🧠 :
The myth that we only use 10% of our brain is false. In reality, we use almost all of our brain, but not all of it at the same time. The brain is extremely active even when we are inactive. It's just that activity shifts between different regions depending on what we are doing (thinking, moving, dreaming, analyzing, etc.). Each area of the brain has specialized roles: the prefrontal cortex for logical thinking and decisions, the hippocampus for memory, the cerebellum for coordination, the amygdala for emotions, etc. They don't all work simultaneously at maximum, because it would be a huge energy consumption and would create neuronal chaos (signals would interfere with each other). If there were simultaneous maximum activity throughout the brain, it would resemble a massive epileptic seizure, where neurons all fire at once. This can lead to loss of consciousness, brain damage, or even death. So yes, in essence, it's not healthy for the entire brain to be fully activated at once
2025-11-02 01:13:27