193: Lisa Feldman Barrett: A Conversation about How Our Emotions, Like Depression, Are Constructed in Our Brain
Release Date: 08/30/2017
The One You Feed - Learn Good Habits to Increase Mindfulness and Happiness and Decrease Anxiety and Depression
Poe Ballentine is a great writer. Thank goodness for that because it's through his gift and skill of writing that we get a glimpse into the experiences of his life which reach us at a moving level of beauty, truth, humility, and struggle. In this interview, you'll hear him talk about these things and the gift you'll get as a result is the knowledge and comforting feeling of knowing you are not alone in your struggles through life. You'll learn through hearing what he's learned about self-growth and self-improvement. Give yourself the gift of listening to this episode....
info_outline 199: Robert Thurman- Buddhism and the Dalai LamaThe One You Feed - Learn Good Habits to Increase Mindfulness and Happiness and Decrease Anxiety and Depression
Robert Thurman is the leading American expert on Tibetan Buddhism and he has recently written a book called Man of Peace: The Illustrated Life Story of the Dali Lama of Tibet. Whether you embrace the teachings of Buddhism or not, this episode will educate you on powerful approaches to growing in wisdom and it will also paint a beautiful picture of how the concepts of Tibetan Buddhism apply in today's world.
info_outline Bonus: Eric talk with Dr. Jon Mills about the effects of trauma on current behavioral patternsThe One You Feed - Learn Good Habits to Increase Mindfulness and Happiness and Decrease Anxiety and Depression
Adverse Childhood Experiences, Trauma and How You Act Today
info_outline Tim Urban Part TwoThe One You Feed - Learn Good Habits to Increase Mindfulness and Happiness and Decrease Anxiety and Depression
Tim Urban is the author of a blog called Wait But Why. This episode will not only thoroughly entertain you but it will also help you implement a playful yet powerful approach to growing in wisdom.
info_outline Tim Urban: Wait but WhyThe One You Feed - Learn Good Habits to Increase Mindfulness and Happiness and Decrease Anxiety and Depression
We talk with Tim Urban about Consciousness and Procrastination. Meet the Instant Gratification Monkey and other characters from our internal zoo.
info_outline Florence Williams: How Spending Time In Nature Has a Scientific, Measurable Impact on improving our health and mood - especially depression!The One You Feed - Learn Good Habits to Increase Mindfulness and Happiness and Decrease Anxiety and Depression
Florence Williams shares the scientific research behind the benefit to our mood and our health when we spend time in nature as part of our daily lives. Her book, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier and More Creative is full of practical, intuitive wisdom that can be applied regardless of your lifestyle or circumstances.
info_outline Danielle Laporte: Has your self-help become self-criticism?The One You Feed - Learn Good Habits to Increase Mindfulness and Happiness and Decrease Anxiety and Depression
Danielle LaPorte is all about being honest when it comes to her experiences on the path to self-improvement, self-growth, and self-empowerment. In this interview, she shares so much of herself that you will remark how brave, vulnerable and real she is and how much you can relate to what she's felt, thought and been through. If you've ever struggled with feeling overwhelmed by the obligations in your life or if walking on a spiritual path has felt like another item on an ever-growing checklist, then this episode is a must listen for you. This week we talk to Danielle Laporte ...
info_outline 194: Scott Stabile: How Being Mindful Of Love, Forgiveness and Empathy Can Transform Your LifeThe One You Feed - Learn Good Habits to Increase Mindfulness and Happiness and Decrease Anxiety and Depression
Scott Stabile has lived through some very difficult things in his lifetime, from feeling shame about his sexuality to the murder of his parents when he was just 14 years old. He can verify that life can be very hard. Yet, he has gone on to live a life full of love, empathy, compassion, and forgiveness. Learn some very practical, applicable wisdom in this episode. You will leave the conversation armed with steps to take towards a happier life for yourself.
info_outline 193: Lisa Feldman Barrett: A Conversation about How Our Emotions, Like Depression, Are Constructed in Our BrainThe One You Feed - Learn Good Habits to Increase Mindfulness and Happiness and Decrease Anxiety and Depression
Have you ever wondered how emotions are made in our brains? This conversation with Lisa Feldman Barrett will explain this and more and as a result, you will be astounded. Full of scientifically backed concepts that you've probably never heard before, your view on how your brain manages how you feel at any given moment will be totally changed after hearing what this author and researcher has to say.
info_outline 192: Sean Carroll: Theoretical Physics and the Meaning of LifeThe One You Feed - Learn Good Habits to Increase Mindfulness and Happiness and Decrease Anxiety and Depression
Think theoretical physics is irrelevant to your everyday life and way over your head? You'll think differently after listening to this interview with Sean Carroll, theoretical physicist, poetic naturalist, and author.The meaning of life, the finitude of life, the choices we make and our experience of happiness and suffering all have a connection back to the scientific realm that will both fascinate and provoke thought in you. This week we talk to Sean Carroll Sean Carroll is a theoretical physicist at the California Institute of Technology. He received his Ph.D. in 1993 from...
info_outlineThis week we talk to Lisa Feldman Barrett
Lisa Feldman Barrett, PhD, is a University Distinguished Professor of Psychology at Northeastern University, with appointments at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital. In addition to the book How Emotions are Made: The Secret Life of the Brain, Dr. Barrett has published over 200 peer-reviewed, scientific papers appearing in Science, Nature Neuroscience, and other top journals in psychology and cognitive neuroscience, as well as six academic volumes published by Guilford Press.
Dr. Barrett received a National Institutes of Health Director’s Pioneer Award for her revolutionary research on emotion in the brain. These highly competitive, multi-million dollar awards are given to scientists of exceptional creativity who are expected to transform biomedical and behavioral research.
Among her many accomplishments, Dr. Barrett has testified before Congress, presented her research to the FBI, consulted to the National Cancer Institute, appeared on Through The Wormhole with Morgan Freeman, and been a featured guest on public television and worldwide radio programs. She is also an elected fellow of Canada’s most prestigious national organization of scholars, the Royal Society of Canada (analogous to the National Academy in the United States).
In This Interview, Lisa Feldman Barrett and I Discuss...
- The Wolf Parable
- Her book, How Emotions Are Made: The Secret Life of the Brain
- The myth of the lizard brain
- Emotions don't live anywhere in the brain
- Neurons being multi purpose
- The idea of degeneracy
- How complex emotions are
- Multi purpose ingredients in your brain (like in recipes)
- Our brains predict, rather than react, to the next immediate moment (those are our emotions and subsequent actions)
- Confirming or Correcting those guesses (or concepts) based on your past experiences
- How this process is your brain is trying to make sense of the sensory input of your body in the world
- How it's more efficient to guess in advance and correct in response than it is to react
- The importance of keeping your body's energy budget in balance
- We see the world as we believe it to be, through our concepts
- Interoception - feedback from your body on how it's systems are working
- Your brain is trying to anticipate what your body is going to need and then provide what's necessary to meet those needs before they arise
- Tragic Embodiment
- Most of the time you don't feel sensations from your body in a very precise way and if you do, you feel them in simple terms - "affect"
- More intense sensations are used to make emotions whereas less intense ones are used to make thoughts and other things
- How illness is an imbalance in systems in your body and how we experience it
- How basic body sensations are the cause of our emotions and how we feel
- How every waking moment of your life is simultaneously physical and mental
- When your body budget is out of balance/disrupted, you will feel distressed
- Reframing the feeling of anxiety as "preparing for something tough" and this is a good sign that your body is preparing for something tough
- Take care of yourself and your body to feel better (sleep, eat, nutrition)
- Understanding emotion and being more granular in our description is helpful because we better know what to do or not to do about it
- When you're depressed or anxious, the distress is not helpful if you personalize it