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Five Ways to Channel Your Inner Millionaire: Here’s how to harness your brain power to maximize productivity.

By nature, many entrepreneurs are inventors and good at solving problems. But how easily, or naturally, do these creative and practical processes come to most people? How can we harness the right frame of mind to make money and improve productivity?

The part of the brain that sets humans apart from the rest of the animal kingdom is our prefrontal cortex (PFC). It is the “executive” part of the brain — the moneymaker. It regulates emotions, thoughts and ideas and makes success and fulfillment possible.

But the PFC must be coaxed into action. Vanderbilt University management professor Richard Daft says that the average human spends only about 2 percent to 10 percent of their time each day using the executive brain. The vast majority of our time is spent reacting reflexively, just like the other animals on the planet.

When it comes to landing your next big deal, which frame of mind do you think would be your better asset?

ANIMAL MIND EXECUTIVE MIND
Jumps around In the here and now
Automatic Intentional
Rote patterns Thoughtful
Reactive Reflective and measured
Sees negative Sees positive
90 percent to 98 percent of time 2 percent to 10 percent of time

The better characteristics fall under the executive mind. Now, imagine what you could produce if you could add just one more percentage point to your own executive category. Consider these five ways to cajole your reluctant PFC into action and harness your brain power to maximize productivity:

  1. Lead it. Direct your brain to focus on something. You decide what your PFC will attend to, as opposed to allowing it to scan the environment for something novel and interesting. This is a deliberate, executive-level function that requires your full effort. The more you focus, the more insights you get.
  1. Weed it. Avoid messy thinking by moderating what’s on your mind. If you don’t, your brain might take the break it needs without asking your permission. When this happens, it will shut down and go into the reactive animal brain. This can lead to trouble.One way to “weed out” the items on your brain’s plate is to turn off every device that can contact or distract you for one hour each day, close your door and work on just one task. You’ll probably get more work accomplished in that hour of focused time than you would in four hours filled with distractions.

    Also, tell your brain what you deem most important by prioritizing your to-do list. If you don’t prioritize, your brain might go for what’s easy, which may not be ideal.

  1. Speed it. Give your memory a break and speed up your thinking. Instead of trying to remember all that you have to do, write it down. By redirecting this energy you will have more to draw upon to be creative and productive. Thinking slows down when you overcrowd your brain with disparate things to recall.
  1. 4. Rest it. We all know the virtues of a good night’s sleep. But daytime rest is critical to fueling the brain as well. Taking regular quiet intervals to allow your PFC to do what it wants to in the first place — wander and reflect — helps to prime it for the more critical tasks of thinking and problem solving.Take a walk or distract yourself with something completely off subject throughout your day. Creating deliberate distractions will prepare you for bursts of brilliance.

  1. Feed it. Your brain operates on glucose and oxygen. It eats up about 20 percent of your total body glucose. If you’re a hard-charging person who skips meals, or eats foods that are high in fat, you’re not giving your brain a chance to bring in the next really big idea.Try complex carbohydrates and sugars found in potatoes, brown rice, grains, fruit and vegetables. Feed your brain well and it will more than feed you.

Read Scott Halford’s latest articles on Entrepreneur.com.

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Embracing Our Inner Idiot

It’s stunning to watch people burst a vein over things they understand very little about, but feel very strongly about. People become emotionally charged-up over sacredly held beliefs; beliefs which often are borne out of no more than the propaganda we were first exposed to early on. Politics seem to bring out the inner idiot in people and causes otherwise rational people to lose all real sense of decorum. I love to read articles about Obama and Palin and McCain and Pelosi and then read the comments people take the time to write after the articles. The criticisms are mean-spirited, not very well thought out and really miss the mark in my opinion.

Yes, you could argue that Palin is not very smart, but she’s turned that into a money making machine. That’s smart; which makes you wonder how smart we are as a nation; making allegedly dumb people rich. Yes, you could argue that Pelosi deserves to be exiled as the Speaker of Another Planet because of her clubbish arm-twisting and very left pushing politics. She’s the poster child for all things spendy. But, she’s become one of the most powerful women in the world; which makes you wonder how smart we are as a nation; making seemingly close-minded people so powerful.

So, we could go back and forth about each and every politician and there would be opinions from the lovers and the haters and the informed and the misguided. Here’s my somewhat neutral opinion: The thing about all of our politicians is that each and every one has flaws in their emotional intelligence, because they are human. Each and every one has power needs because they are politicians (why would you subject yourself to the public’s lunacy otherwise?). Each and every one, at their very core, probably isn’t as hateful, stupid, uncaring, mean – and any other negative description you come up with – as you might paint them to be. They probably want to make life better – even the politicians we don’t like probably want that at some level.

At the core, most of us turn into idiots when our sacred beliefs (Democrat vs. Republican, pro-choice vs. pro-life, gun ban vs. gun rights, gay marriage vs. straight marriage, etc.) are tested and people try to convince us that we are stupid for holding them. And then we DO turn stupid in our response – at least according to the ridiculous comments posted after articles. When your idiot comes out to play, use emotional intelligence and instead of vomiting hate, try to come from a place of curiosity. Ask questions – don’t make accusations. Strive to understand instead of respond. Know that the pendulum always swings. And, if you believe that your way of life and thinking is the only “smart” way, one day that pendulum will swing again and the “stupid” people will be in control and it will feel like you are excluded by them. Your inner idiot will probably come alive again. Tame it with kindness. Stop the madness. We are all passengers on the same flight.

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