https://drjudyho.substack.com/p/neuroplasticity-101
Neuroplasticity is driven by what we pay attention to, repeat,
practice, and emotionally engage with. It’s shaped by your habits, your
thoughts, your environment—and what you choose to do with them.
When
you practice a new skill or repeat a specific behavior, your brain
strengthens the pathways that support that activity. If you imagine your
mind as a dense forest, forming new habits is like carving a trail
through the trees. The more often you walk the path, the clearer it
becomes.
This is what neuroscientist Donald Hebb famously summarized as:
“Neurons that fire together, wire together.”
That
includes everything from how you speak to yourself to how you respond
to stress. For example, if your go-to inner dialogue is self-critical—“I never get this right”—you
strengthen those pathways. But with conscious effort, you can begin to
shift those patterns toward something more balanced, and over time, that
becomes the new default. The result is not only psychological
relief—it’s physical change in the brain.