7 Quotes & Sayings By John J Ratey

John Ratey grew up in a tiny, rural town in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina. He graduated from Harvard University with a degree in psychology and went on to receive his M.D. from the New York University School of Medicine, where he was an intern and chief resident of psychiatry at Bellevue Hospital before launching a ten-year private practice that focused on adult attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. John's first book, A User's Guide to the Brain: Perception, Attention and the Four Theaters of the Brain, was a New York Times bestseller Read more

He is currently a professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and is also the Director of the Division of Adult Psychiatry at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston.

1
Exercise is not an instant cure, but you need to get your brain working again, and if you move your body your brain won't have any choice. John J. Ratey
2
One small but scientifically sound study from Japan found that jogging thirty minutes just two or three times a week for twelve weeks improved executive function. But it's important to mix in some form of activity that demands coordination beyond putting one foot in front of the other.. Aerobic exercise and complex activity have different beneficial effects on the brain. The good news is they're complementary. . John J. Ratey
3
After a stressful event, we often crave comfort food. Our body is calling for more glucose and simple carbohydrates and fat... And in modern life, people tend to have fewer friends and less support, because there's no tribe. Being alone is not good for the brain. John J. Ratey
4
The essence of physical education in Naperville 203 is teaching fitness instead of sports. The underlying philosophy is that if physical education class can be used to instruct kids how to monitor and maintain their own health and fitness, then the lessons they learn will serve them for life. And probably a longer and happier life at that. What's being taught, really is a lifestyle. The students are developing healthy habits, skills, and a sense of fun, along with a knowledge of how their bodies work. Naperville's gym teachers are opening up new vistas for their students by exposing them to such a wide range of activities that they can't help but find something they enjoy. They're getting kids hooked on moving instead of sitting in front of the television. . John J. Ratey
5
Students would be assessed on effort rather than skill. You didn't have to be a natural athlete to do well in gym. John J. Ratey
6
The more we build these networks and enrich our stores of memory and experience, the easier it is to learn, because what we already know serves as a foundation for forming increasingly complex thoughts. John J. Ratey