5 Neurosculpting Practices for Lasting Brain Change

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April 8, 2019

How many times do you beat yourself up for repeating the same limiting or self-sabotage patterns even though you “know better”? You might find yourself reaching for the next self-help book or seminar which often reiterates all the ways you “know better.” Back to square one!

Part of the problem is that knowing better often has little power to actually create real and lasting brain change. Science supports the idea that our unconscious and subconscious processes account for far more of our behavior drivers than conscious thought processes. So if our behaviors and patterns are dictated more from subconscious patterns than conscious ones, it really does little good to “know better.” Instead, for lasting brain change we have to “do better.”

Self-directed neuroplasticity, and practices like Neurosculpting, are some of the keys to influencing our thought patterns, breaking old ones, and establishing new ones. The great news is we can use some simple practices to begin winning over the brain and body, priming it to be more predisposed to self-directed change. Incorporating these five best practices can open the doors to a more graceful, resilient, and lasting experience of change.

1. Gratitude

Having a gratitude practice has been neurologically and biologically proven to have a profound effect on the body and mind. When the mind and body reach these states we feel less apprehensive about change and more open to new possibilities and uncertainty. UC Berkeley reports that practicing gratitude can lead to:

  • A strong immune system
  • Lower blood pressure
  • Joy
  • Forgiveness
  • Ease of chronic pain
  • Compassion
  • Social involvement

A simple gratitude practice can be five minutes in the shower making a list of the things in your day that support your comfort and safety. These might be appreciating the warm water, noticing you have shelter, or remembering you had a soft bed to sleep in. When you focus on the simple yet plausible things that support your comfort and safety, gratitude begins to cultivate naturally.

2. Brain Nutrition

Nourishing ourselves with foods high in Omega-3s and healthy fats is one of the best ways to support a healthy brain and a quality meditation practice in which to shift your patterns. Our body uses Omega-3s and healthy fats to build grey matter in our brain. In addition to brain nutrition, hydration is essential to healthy cognitive function, concentration, attention, memory and self-directed neuroplasticity.  

A simple practice to begin priming you for brain resilience and change is to put your food on a plate, eat it at a table, and make sure you have a healthy fat, protein, and source of quality slow carbohydrates like vegetables.

3. Daily Shaking Practice

When we experience a stress response, stress hormones (including adrenaline) move into the bloodstream and muscles contract and tighten. These physical changes occur in order for the body to engage in a fight-or-flight response for protection. When the body is in this state we are at our most resistant to change.

In most of the stressors that we typically face in our daily lives, however, we do not hit or run our way out of the situation, and the contracted physical state remains for extended amounts of time unnecessarily. This ultimately creates a potential for long-term physical maladies, including chronic pain and illness, and a mental rigidity that sabotages change.

One of the best ways to release tension, stress, or contraction—and prime the brain for lasting change—is to quite literally shake it off!

Consider what a rabbit, or any mammal, does after it has been chased by a predator and is now safe: it likely hides under a bush or object and shakes until the adrenaline has dispelled and the muscles can relax. You may have experienced your body attempting to use this technique naturally and perhaps have even tried to resist or control involuntary shaking.

We can utilize this natural biological strategy to release muscle tension and alleviate stress hormone buildup in the body. Consider finding a private space and informing people that you will be shaking so they know there is no medical emergency. Having a daily shaking practice releases unused and un-useful tension and contraction, allowing for alleviation and relaxation.

Feel free to shake violently and to even develop a daily shaking practice—as many others have!

4. Tapping with Non-Dominant Hand

This is one of our favorite Neurosculpting tricks! When you are in a meditation and find yourself in a moment that you would like to access easily later or anchor in now, you can tap a part of your body with your non-dominant hand. Creating a physical sensation in connection with a particular experience creates an association. This physical association makes the experience more easily accessible later.

Tapping can be used to retrieve the memory during another meditation, and even throughout the day. While it may not be as in-depth as a full meditation, tapping in the same place on your body with your non-dominant hand will bring the experience to mind. Imagine trying to establish a new pattern yet never having real-time moments to remind your subconscious mind of it. That new pattern will simply begin to fade away.

With this simple tip you can give gentle reinforcement to your new pattern while standing in line at the grocery store, driving in your commute, cooking, or showering. You can tap with your non-dominant hand in most moments and access the experience on a conscious or subconscious level.

5. Daily Novelty Exercises

Pique your brain’s interest with novel activities every time it crosses your mind. You can use imaginative yet non-threatening, simple exercises throughout the day to engage your brain. Ideas that are interesting, but not unnerving, can excite brain activity without a stressor and bring it into a heightened state of focus and receptivity to adaptation. This supports your brain’s capacity for pattern changes, problem-solving, goal-setting, and approaching your day with relaxed yet focused attention. Be creative and keep it simple.

Here is a list of novel and silly ideas to engage healthy activity in your brain throughout the day:

  • Brush your teeth or hair with your non-dominant hand
  • 
Get dressed out of order (opposite shoe first, shirt before pants)
  • Reverse or rearrange your morning routine
  • 
Imagine or envision a completely new shape or color
  • 
Imagine what the world would look like if you walked on your hands

These simple practices each day gently engage our ability to down-regulate our rigidity and up-regulate our predisposition to adaptation so that when we focus on making changes the brain is as receptive and focused as possible. Lasting brain change is not about what you know, it’s about what you do.


Lisa Wimberger is the founder of the Neurosculpting® Institute. She holds a master’s degree in education, a certificate in the Foundations of NeuroLeadership, and certificates in medical neuroscience, visual perception, the brain, and neurobiology. She is the author of New Beliefs, New Brain: Free Yourself from Stress and Fear, and Neurosculpting: A Whole-Brain Approach to Heal Trauma, Rewrite Limiting Beliefs, and Find Wholeness. As the founder of the Neurosculpting modality, Lisa runs a private meditation practice in Colorado, teaching clients who suffer from stress disorders. She is a faculty member of Kripalu Yoga and Meditation Center, the Law Enforcement Survival Institute, Omega Institute, and 1440 Multiversity.


Join Lisa Wimberger & 25 Leading Experts in the Fields of Neuroscience and Functional Medicine in the Brain Change Summit!

Lisa Wimberger

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Lisa Wimberger is the founder of the Neurosculpting Institute and author of New Beliefs, New Brain. A member of the National Center for Crisis Management and other care associations, she has a private practice in Denver, CO, specializing in helping clients with stress disorders. For more, visit neurosculptinginstitute.com.

Also By Author

5 Neurosculpting Practices for Lasting Brain Change

Incorporating these five best neuroplasticity practices can open the doors to a more graceful, resilient, and lasting experience of change.

Neurosculpting

Founder of the Neurosculpting® Institute Lisa Wimberger speaks with Tami Simon about how people can change their ingrained beliefs and conditioned behaviors using her revolutionary method. Neurosculpting takes a whole-brained approach to changing the way we deal with stress. Lisa relates how to “set up our brains for change” by calming our fight, flight, and freeze response, and guides us through a Neurosculpting session so we can see how we might respond in a new way to a stressful situation. (66 minutes)

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What It Really Means to Face Mortality 

Facing mortality often begins through loss, aging, illness, or the realization that life moves quickly. While these experiences can feel unsettling, many spiritual traditions teach that acknowledging mortality can deepen presence, compassion, and honesty.

Impermanence is part of every human experience, yet avoiding thoughts about death often strengthens fear beneath the surface. Reflecting on mortality can shift perspective, making relationships, conversations, and everyday moments feel more meaningful and precious.

There is also comfort in remembering that mortality is a shared human experience. Every person carries questions about loss and death, and recognizing this shared vulnerability can create deeper empathy and connection.

Why Death Acceptance Can Bring Greater Emotional Freedom

Death acceptance is not about pretending grief or fear disappears. Rather, it is about loosening the struggle against realities that cannot be controlled. Many people spend years avoiding thoughts of death, yet avoidance often creates emotional tension and unease. Acceptance allows people to meet life with greater honesty and less resistance. 

Learning to Release the Need for Control

Much of our fear comes from wanting certainty about the future, yet mortality reminds us that life cannot be fully controlled. While this can feel uncomfortable, it may also create emotional freedom and a deeper sense of presence.

Practices such as meditation, prayer, journaling, and honest conversations can help people remain grounded even when answers are unclear, and Pema Chödrön’s course, Embracing the Unknown, was created to guide people through exactly this kind of unsettled inner terrain by focusing on the concept of bardo, or the in-between space beyond death.

Allowing Grief and Love to Exist Together

Grief is often seen as something to overcome quickly, yet it reflects the depth of human love. Death acceptance encourages people to honor sorrow rather than resist it. Loss can still feel painful and disorienting, but allowing grief to exist openly often creates more space for healing than suppressing it. Tears, memories, and longing become expressions of love rather than weakness.

Mourning deeply and still feeling grateful for the relationships and experiences that shaped a life can happen at the same time. Grief and gratitude are not opposites. They are two expressions of the same deep love.

Commonalities In Spiritual Approaches to Accepting and Understanding Death

Death has been approached from a spiritual perspective for centuries, often centering on impermanence as a path toward greater awareness and compassion. While spiritual traditions differ in belief and language, many encourage people to contemplate impermanence as a path toward deeper presence rather than fear. 

Seeing Impermanence as a Sacred Part of Life

Impermanence is part of every human experience. Bodies age, emotions change, and life continues shifting moment by moment. 

Many spiritual traditions teach that recognizing this truth can deepen appreciation for everyday life. When people remember that experiences are temporary, they often become more present and attentive. Simple moments, honest conversations, and time with loved ones can feel more valuable and emotionally rich.

Awareness of mortality can also encourage forgiveness. Conflicts and resentment often lose their intensity when life is viewed as finite, creating more space for compassion, connection, and healing.

Practicing Presence Through Spiritual Reflection

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Using Mortality Meditation to Deepen Awareness

A mortality meditation practice may involve reflecting quietly on the reality that every moment eventually passes. This awareness can sharpen attention and help people reconnect with the present moment instead of living distracted or emotionally numb.

Simple experiences often become more meaningful through this practice. The sound of laughter, the warmth of sunlight, or the comfort of sitting beside someone you love may feel more vivid when viewed through the understanding that life is temporary.

Mortality meditation can also reveal how often fear influences daily habits. Many people stay constantly busy because silence feels uncomfortable. Sitting with mortality may initially feel challenging, yet it often creates greater emotional honesty and clarity over time.

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End of life peace often grows through emotional openness, compassionate care, and sincere connection with the people we love.

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  • Spending time in nature often reminds people that life moves in cycles of change and renewal. Watching the seasons shift or sitting near moving water can offer quiet comfort and a sense of natural continuity.
  • Listening deeply to someone nearing death may be more healing than trying to offer perfect advice. Presence itself is a profound gift, and sometimes the most loving thing is simply to stay.
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Common Fears That Arise When Facing Mortality

Many fears emerge when facing mortality. Some people fear physical suffering or losing independence. Others worry about leaving loved ones behind, carrying regret, or reaching the end of life without fulfillment. Fear of the unknown can feel especially difficult because it reaches beyond what the mind can fully grasp.

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Practices that support death acceptance often encourage emotional presence rather than avoidance. Mindfulness meditation helps people observe difficult thoughts and emotions without immediately becoming overwhelmed by them. Journaling allows space for honest reflection and emotional processing.

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Facing Mortality as a Path to Meaning, Gratitude, and Peace

Facing mortality can become an invitation to live more intentionally. Awareness of death often clarifies what truly matters and encourages people to spend their time with greater care and sincerity. Everyday moments begin carrying deeper meaning because they are recognized as temporary and precious.

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What does facing mortality mean emotionally?

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Why do people avoid conversations about death?

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Can facing mortality improve mental well-being?

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Is death acceptance the same as giving up on life?

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How can families support loved ones facing the end of life?

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Why does mortality awareness increase gratitude?

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Can children understand conversations about mortality?

Children can understand mortality in age-appropriate ways. Honest and compassionate conversations often help children process loss and feel emotionally supported rather than confused or isolated.

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