Showing posts with label Flute. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flute. Show all posts

Sunday, February 21, 2021

HuffPost: Musicians Are Smarter Than The Rest Of Us

 

Musicians Are Smarter Than The Rest Of Us


Musicians’ Brains Stay Sharp as They Age

Summary
While it is known that practicing music repeatedly changes the organization of the brain, it is not clear if these changes can correlate musical abilities with non-musical abilities. The study of 70 older participants, with different musical experience over their lifetimes, provides a connection between musical activity and mental balance in old age. “The results of this preliminary study revealed that participants with at least 10 years of musical experience (high activity musicians) had better performance in nonverbal memory, naming, and executive processes in advanced age relative to non-musicians.”


Introduction
Changing one’s lifestyle may postpone the onset of problems connected with old age, like Alzheimer’s disease. These diseases cause cognitive changes like loss of memory, reasoning, and perception. Adequate rest and physical exercise as well as a lifelong habit of stimulating the mind are favorable for clear thinking in old age. Musical activities, undertaken throughout the lifetime, have an impact on one’s mental health during old age. This has been studied in this current research work. Practicing music for a number of years brings about certain changes in brain organization. Comparing the lucidity in old age of those pursued music related activities and those who didn’t may help to understand the effect of the music-related reorganization of brain on successful aging.

Methods
-- Seventy healthy participants, aged between 60 and 83, were divided into three groups, based on their degree of involvement in musical activities, over their lifetimes.
-- The three groups were similar in average age, education, handedness, sex ratio, and physical exercise habits.
-- The first group, namely the non-musicians, never received any formal musical training. The second group, the low activity musicians, had one to nine years of training. The third, the high activity musicians, trained for more than 10 years and played regularly afterward.
-- All were tested for brain strengths such as memory, attention, and language prowess, using standardized tests. Their mastery on the use of language, ability to remember, and ability to express oneself were tested.

Results
-- Verbal intellectual ability and learning, as well as recall of verbal information, were found to be similar across the three groups.
-- The high activity musicians were significantly better at performing tasks based on visual inputs.
-- Although language prowess seemed to be similar across the groups, the high activity musicians’ memory for words was significantly better than that of non-musicians.
-- The age at which musical training started affected visual memory, while the number of years of training affected non-verbal memory.

Read the full article H E R E < ------

This Pup agrees?!! 😄


O sing unto the LORD a new song: 
sing unto the LORD, all the earth.




**

Friday, November 13, 2009

One is the loneliest number

I enjoy having a large family.  The crowd, the noise, the hustle/bustle, the liveliness  --  added up, mean fun and excitement (though involving a lot of hard work).  Silence and inactivity, in the context of family, is booooring and totally dulls-ville. 

So, our main acitivity on Saturday mornings is music lessons from 8:45 am till about 12:15 pm  Last Saturday after Junior Choir class, we ran into Anne, Camille's former Flute teacher through WC-CSA.  The day was so warm and sunny that she and her three students were practicing outside, away from the usual 'ol stuffy classroom. If it were still last year, Camille would be right smack dab in the middle of the group, practicing/playing her heart out on her Pearl flute.  She bacame such a good flutist  because of Anne's expertise, and her own efforts and rigorous practice sessions. Yes, it was good to see Anne once again.

How I miss Camille and how I miss flute lessons! I miss the applause during Recital season for her playing so well.   I miss being spoiled with the constant "noise" of flute and piano music throughout our home.  Her siblings still play the piano quite often, thank God (now you can add Clarinet to the mix); and Kristi picks up her guitar and sings now and again, but the Flute has been silenced -- at least temporarily.  In 3 and a half years, Lord willing, we'll have a Flute-playing Registered Nurse in the house!

That's the best-case scenario.  Realistically speaking, the children will slowly, but surely be leaving and living on their own, taking their music with them.  Their future families will certainly benefit; but as far as the music being exlusively mine and Romy's, those days are numbered. So, will the fun be over in the future?  Will the noise level in our home be finally reduced to dead silence (horrors! yuck! no way!).  Hopefully not.  Lord willing, there will always be RRE Family parties and get-togethers.  And Christmas parties.  And...I can hardly wait for this:  our children's weddings, their future families, our future gazillion Grandkids!  May it be so, Lord, may it be so.

Camille modelling a John Atencio Yellow Topaz ring with her Pearl-brand Flute.

Camille in her Fencing outfit/uniform (modelling my Chanel bag)

...how can one be warm alone?  And if one prevail against him, two shall withstand him; and a three-fold cord is not quickly broken.   Ecclesiastes 4: 11, 12




Monday, June 8, 2009

Baptist Bible Church's 24th Anniversary in Chicago

Yesterday, we were also able to join Baptist Bible Church on the 24th Anniversary of their founding. We met old friends, as well as new. Three-year-old Sierra had her own digital camera. She sang The National Anthem very well. The guest preacher, Pastor Brennan, spoke eloquently on Lazarus and the rich man. BBC's other guests included the outstanding musicians of the Berean Church's Ukelele Group. Kristi, Camille, and Jared also partook of the service with their piano and flute skills. I am grateful to the many years of Piano and Flute lessons the has Lord provided through Hubby's job. We were also pleasantly surprised with the availability of day-old bread from Dominicks. They were delicious with our next day's meal of Mushroom Soup!