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Fire Together, Wire Together: How Prayer Strengthens the Brain

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One of the things that we find to be such an important element of many of the rituals and practices that people do as part of their religious traditions is the repetition of it.  The more that you come back to a particular idea, the more you focus on it, the more you say a phrase or a prayer, those are the ideas and beliefs that become written into the neural connections of the brain.  


There is a cute saying the neurons that fire together wire together.  The idea is that when you are doing a particular practice, whatever it is religious or otherwise, the more you do it the more you are writing that information into the neural connections of the brain.  The neurons that support that idea or support that practice fire together. They strengthen their connections and it makes it easier for you to come back to that particular practice and it also strengthens the beliefs that are around that particular practice.  

So that is why a practice like prayer is so valuable to people who are religious because you keep coming back to God. And if you keep praying to God in that particular way that becomes your belief system and this repetition strengthens the way the brain works specifically around that particular task or that particular idea.

That’s also why we think that a practice like meditation even taking into a more secular kind of context can be a very powerful tool for helping to improve the way a person’s brain works.  The analogy here is if you were wanting to become a better tennis player, for example, you could do one of two things.  One is you go play tennis.  You need to keep practicing the tennis itself.  The other is that you could go to the weight room and lift weights or run, which is more general strengthening and conditioning.  Now if you wanted to become a good basketball player you wouldn’t play tennis.  You’d shoot baskets.  But the weight training and the aerobic training can be good for both.  

So meditation may fall into that area where maybe you want to be really good at doing crossword puzzles.  You want to do a lot of crossword puzzles, but if you get really good at crossword puzzles it doesn’t make you a good chess player. But if you do meditation practices it might make you better either in doing crossword puzzles or being a good chess player or maybe even be a better athlete.  So it has something to do with how we can more generally improve the function of the brain and these kinds of practices actually can help. 

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