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The Importance Of Good Relationships With Robert Waldinger, PhD (#09)

The Shannon Harvey Podcast

Release Date: 03/11/2021

How Food Companies Get Us 'Hooked' On Junk – with Michael Moss (#11) show art How Food Companies Get Us 'Hooked' On Junk – with Michael Moss (#11)

The Shannon Harvey Podcast

They're cheap, convenient, practically imperishable, and engineered to be irresistible. They’re called "ultra processed foods" and in some nutrition scientists believe they are the smoking gun.

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Mindful Myths – With Timothea Goddard (#10) show art Mindful Myths – With Timothea Goddard (#10)

The Shannon Harvey Podcast

Usually I share interviews with scientists doing research on how we can live better, healthier lives. But this week you'll hear from a different kind of expert – a mindfulness teacher who has made a big impact on my life.

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The Importance Of Good Relationships With Robert Waldinger, PhD (#09) show art The Importance Of Good Relationships With Robert Waldinger, PhD (#09)

The Shannon Harvey Podcast

In this episode I’m taking you inside my research files and a conversation I had with Professor Robert Waldinger – the director of the longest ever study on life and happiness.

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Daniel Goleman, PhD (#8) show art Daniel Goleman, PhD (#8)

The Shannon Harvey Podcast

This episode is my extended interview with science journalist, Daniel Goleman, whose 1995 best-selling book, Emotional Intelligence helped make the science of emotions mainstream.

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Kristin Neff, PhD (#7) show art Kristin Neff, PhD (#7)

The Shannon Harvey Podcast

In this episode I’m talking with the self-compassion pioneer and researcher, Associate Professor Kirstin Neff.

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Judson Brewer, PhD (#06) show art Judson Brewer, PhD (#06)

The Shannon Harvey Podcast

If you're interested in learning how your brain works and how to use that knowledge to make healthy changes in your life, then this week's podcast is for you.

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Michael Steger, PhD (#05) show art Michael Steger, PhD (#05)

The Shannon Harvey Podcast

After listening to this week's podcast, I suspect that you won't be able to stop yourself from taking a moment to reflect on what really matters to you the most in life, on what is truly important to you... and why. It with Professor Michael Stegor – a leading expert in finding meaning in life.

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Richard Davidson, PhD (#04) show art Richard Davidson, PhD (#04)

The Shannon Harvey Podcast

This is another extended conversation from my film, My Year Of Living Mindfully. This time it is with Richard Davidson PhD, the Director of the Centre for Healthy Minds at the University of Wisconsin, Maddison. 

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Elissa Epel, PhD (#03) show art Elissa Epel, PhD (#03)

The Shannon Harvey Podcast

This podcast is a little different from the first two. Although, like the others, this interview was done for my last documentary project, My Year of Living Mindfully, it isn’t with someone who’s specifically a mindfulness researcher. It’s with Professor Elissa Epel, a researcher at the forefront of understanding the connection between our mind, body and health. I knew this conversation would be fascinating because Elissa had already made a big impression on how my own lifestyle was influencing my hea

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Willem Kuyken, PhD (#02) show art Willem Kuyken, PhD (#02)

The Shannon Harvey Podcast

Now, more than ever, we need discussions about the "how" of preventing and treating mental health problems. This episode features Willem Kuyken PhD, Director of the University of Oxford Mindfulness Centre. His research has earned him a place among the Who’s Who of influential scientists. His research investigating how mindfulness can prevent depression has ranked him in the top 1% of researchers in his field. Mindfulness is sometimes dismissed as "woo woo", but this interview will make you think again.

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More Episodes
In this episode I’m taking you inside my research files.
 
When I start to think about a new question or film project, I often don’t really know where it’s going to lead. Over the following weeks, months, or even years, I dive headfirst into the academic journals. 
 
The process often feels like a journey of discovery – sometimes it’s the evidence that amazes me and sometimes it’s the people I get to talk to that leave a lasting impression on how I view the world.
 
One of those conversations happened late one night as I beamed into the Harvard Medical School to chat with Professor Robert Waldinger – the director of the longest ever study on life and happiness. As well as being a Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard he’s also a psychoanalyst and Zen priest. 
 
At the time I had just published my first book, The Whole Health Life and was starting to contemplate what I would tackle next.
 
His online TED talk has now been watched by more than 37 million people world wide. It was called “What makes a good life?” And I wanted to know more.
 
The study he’s oversees has been tracking the lives of two groups of men for over 75 years. It now follows the Baby Boomer children of the original participants to understand how childhood experience reaches across decades to affect health and wellbeing. 
 
As you can imagine, the research data is an absolute treasure trove of knowledge about what matters most.