how much he loved me the sadness. I wrote him for his funeral. I wrote a poem that's actually, I put it in the book.
I won't go over with you, but it's beautiful. Get the book.
So start as soon as possible, number one.
Number two, brain health, right?
I'm already talking to you about how stress chemicals can damage your brain.
You need to get on a brain healthy program.
Too often people are feeling bad.
They're smoking pot. They're drinking alcohol.
They're doing, they're eating a lot of sugar. They're doing things to medicate themselves that actually make them worse and perpetuate the problem.
And I sent a note to my team today about Tom Brady.
So, you know, Tom Brady, greatest of all time, quarterback,
10th Super Bowl, just won his seventh Super Bowl or something crazy.
I'm not a fan of football, but I'm a huge fan of Tom Brady. Because if you actually look at his routine, the New York Post had a headline story of his insane routine. He's
basically a brain warrior. He the best quarterback in football.
I mean, it's crazy, right?
So if you're going to be in a stressful environment,
step number two is get your brain right.
Do the things.
Focus on exercising, eating right, taking your supplements, new learning. Do not give yourself permission
to get off track. I have a great story that I put in one of my books, Use Your Brain to Change Your
Age, about Chris, who lost her 12-year-old daughter, Sammy, to bone cancer, and then just felt terrible and
got depressed, started drinking too much, ate the wrong food, went from 130 pounds to 200 pounds.
And on the two year anniversary of Sammy's death, she was going to kill herself herself and then she saw me on TV and I was talking about
brain health and she said well I'll get his book and if it's a bad book I'll
kill myself tomorrow she actually told me that horrified me and but she
realized she was doing all the wrong things so she stopped drinking she
stopped eating bad food.
She got on her tennis shoes, she started walking,
then she started running.
And over the next year, got down to her normal weight,
felt better.
Of course, she's always gonna miss Sammy.
Of course, I'm always gonna miss my dad.
But hurting myself isn't helping anybody. Step three, fix sleep
first. So important. If you don't sleep right, you won't grieve right. If you don't sleep right,
you won't think right. If you don't sleep right, you won't make the right decisions and really take some time and focus on getting the sleep you need and that does
not mean ambient that is not a good strategy hypnosis meditation brain md makes something
called put me to sleep uh we also have restful sleep. There are supplements
that can help magnesium, theanine, GABA, a little bit of
melatonin, not a lot, a little bit of melatonin. Number four is
journal. What happened if you're having trouble getting beyond
grief? There's research that says just writing about it
15 minutes a day after a couple of weeks,
significant improvement.
The idea is do something.
Number five, be on an alert for an ant infestation.
Those of you who follow my work,
I talk about automatic negative thoughts,
the thoughts that come into your mind automatically and ruin your day. And your
brain is always listening. There's a big chapter on how to kill the ants that are feeding the
dragons. Here's the exercise. Whenever you feel sad or mad or nervous or out of control,
write down what you're thinking.
And then ask yourself, is it true?
Can I absolutely know if it's true?
So helpful.
Six is deal with the triggers.
Be on guard for them.
And when they come, let the feeling wash over you
and then change it.
You don't have to stay in sadness.
And I have a new course coming out called
Overcoming Anxiety, Depression, Trauma, and Grief, and talk
about my friend Joseph McClendon, who has a four-step process to break bad feelings quickly.
Practice feeling bad. Like, go to the darkness. You know, I feel the sadness over my dad. And then say, stop.
I mean, once you've dealt with it,
but you don't, you know,
I call it interrupting unnecessary,
unhappy moments.
Say, stop.
Stand up, take a breath,
gives you some space,
and then replace it with a happy moment.
Like after I did one of my shows,
my dad called me and said he was proud of me.
And that was not a common thing.
You know, as accomplished as I am,
you know, expressing love was sort of rare.
And, but I cherish that.
I hold on to that.
And then celebrate.
It's like, yes, I don't have to feel bad.
I can interrupt unnecessary, unhappy moments.
Keep your memory balanced.
Too often when we lose someone or something, we over-idealize them. I saw
my grandmother do this to my grandfather. I love my grandfather. I was named after him.
He was my best friend when I was growing up. He was a candy maker. I mean, I was attached,
but my grandmother was sort of mean to him. I wasn't a fan of her. And when
my grandfather died, she just like went on and on about how wonderful he was and how
much she missed him. You want to keep it balanced. And the bonus strategy, you're still struggling get help sometimes grief and loss can get stuck
in your brain so i've actually published scientific studies on how trauma gets stuck in the brain And grief often becomes traumatic.
And there are treatments that can help.
Now, for me, I don't just reach for, oh, take this or that medicine.
But supplements like happy saffron or serotonin mood support can often be very helpful to you.
So I hope you're finding this helpful.
You can also order my new book,
Your Brain Is Always Listening.
If you go to yourbrainisalwayslistening.com
and if you pre-order it,
I'm actually giving away a bottle,
a free bottle of Happy Saffron
along with some other wonderful gifts.
So I hope you have a great night.
If you're struggling with grief and loss,
use some of these tips.
I know they can be helpful to you.
Take care.
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