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https://xiaoyuzhoufm.com

Dr. Greg Siegle is director of the Programme in Cognitive A'ffective Neuroscience (PICAN) at the University of Pittsburgh. Last month, June 2019, he was also awarded the Honorary Chair in Cognitive Science at the University of Amsterdam. He’s devoted to understanding interactions of cognition and emotion, particularly their associations with mental disorder and recovery such as depression and anxiety.

**Shownotes **

  • 1:00 Lecture at the University of Amsterdam: “what if freaking out and shutting down are completely normal?"
  • 2:50 Most interventions in mental health is to decrease emotions
  • 4:10 “Healthy” people dissociate every day
  • 4:57 Freaking out and shutting down are both part of the process (e.g. spider-phobia)
  • 6:11 Dissociation is stigmatized in mental health field
  • 7:33 There’s a continuum from compartmentalization to total dissociation.
  • 8:26 Detachment in mindfulness share a lot with dissociation
  • 9:02 Pre-frontal cortex lets us put the choice back to our hands
  • 10:02 We’re already doing emotional regulation unconsciously all the time
  • 10:15 Naked card experiment
  • 12:13 Emotions at the workplace - can you cry and completely disengage like a zombie?
  • 13:10 Performance suffers when emotions are suppressed
  • 14:00 Not preventing a person from using the coping mechanism that helped them survive
  • 14:44 Greg’s lab policy - What if doctors and nurses, not just patients, are also allowed to have emotions?
  • 15:30 A real-life example in Greg’s workplace
  • 18:50 Including “allowing emotions” during the interviewing process
  • 19:54 Some Asian employees do not feel like expressing emotions, which is also okay
  • 21:00 Communicating and checking in as the new normal
  • 23:00 Black employees feel less safe to express emotions
  • 24:58 Allowing people to shut down makes it safer for them to come back when they’re ready
  • 25:24 Orgasmic meditation - when the environment is safe, women having sexual abuse histories do not have problems to have arousal
  • 26:52 It’s the lack of safety that prolongs shutting down
  • 28:28 Set and setting are made explicit in psychology and psychiarity
  • 29:20 Lab may not be the ideal place for either stimulation or intervention
  • 31:26 What does it mean by “leaning in” to the emotions?
  • 33:03 To allow the regulatory mechanisms to shut off
  • 33:50 Chinese saying “wuwei”
  • 34:26 What if you don’t work too hard? Allow the process to play out
  • 35:12 Not regulating emotions might work as well
  • 35:40 Depression: leaning in to the rumination; take the power back
  • 38:11 Give anxiety a “worry time”
  • 42:05 “Play time” - Does the world end if I ruminate right now? People actually ruminate less if it’s made explicitly as a process.
  • 44:20 “Surfing” high emotions, even enjoying it
  • 44:47 People like BDSM and haunted house playing with high arousal
  • 46:00 Why is it hard to play with emotions in daily life?
  • 47:42 Not just individual efforts to regulate emotions, but also power relations
  • 48:25 Women are more stigmatized to show emotions at workplace
  • 50:00 What if workplace training includes “really hearing the content and saying I hear you when someone’s expressing emotionally”?
  • 51:15 Shutting down in relationships
  • 52:45 Emotions are stored in the body
  • 53.45 The somatic marker hypothesis, formulated by Antonio Damasio
  • 55:21 “Where are you feeling emotions in your body”
  • 56:01 Body awareness can be double-edged
  • 57:31 Our relationship with pain - what’s it telling me?
  • 59:40 Arousal is arousal - why not playing with that
  • 61:01 One story about arousal may not be more valid than other ones
  • 62:58 The time course of arousal is slow; make use of it
  • 64:24 Make-up sex can be a valid re-direction of arousal
  • 65:30 Artists using their hard emotions to create
  • 66:38 Vibration can lead to vigilance that’s neither positive nor positive
  • 67:30 Meditation is not just about distancing
  • 68:20 Philippe Goldin, laughter meditation
  • 69:30 Detaching as spiritual bypassing
  • 72:05 First learn to swim and surf, and then dive into the extraordinary state of mind
  • 72:35 What does neuroscience say about when to surf, and when to dive?
  • 73:51 Allowing the dark side as part of every day - it’s all one person
  • 74:03 Use your “darkness” as a great resource, as a superpower
  • 75:25 The middle way
  • 76:40 Not stigmatizing the reactions is healing
  • 77:55 Embodied dissociation
  • 78:25 Not just regulating individual patient’s emotions, but change their environments as well
  • 80:23 Better environment for depression - not isolating, but also ok to want to stay alone
  • 81:20 Interpersonal therapy
  • 82:01 Depressive realism
  • 82:20 What about the socio-political cause for depression - fetishizing productivity?
  • 85:16 Both personal an structural changes needed
  • 85:50 Local changes can make a difference - have hard conversations, reclaim power
  • 87:25 **Be your own scientist, play with emotions, do not be scared of them **

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nymphs
2年前 浙江
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17:15 有点感动
nymphs
2年前 浙江
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57:36 我最近同感,不能叫身体敏感吧,只是之前很多身体的信号被我忽视,而最近像大风天的树叶般一片片被刮下来铺开在我脚边,会觉得身体的反应夹着情绪的波动特别难顶。同时,我很难跟自己的负性情绪接触上,我待一会就弹开了,但身体会持续难受着,发泄不出来,哭不出来,我没法为自己哭,但看电影和读新闻可以,能为别人哭,但那种感受更难受,自己的部分没消化又加了别人的太复杂了,体量很大又缠在一起,我的身体空间小小的快爆炸。 所以,我听到这里特别想问 “如何在情绪和身体如此难受时,让这种难受可以流淌/发泄出来?我真的隔得很远”。 我现在意识到的是,我能用跟朋友聊天发泄出一些;我不看新闻和电影来逃避现在的感受,我努力多呆一会;写日记也行,但进入自己的难度会更大,很躁动很暴躁。谢谢你们的对话让我有了这些觉察和反应!
EarsOnMe

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