Right brained vs. left brained, which is better?

People are happy to label themselves this or that, but the idea of people being left-brained or right-brained may be less fixed than we’d thought. I am not a scientist, but the way I see it (in my non-scientific mind) is that we all have one brain with two sides to it, so is it possible to use both in a balanced kind of way, instead of letting one side dominate?

Right brained vs. left brained, which is better?

According to conventional wisdom, people tend to have a personality, thinking style, or way of doing things that are either left-brained or right-brained. Those who are right-brained are supposed to be intuitive and creative free thinkers, they experience the world in a descriptive and subjective way. Meanwhile, left-brained people tend to be more analytical and methodical; they pay attention to details and are ruled by logic. According to the right brained vs. left brained belief, the dominant hemisphere determines our personality, thoughts, and behavior, but is it true?

People are happy to label themselves this or that, but the idea of people being left-brained or right-brained may be less fixed than we’d thought. I am not a scientist, but the way I see it (in my non-scientific mind) is that we all have one brain with two sides to it, so is it possible to use both in a balanced kind of way, instead of letting one side dominate?

Be flexible in your thinking

Richard Templar explains in Rule 7 of his book The Rules of Life the importance of being flexible in your thinking. Once you think you have all the answers, you might as well hang up your boots, right? No, because once your thinking gets crystallized, rigid, formed, you’ve lost the battle. Once you get set in your ways, you’re already part of history. To get the more out of life, it’s important to keep your options open and let your thinking and life be flexible. You have to be ready to roll as the storm breaks.

Flexible thinking is like practicing martial arts, being ready to duck and weave, dodge and flow, and launch counterattacks when your opponent least expects it. If you try to see life as a friendly sparring partner, you’ll have fun. If you stay straight and rigid in your approach you are likely to be knocked down.

Life can be unpredictable and being able to go with the flow and be flexible in your thinking is a necessary skill for dealing with life’s inevitable changes and will help you adjust more easily to new circumstances, challenges, and situations as they arise.

We all have set patterns in life. We like to label ourselves as this or that and are quite proud of our opinions and beliefs. We all like to read a familiar set of newspaper, watch the same sort of TV programs or movies, go to the same sort of shops, eat the sort of food, wear the same type of clothes and all this is fine. But if we cut ourselves off from all other possibilities, we become rigid, hardened, and most of all boring.

Life is a series of adventures. Each adventure is a chance to have fun, learn something, explore the world, expand your circle of experience and friends, and broaden your horizons. Shutting down to adventure means exactly that — you are shut down.

The moment you are offered an opportunity to have an adventure, to change your thinking, to step outside of yourself, go for it and see what happens. If this thought scares you, remember that you can always go back into your shell anytime, if that is what you want to do. You don’t have to say yes to every opportunity that presents itself to you, because that would be inflexible. The very flexible thinkers know when to say no as well as when to say yes.

Mental rigidity turns us into prisoners

Right brained vs. left brained. Be flexible in your thinking. Photo by freepik via freepik.com

Mental rigidity turns us into prisoners, decreases our adaptability, creativity, spontaneity, and positivity. We remain tied to old patterns that keep us from growing intellectually and emotionally. Close-minded people are those who refuse to contemplate points of view different from their own. They reject other’s approaches, ideas or perspectives, and feel very content being enclosed in their own ideas, safe within the fortress they have built around them. Those same people also tend to be stubborn, argumentative, get upset when things don’t get their way, are uncooperative, or have conditions such as obsessive-compulsive disorders.

We can’t grow either on an intellectual or emotional level, if we don’t realize that what we knew could be wrong, or at least insufficient. Being wrong can become then a kind of liberation, while mental rigidity and the desire to be right only hide the fear of what would happen if we dared to admit our mistakes and go beyond.

The person who develops rigid ways of thinking is somehow protecting themselves. In fact, in many cases, realizing something you have blindly believed for years isn’t true, or at least not completely true, can be extremely painful and give way to an existential crisis.

The most important premise to get rid of mental rigidity consists in avoid seeking absolute truth, simply because it doesn’t exist. You only have to watch the news to realize that the same event can be interpreted in many different ways. Every time we assume an absolute truth, we stay blind to any other possibilities. There isn’t just one truth, we aren’t dominated by only a right brained vs. left brained way of resolving a problem, there are numerous ways. So be flexible in your thinking, keep an open mind.

And this, my dear friend, is your Quest.

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By Author_Joanne_Reed

Joanne Reed The Author
Author of "This is Your Quest". You can't buy happiness but you can buy books. Your mission, should you wish to accept it is to experience happiness

2 replies on “Right brained vs. left brained, which is better?”

Loved this, all so true, we went on our adventure and now we’re on another one, and we have learned so much along the way. ❤️

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