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The contemporary world is saturated with ways in which we can experience rewards that were historically much more difficult to access. Although this idea of a world filled with dopamine fixes is not new, it can be continually surprising just how extreme this reality has become. Here on the show today to talk about this issue and her most recent book, Dopamine Nation, is Dr. Anna Lembke, and we have a fascinating and important conversation in which she unpacks the human body and mind in relation to the world around us at present. One of the main points from this chat is the weakness of humans, and how unaware we can be of the way our brains compel us to engage in behaviours and seek pleasure. We get into some strategies and solutions for healthier ways to exist, talking about mindfulness, awareness, and dopamine fasting, in the face of accelerating tech and overabundance. Dr. Lembke gives us a great introduction to dopamine and how it functions in our bodies, unpacks the four properties of addictive substances and activities, the different ways to frame and understand addiction, and shares some realistic ideas about moderation. So to hear all this and much more, tune in to this great episode of the Rational Reminder Podcast.
Timestamps:
0:00 Intro
3:02 Dopamine and Addiction
13:48 Tech, Investing, and Addiction
27:35 Managing an Addiction
32:35 Long-term Decision Making and Dopamine
36:22 Pain vs Pleasure in the Brain
44:17 Retirement & Addiction
50:27 Honesty, Shame, and Unwanted Behaviours
Book From Today’s Episode:
Dopamine Nation: Finding Balance in the Age of Indulgence - amzn.to/3BZEBxB
Links From Today’s Episode:
Rational Reminder on iTunes - itunes.apple.com/ca/podcast/t....
Rational Reminder Website - rationalreminder.ca/
Shop Merch - shop.rationalreminder.ca/
Join the Community - community.rationalreminder.ca/
Follow us on Twitter - / rationalremind
Follow us on Instagram - @rationalreminder
Benjamin on Twitter - / benjaminwfelix
Cameron on Twitter - / cameronpassmore
Anna Lembke - www.annalembke.com/

Пікірлер: 27

  • @rationalreminder
    @rationalreminder2 жыл бұрын

    Timestamps: 0:00 Intro 3:02 Dopamine and Addiction 13:48 Tech, Investing, and Addiction 27:35 Managing an Addiction 32:35 Long-term Decision Making and Dopamine 36:22 Pain vs Pleasure in the Brain 44:17 Retirement & Addiction 50:27 Honesty, Shame, and Unwanted Behaviours

  • @zzzzzzzzzzz6
    @zzzzzzzzzzz6 Жыл бұрын

    The bit about non-self / self-forgetting is super interesting.

  • @ale_fina
    @ale_fina2 жыл бұрын

    Folks I believe I developed an addiction... I'm totally addicted to the Rational Reminder podcast. Cameron, Ben... Keep it up. Can't wait for the next video :)

  • @thechristiankaren2229
    @thechristiankaren2229 Жыл бұрын

    She is an amazing human being.

  • @samarjitsingh1641
    @samarjitsingh16418 ай бұрын

    Angelic Words....God bless you. Universe needs You.

  • @nishantak911
    @nishantak9112 жыл бұрын

    I'm pretty sure I'm addicted to finance videos on KZread. RR included ofcourse

  • @drsandhyathumsikumar4479
    @drsandhyathumsikumar4479 Жыл бұрын

    What an excellent conversation 🎉.much gratitude to both the organizer and speaker So wonderful to see the ethics of financial investing be so clearly brought forth .. BRAVO !

  • @kenhtinhthuc
    @kenhtinhthuc Жыл бұрын

    The teeter-totter analogy is a great way to describe the pleasure-pain balance in terms of one goes up the other goes down. An alternative analogy is the yin and yang with yin being pleasure and yang being pain, they are interwoven: the pleasure includes in itself pain and the pain includes in itself pleasure. Our emotional life is continuous movements between pleasure (yin) and pain (yang). Nirvana is entered when these movements cease. Her talk has striking parallel with Buddhism e.g. radical honesty being one of Buddhist precepts/silas (wrong speech, lying), which is foundational for developing concentration/samadhi which then can lead to wisdom/paññā (probably located in the prefrontal cortex).

  • @saber8560

    @saber8560

    Жыл бұрын

    interwoven is such an insightful word to use here!

  • @drsandhyathumsikumar4479
    @drsandhyathumsikumar4479 Жыл бұрын

    Ben and Cameron ..much gratitude for a wonderful session .Bravo on bringing up this conversation into a financial context 🎉🎉

  • @safetyfirst2417
    @safetyfirst24172 жыл бұрын

    Life itself is pretty addictive

  • @ksideth
    @ksideth2 жыл бұрын

    Great conversation. Many thanks.

  • @maikkdk5956
    @maikkdk595610 ай бұрын

    Great 😊

  • @vlf0lh41
    @vlf0lh412 жыл бұрын

    Just received my RR mug and socks today!

  • @marcibunn
    @marcibunn2 жыл бұрын

    thank you!

  • @shashilwow
    @shashilwow8 ай бұрын

    Is it strange that they keep attacking Facebook and tik tok, but not KZread.. since they're on that platform at the moment?

  • @peouspaul1258
    @peouspaul1258 Жыл бұрын

    I think something is good + bad is addictive..

  • @peouspaul1258
    @peouspaul1258 Жыл бұрын

    Healthy foods not addictive .. right ??..

  • @rimservices
    @rimservices2 жыл бұрын

    46:25 brain is a whaaaa?

  • @karenohanlon4183
    @karenohanlon41832 жыл бұрын

    Fighting an addiction is like trying to outrun a tsunami

  • @squidlife4032
    @squidlife40322 жыл бұрын

    The move to label everything that releases dopamine an addiction is ridiculous. If you can think of a thing, there's probably someone out there with a serious problem with it. That shouldn't necessarily tell us much about the thing, but instead the person. There are some things that are inherently addictive. But the idea that food and shopping are addictive like heroin is absurd. Yes, everyone is vulnerable to excessive use of a thing or activity. But let's not cheapen addiction by overusing it as a label.

  • @auntitchyreadstellsyouasto3765
    @auntitchyreadstellsyouasto37652 жыл бұрын

    Such a great woman, just went and screwed up any real pain patients lives. This life is all about protecting people...you deserve a Medela for screwing up lives. You should go look in the mirror. What you do affect others. I'm lucky I got surgery. Others ... Suffer.. because .hey you knew all about their lives

  • @GNotGenius
    @GNotGenius2 жыл бұрын

    It seems silly to dismiss everything "pleasurable" to be an "addiction". She basically is categorizing things as "these things are good happiness, these other things are bad happiness". What makes spending time with other people better than spending time on pleasure? Nothing. Literally just preference. Just let people do what makes them happy and stop criticizing the things they like doing. Drugs, Cigarettes, Internet, TV, Porn, Fast food are perfectly legitimate sources of pleasure and in no way less legitimate than "oh spending time with family and friends" or "improving oneself" or whatever canonical way of "converting time to happiness" you're thinking of. If the takeaway here is "excess is bad" then sure. But there seems to be a lot of labelling activities into "these are acceptable to spend as much time as possible on" and "these are bad" categories. These labelling exercises are not something anyone should be doing for anyone else.

  • @chrisf1600

    @chrisf1600

    2 жыл бұрын

    I didn't get that from the interview at all. Early on in the interview, Dr Lembke clearly lists out the four factors that characterise a medical diagnosis of addiction (the "4 C's"). If the things you listed give you pleasure, then keep on doing them. It only becomes a problem if you're doing them to such an extent that you're experiencing negative consequences in your life.

  • @Goodbyeeveryonehere

    @Goodbyeeveryonehere

    2 жыл бұрын

    Anything can be addictive if it raises the biochemistry. Addictions are different for everyone. This is for people who recognise that a substance or behaviour is adversely affecting their iife and who want to do something about it.

  • @saber8560

    @saber8560

    Жыл бұрын

    yea you shouldnt label for others . .. ... ....unless ofcoarse youre Standfords dual diagnosis addiction clinician who's job is to illuminate psychological and neurological pathology and aid in recovery it might not feel good to learn that one of our own behaviours is from the "bad category" but to turn a blind eye seems less good to me

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