Sunday, 3 September 2017

Play by Dr Stuart Brown






All quotes from Stuart’s book

The ability to play is critical not only to being happy, but also to sustaining social relationships and being a creative, innovative person.


Play is a very primal activity. It is preconscious and preverbal -- it arises out of ancient biological structures that existed before our consciousness or our ability to speak.


Play is a state of mind rather than an activity. 


People who had the most cognitive activity (doing puzzles, reading, engaging in mentally challenging work), the chances of getting Alzheimers disease were 63% lower than that of the general population. 


If we stop playing, we share the fate of all animals that grown out of play.  Our behavior becomes fixed.  We are not interested in new and different things.  We find fewer opportunities to take pleasure in the world around us. 


Play can become a doorway to a new self, one much more in tune with the world.  Because play is all about trying on new behaviors and thoughts, it frees us from established patterns. 


True mastery over a lifetime comes from one's internal play compass. 


For all of us, "entering the forest where there is no path" and discovering our own path is an essential part of the transformative experience. 



As with many things in life, often the problem is not the problem, the problem is how you react to the problem.  


People reach the highest levels of a discipline because they are driven by love, by fun, by play. 


The body remembers what the mind has forgotten. 


Play, by its very nature, is a little anarchic.  It is about stepping outside of normal life and breaking normal patterns.  It is about bending rules of thought, action, and behavior.


Following your bliss may be difficult, demanding, uncomfortable, [and] tedious at times. 


Your current feelings about people, things, and activities are rooted in the emotions you previously experienced and forgot in the natural amnesia of early life.


You can't be truly open to spontaneity if you don't feel comfortable testing novel ways of expressing yourself.