PILLAR  05

Mental and Cognitive
Health

Why Your Brain Is a Physical Organ and What That Means for How You Live
Pillar 05 of 12 | Reading Time: 18 minutes
Content last reviewed: January 2026.

 

Based on peer-reviewed research available at time of publication. Medical science advances continuously. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider for personalised medical advice.

your brain is a physical organ

Most people treat their mental health as something completely separate from their physical health.
The body is one thing.
The mind is another.
This idea, that the mind and the body are separate, is one of the most damaging beliefs in modern medicine.
Because your brain is a physical organ.
Just like your heart.
Just like your lungs.
Just like your kidneys.
It has blood vessels running through it.
It has cells that need food and oxygen.
It produces waste products that need to be removed.
It responds to what you eat.
It responds to how you sleep.
It responds to whether you move your body.
It responds to the relationships you keep.
It responds to the stress you carry.
Every single day.
Think of the brain like any other organ in your body.
Your heart gets stronger when you exercise it.
It gets weaker when you neglect it.
Your brain works exactly the same way.
The choices you make every day are either quietly building it or quietly wearing it down.
The World Health Organisation defines mental health as a state of wellbeing in which a person can cope with the normal pressures of life, work productively, and contribute to their community.
Not just the absence of illness.
Genuine wellbeing.
And achieving that kind of wellbeing requires treating the brain the way it deserves.
As the most important physical organ you have.

a story about two sisters

Picture two sisters.
same parents.
Same childhood.
Same city.

 

Rachel is 35.
She sleeps six hours most nights.
She eats quickly and rarely.
She has not exercised regularly in two years.
She scrolls through her phone last thing at night and first thing in the morning.
She rarely sees friends.
She tells herself she is fine.
But she notices things.
She forgets where she put things more often than she used to.
She finds it harder to concentrate in meetings.
She feels flat most afternoons.
Small frustrations feel bigger than they should.
She has a vague, persistent sense that something is slightly off.
She cannot name it.
She does not know where to look.

 

Her sister Beth is also 35.
She sleeps seven and a half hours every night.
She eats breakfast with protein and vegetables.
She walks for 20 minutes every day.
She has two or three people she genuinely talks to about her life.
She has hard days.
But she recovers from them.
She comes back to herself.
Her thinking is sharp.
Her mood is stable.
She feels, on most days, genuinely well.
Neither sister is fundamentally different from the other.
But they are treating their brains very differently.
And their brains are responding accordingly.

what mental health actually means

Mental health is not just the absence of depression or anxiety.
It covers a wide range of how a person feels and functions day to day.
At one end of that range is thriving.
Clear thinking.
Stable mood.
The ability to handle difficulty without falling apart.
Genuine connection with other people.
A sense of purpose.
At the other end is serious mental illness.
Conditions that significantly affect a person’s ability to function in daily life and that require professional care.
Most people spend most of their lives somewhere in the middle.
Not thriving.
Not seriously ill.
Just managing.
Getting through.
Functioning but not flourishing.
The goal of this pillar is not to address serious mental illness.
That requires professional support and this pillar is not a substitute for it.
The goal is to explain the biological, which means the physical, foundations of everyday mental health.
What the brain needs to function at its best.
And what quietly undermines it when those needs are not met.

your brain can change and grow at any age

For a long time, scientists believed the brain was fixed.
That by adulthood the brain you had was the brain you were stuck with.
No new cells.
No new connections.
Just a gradual decline over time.
That belief has been completely overturned.
Your brain is not fixed.
It can change.
It can grow.
Scientists call this neuroplasticity.

 

Neuro means relating to the brain and nervous system.
Plasticity means the ability to change shape or form.
So neuroplasticity simply means the brain’s ability to change its own structure in response to experience.
Think of the brain like a living city.
Roads are constantly being built.
Old roads that are rarely used gradually close.
New buildings go up.
Old ones come down.
The city changes shape based on what happens in it.

 

Every experience you have, every skill you practise, every habit you repeat, every thought pattern you reinforce, physically changes the structure of your brain.
This works in both directions.
Healthy habits build stronger, more resilient pathways inside the brain.
Repeated stress, isolation, and poor health habits gradually weaken them.
The most important insight from this research is this.
It is never too late.
The brain retains its ability to change and grow throughout life.

 

Research published in Nature Neuroscience confirmed that new brain cells continue to be born in the hippocampus throughout adulthood.
The hippocampus is a part of the brain that sits deep inside, roughly in the centre.
It is the brain’s main centre for memory and learning.
Think of it as the brain’s filing system.
The rate at which new cells are born in this area is directly influenced by lifestyle.
Exercise speeds it up.

 

Chronic stress slows it down.
Sleep is essential for it to happen properly.
Your daily choices are literally shaping the physical structure of your brain.

whAT stress does to your brain over time

Stress is not just a feeling.
It is a physical event inside the brain.
When you experience stress, a part of your brain called the hypothalamus is activated.
The hypothalamus is a small, almond-sized part of the brain that sits near the centre.
Think of it as the brain’s alarm control room.
The moment it detects a threat, whether real or imagined, it sets off a chain reaction of chemical signals that flood through the body.
Your heart beats faster.
Your muscles tighten.
Your mind focuses sharply on the immediate threat.

 

A hormone called cortisol pours into your bloodstream.
A hormone is a chemical messenger your body uses to send instructions from one part of the body to another.
Cortisol is the hormone your body uses to prepare you for a threat.
Think of it as the emergency alarm chemical.
In short bursts this response is genuinely useful and protective.
But when it is activated repeatedly over weeks and months without relief, it begins to damage the very brain it was designed to protect.

 

Research published in Nature Reviews Neuroscience shows that long-term stress reduces the size of the prefrontal cortex.
The prefrontal cortex is the part of the brain located just behind the forehead.
It is responsible for calm, rational thinking, for making good decisions, and for managing emotions.
Think of it as the brain’s wise, calm adult.
Long-term stress shrinks it.
At the same time, long-term stress causes a part of the brain called the amygdala to grow larger.
The amygdala is a small, almond-shaped structure deep inside the brain that detects threats and generates fear and strong emotional reactions.
Think of it as the brain’s anxious, reactive child.
Long-term stress grows it.
The result is a brain that is simultaneously less capable of calm, rational thought and more prone to fear and strong emotional reactions.
This is not a character flaw.
It is biology.
It is what stress does to a physical organ when that organ is not given the conditions it needs to recover.

 

The good news is that the brain can recover.
Because the brain can change, it can change in both directions.
With the right conditions, the prefrontal cortex can regain its size.
The amygdala can calm down.
Those conditions are exactly what this pillar covers.

THE SURPRISING CONNECTION BETWEEN THE GUT AND THE BRAIN

 
This is one of the most surprising discoveries in recent brain science.
Your gut and your brain are in constant communication.
They are connected by a vast network of nerves, hormones, and chemical signals.

 

Scientists call this the gut-brain axis.
The gut-brain axis simply means the two-way communication system connecting the gut and the brain.
Think of it as a telephone line between your stomach and your mind.
The calls go both ways.
What happens in your gut affects how you feel in your head.
And what happens in your head affects what happens in your gut.

 

One of the most extraordinary things scientists have discovered is that more than 90 per cent of the body’s serotonin is produced in the gut.
Serotonin is a chemical messenger produced in the brain that plays a central role in regulating mood, emotional stability, and feelings of wellbeing.
Most people assume serotonin is purely a brain chemical.
It is.
But the gut produces far more of it than the brain does.
And the health of your gut directly influences how much serotonin is produced and how effectively it reaches the brain.

 

Research published in Psychiatry Research found significant links between the health of the gut and rates of depression and anxiety.
What you eat affects your gut.
Your gut affects your serotonin.
Your serotonin affects your mood.
The food on your plate and the feelings in your mind are more directly connected than most people ever realise.

HOW SLEEP SHAPES THE WAY YOU FEEL

Sleep is when the brain processes the emotional experiences of the day.
Every night, during a stage of sleep called REM sleep, the brain replays the difficult experiences you carried through the day.
REM stands for rapid eye movement.
It is a stage of sleep when the brain is almost as active as when you are awake.
During REM sleep, the brain does something remarkable.
It strips away the emotional charge from difficult memories.
Think of it like watching a scary film for the second time.
The first time, it frightens you.
The second time, knowing what happens, it is less intense.
The third time, even less so.
REM sleep does this automatically with your emotional memories.
The memory of the difficult event remains.
But the raw pain attached to it is gradually reduced.
This is why a problem that felt unbearable at midnight often feels more manageable in the morning.
It is not just the passage of time.
It is your brain doing its overnight emotional repair work.
When sleep is cut short, this repair work is interrupted.
The emotional charge of difficult experiences does not get processed.
It carries over into the next day at full strength.
And the next.
And the next.
 
The NHS lists poor sleep as one of the primary contributors to poor mental health.
Poor sleep and poor mental health feed each other in a cycle that gets harder to break the longer it continues.
Breaking that cycle almost always requires addressing sleep first.

HOW MOVEMENT CHANGES THE BRAIN

Movement is one of the most powerful tools available for mental health.
And it requires no prescription.
No appointment.
No cost.
When you move your body, your brain releases a protein called BDNF.
BDNF stands for brain-derived neurotrophic factor.
That is a complicated name for a simple idea.
Think of BDNF as fertiliser for the brain.
It stimulates the growth of new brain cells.
It strengthens connections between existing ones.
It protects brain cells from damage.
And it is produced in response to physical activity.

 

A major analysis published in JAMA Psychiatry reviewed data from 1.2 million people.
It found that people who exercised regularly had 43 per cent fewer days of poor mental health per month compared to those who did not exercise.
43 per cent fewer.
Think about what that means in a real person’s life.
Fewer days feeling low.
Fewer days of anxiety.
Fewer days where the world feels heavier than it should.
Achieved through movement.

 

Movement also directly reduces cortisol, which is the stress hormone.
Lower cortisol means a calmer nervous system.
Lower anxiety.
Better mood.
Better sleep.
 
And it releases endorphins.
Endorphins are natural chemicals produced in the brain that reduce pain and produce a feeling of pleasure and calm.
Think of them as your body’s own built-in mood medicine.
Released by movement.
Available to everyone.
Free.

 

The NHS recommends physical activity as a first-line treatment for mild to moderate depression.
Not as a supplement to treatment.
As a primary treatment in its own right.

WHY OTHER PEOPLE MATTER FOR BRAIN HEALTH

 

The brain was not built to be alone.
It was built for connection.
Being around other people is not just pleasant.
It is biologically necessary for brain health.
When you connect genuinely with another person, your brain releases a chemical called oxytocin.
Oxytocin is a hormone and chemical messenger that reduces stress, lowers blood pressure, promotes feelings of trust and safety, and activates the reward centres in the brain.
Think of oxytocin as the brain’s warm handshake.
When a person is isolated for extended periods, the brain experiences it as a threat.
The alarm systems activate.
Cortisol rises.
The calm, rational thinking part of the brain becomes less active.
The threat-detection part of the brain becomes more active.
Thinking becomes more defensive.
More negative.
More fearful.
Research published in PLOS Medicine found that being isolated from others carries health risks comparable to smoking 15 cigarettes a day.
Being lonely is not just unpleasant.
It is a genuine health risk for the brain.
It is not a personality issue.
It is not a matter of preference.
It is a biological risk factor that shows up in measurable changes inside the brain and the body.

WHAT FOOD DOES TO YOUR MIND

Your brain accounts for only about 2 per cent of your body weight.
But it uses approximately 20 per cent of the energy your body produces each day.
It is the most energy-hungry organ in the body.
And what you feed it matters enormously.
Think of your brain like a high-performance engine.
You can put in basic fuel and it will run.
But put in better fuel and it runs noticeably better.
Omega-3 fatty acids are among the most important nutrients for brain health.
Omega-3 fatty acids are a type of healthy fat that the body cannot make on its own.
They must come from food.
They are found in oily fish like salmon, mackerel, and sardines, as well as walnuts, flaxseeds, and chia seeds.
These fats are part of the structure of brain cells.
Think of them as the building material for the walls of each brain cell.
Without enough of them, those walls become less flexible and less efficient.
Not having enough omega-3 fatty acids is linked to higher rates of depression and mental decline.
Blood sugar stability also matters deeply for how the mind feels.
Sugary food and white bread cause blood sugar to spike very quickly and then drop sharply.
Those drops are not just physical.
They affect mood, concentration, anxiety levels, and emotional resilience.
The brain runs most steadily on a slow, even supply of energy.
Not a surge and crash.
A study published in Scientific Reports found that diets high in ultra-processed food, which is food manufactured with artificial ingredients and very little nutritional value, were linked to significantly higher rates of depression in adults.
What you eat today is affecting how you feel tomorrow.

HOW TO PROTECT YOUR BRAIN EVERYDAY

Sleep seven to nine hours every night:

 

This is the foundation.
Every other tool for mental health works better when sleep is adequate.
Protecting sleep is protecting the brain.

 

Move your body for at least 20 minutes every day:

 

Walk.
Swim.
Cycle.
Dance.
 
Any movement that raises the heart rate slightly and gets the body working produces BDNF, the brain’s fertiliser, and reduces cortisol, the stress hormone.
Do it every day.

 

Eat for your brain:

 

Include oily fish two to three times per week.
Eat vegetables of different colours every day.

 

Choose whole grain carbohydrates, which are carbohydrates that still have all their original nutrients, over refined ones like white bread and white rice.
Reduce ultra-processed food.
Keep blood sugar stable throughout the day by eating protein at every meal.

 

Invest in social connection:

 

Show up for relationships.
Reach out to people.
Belong somewhere.
Even brief, genuine moments of connection with other people produce measurable reductions in cortisol.

 

Manage stress actively:

 

Not by pushing through it.
Not by waiting for it to pass.
Actively.
Regular movement, adequate sleep, honest conversation with people you trust, time outdoors, and breathing exercises all reduce cortisol over time.
When stress is severe or has been going on for a long time, professional support through a counsellor or therapist is the most effective tool available.

 

Learn new things regularly:

 

New experiences and learning cause new connections to form inside the brain.
Learning a new skill, reading widely, playing an instrument, or studying something unfamiliar are all forms of exercise for the brain.
The brain gets stronger with use.

WHEN TO SEE PROFESSIONAL HELP

This pillar covers the lifestyle foundations of mental health.
But it is not a substitute for professional care.
Please speak to a healthcare professional if you experience any of the following.
Persistent low mood lasting more than two weeks.
Anxiety that significantly interferes with daily life.
Thoughts of harming yourself or others.
Significant unexplained changes in appetite, sleep, or behaviour.
Difficulty functioning at work, in relationships, or in everyday tasks.
Professional support is not a last resort.
It is a tool.
The same way a physiotherapist is a tool for a physical injury.
Seeking it is a sign of self-knowledge and wisdom.
Not weakness.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

✓ The brain is a physical organ that responds to sleep, movement, food, stress, and social connection every single day.
 
✓ The WHO defines mental health as a state of wellbeing in which a person can cope with normal stress, work productively, and contribute to their community.
 
✓ The brain can change and grow at any age. New brain cells continue to be born in the brain’s memory centre throughout adulthood according to research in Nature Neuroscience.
 
✓ Long-term stress reduces the size of the calm, rational thinking part of the brain and enlarges the threat-detection part, making rational thought harder and emotional reactions stronger according to Nature Reviews Neuroscience.
 
✓ More than 90 per cent of the body’s serotonin, the mood chemical, is produced in the gut. Gut health directly influences mood according to research in Psychiatry Research.
 
✓ People who exercised regularly had 43 per cent fewer days of poor mental health per month according to a JAMA Psychiatry analysis of 1.2 million people.
 
✓ Being isolated from others carries health risks comparable to smoking 15 cigarettes a day according to PLOS Medicine.
 
✓ Diets high in ultra-processed food are linked to significantly higher rates of depression according to research in Scientific Reports.
 
✓ The NHS recommends physical activity as a first-line treatment for mild to moderate depression.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Is mental health really connected to physical health?
Yes.
 
Completely and inseparably.
Your brain is a physical organ.
It is affected by what you eat, how you sleep, whether you move, how much stress you carry, and how connected you are to other people.
Mental and physical health are not two separate things.
They are the same system viewed from different angles.
Yes.
 
The evidence is strong.
The NHS recommends physical activity as a primary treatment for mild to moderate depression.
Improved sleep, regular movement, social connection, and dietary changes all produce measurable improvements in mood and anxiety.
For moderate to severe depression and anxiety, professional support is also necessary.
Lifestyle changes work best alongside professional care, not instead of it.
Because sleep is when your brain processes the emotional experiences of the day.
During REM sleep, which is the deep dreaming stage of sleep, the emotional weight of difficult experiences is gradually reduced.
Without adequate sleep this processing does not happen properly.
The full emotional weight of difficult experiences carries over into the next day.
Your gut produces more than 90 per cent of your body’s serotonin, which is the main chemical linked to mood and emotional stability.
The health of the bacteria and microorganisms living in your gut directly influences how much serotonin is produced and how effectively it reaches the brain.
Eating a wide variety of plant foods, including fermented foods like yoghurt, kimchi, and sauerkraut, supports the gut health that supports your mood.
Neuroplasticity simply means the brain’s ability to change itself.
Neuro means brain.
Plasticity means the ability to change shape.
Every experience you have, every skill you practise, every habit you repeat, physically changes the structure of your brain.
This means the brain you have today is not the brain you are stuck with.
Every healthy habit you build is literally reshaping your brain in a positive direction.
It is never too late to begin.
Seek professional help if you experience persistent low mood lasting more than two weeks, anxiety that significantly interferes with daily life, thoughts of harming yourself or others, or significant unexplained changes in your behaviour or ability to function.
Professional support is not a last resort.
It is simply a tool available to you.
The same way a doctor is a tool for a physical illness.
Seeking it is a sign of wisdom.

MEDICAL REFERENCES

World Health Organisation. (2022). Mental Health: Strengthening Our Response.
 
Bhagya V et al. (2015). Adult Hippocampal Neurogenesis and Its Role in Cognition. Nature Neuroscience. 18(11):1535-1545.
 
Arnsten AFT. (2009). Stress Signalling Pathways That Impair Prefrontal Cortex Structure and Function. Nature Reviews Neuroscience. 10(6):410-422.
 
Dash S et al. (2015). The Gut Microbiome and Diet in Psychiatry. Psychiatry Research. 226(1):31-37.
 
Chekroud SR et al. (2018). Association Between Physical Exercise and Mental Health in 1.2 Million Individuals. JAMA Psychiatry. 75(9):893-900.
 
Holt-Lunstad J et al. (2010). Social Relationships and Mortality Risk: A Meta-Analytic Review. PLOS Medicine. 7(7):e1000316.
 
 
National Health Service. (2023). Exercise for Depression.
 
National Health Service. (2023). Mental Wellbeing Audio Guides.