Monday, January 30, 2012

Brain Health


Did anyone know that January is Alzheimers Awareness Month?

I just recently became aware of this fact, and so here is a post dedicated to brain health! 

My first two years of University I was a dancer. Music and Dance came first in my life, and I loved it. I started realizing that playing music and dancing are things that involve muscle memory, and that our brains work sort of subconsciously once we have learned a step or a pattern.  In my second two years of University I focused more on writing and research, and in one of my classes I ran into a student doing a thesis on dancing and Alzheimer's. Before she even began to explain her theory to me I knew it was a good one. The people getting Alzheimer's right now are the people who grew up going to social dances, their brains know how to dance, without thinking about it. So part of this student's research involved getting Alzheimer's patients up and music playing, and they just knew what to do! Amazing! Her study also noted several cases where while dancing, some of these people would 'come back,' meaning they could remember things and people. What a beautiful thing. 

Along with dancing and music, brain health in general is stimulated by anything that gets you thinking logically or problem-solving. That's exactly what puzzles do for you! According to retired psychologist, Patsi Krakoff, Psy.D., who writes a blog for "Keeping Your Brain Healthy," studies indicate that challenging brain exercises are key to boosting the amount of new brain cells your body creates. So by puzzling out these Pic-a-Pix puzzles, you are boosting your brain health! Can this delay the onset of Alzheimer's disease? I'm not sure if that has been clinically proven yet, but Pic-a-Pix sounds like a pretty fun prescription for boosting brain health!



Because Pic-a-Pix helps brain health, Diane Baher (Pic-a-Pix puzzle book creator) has set up a donation system with the Alzheimer Society of Calgary. She donates $1 from every book sold to the Alzheimer Society. Pretty great to be able to give back to society, and that's a fundamental part of bettering the world.  During this, the Alzheimer's Awareness Month, Diane was at the Okotoks Library for their Family Literacy Day event, pictured above. She had a Pic-a-Pix station set up with information and books for sale. Guest speaker at the event was Jayson Krause, who recently published "52 People," which isn't so much about brain health as relationship health. But in a way, if we have healthy relationships we'll have a healthier brain- it all ties together in the end. His idea for the book started when his best friend died and he realized he hadn't really known him. Thus began a crusade to really get to know people- finding the right questions to ask, and to persuade others to really get to know their loved ones, beyond just the day-to-day blather. I could write a whole 'nother post about just that. :) But here's where I sign off for today...



Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Why Pic-a-Pix?


Let me tell you why I love doing these puzzles...as opposed to cross word puzzles, Sudoku, word-searches, etc

I have heard many times that doing puzzle-type things keeps your brain going- healthy, keeps it good at thinking, analytical skills, stuff like that. And we all know that such things are really important especially as we get older and start forgetting stuff. So it'd probably be a good idea to like doing those puzzles. But quite frankly I find them a bit dull. Well that's not entirely true. Word searches and cross-word puzzles are more so that way. Sudoku, unfortunately, is just way beyond me. Someone tried to make math fun, and I applaud that, but it is still way too hard for me, and there is no immediate reward I can see from finishing one. 

Pic-a-Pix, on the other hand...

Pic-a-Pix is kind of like Sudoku (as far as I can tell) in that you have to work with numbers. But the math doesn't go beyond addition and subtraction. Deduction skills are developed, which are an excellent thing for anyone to develop, and you have to cross-check yourself constantly, going back to parts you've already worked on over and over to find more clues. It's kinda like repetition, which is one of the best ways to learn. But all that stuff is pretty scholarly... the real reason I love these puzzles are because they keep you hanging--trying to figure out what the picture will be at the end!! I love that! #1 I like art and creating pictures and beautiful things (even if I'm not very good at it), and #2 the suspense is awesome. All the scholarly stuff is really just some awesome side-effects. Pretty good, hey?

Here is one of the first Pic-a-Pix puzzles I did:

Monday, January 23, 2012

WebSite

Eventually I hope to post puzzles right here on my blog, but the best place to find them right now of course is the creator's website!

http://learnpicapix.com/


This website was created a year or so ago and is a great place to learn how to do the puzzles, and try out free puzzles! I recommend trying out a puzzle or two on the website, and let me know how it goes. ;)

Intro to Pic-a-Pix

"Pic-a-Pix are exciting Picture Logic puzzles that form whimsical pixel-composed pictures when solved. Challenging, deductive and artistic, this original Japanese invention offers the ultimate mix of logic, art and fun while providing solvers with many hours of mentally stimulating entertainment."--ConceptisPuzzles

My first introduction to these puzzles was momentarily frustrating, then way tons of fun! I took the book of puzzles to dinner and would work on them while waiting for the food. My family laughed at first, but then they all wanted to try to do the puzzles too!

Before I get into any rules or anything else, here is a tutorial from YouTube, enjoy!

 

Fan-club Beginnings

I was recently at a family Christmas party and was approached by my aunt with a puzzling book-- a book of Pic-a-Pix Puzzles. The most puzzling part was that she had created all 100 of the puzzles by herself! I was amazed and began trying to solve the puzzles.

Now don't get me wrong, I'm not actually a huge fan of puzzles, I'm not the type to do the Sudoku in the newspaper or take a book of crossword puzzles on a road trip, I'd rather read a book or take a coloring book. These puzzles are unique, however, in that they create pictures! It is sort of like a paint-by-number, where you create something beautiful at the end, but totally tax your brainpower the meantime.  And it was FUN! So in short order I agreed to start a fan- blog for her, to get the word out about these puzzles and to share them with everyone!

I'll use this blog as a place to share everything I learn about Pic-a-Pix, and pic-a-pix puzzle creator Diane Baher. Hopefully you'll have as much fun puzzle-ing as I am! Stay tuned...