4.8 • 676 Ratings
🗓️ 16 October 2016
⏱️ 38 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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Recently someone posted this question in the introvert subreddit on reddit: "How to deal with half wanting new friends and half wanting to be a hermit?"
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I hear and read questions like this all the time from introverts and introverted HSPs. We cherish being alone, and then sometimes wonder if we can get along without worrying about having relationships. After all, relationships are time consuming, difficult, and can be painful.
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But then we often realize that we cannot exist alone. It might seem easier to avoid relationships, but it is bad for our mental and physical health. Humans were built to need and thrive on connection with others.
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A Vice.com interview with Amy Banks, PhD, titled, "An Expert Explains Why You Feel So Lonely All the Time" really piqued my interest in this topic. I loved Dr. Banks' scientific explanation of why having quality relationships is so important.
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Dr. Banks was an instructor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and is now the Director of Advanced Training at Jean Baker Miller Training Institute at the Wellesley Centers for Women. Her newest book is called Wired to Connect: The Surprising Link Between Brain Science and Strong, Healthy Relationships.
On this episode, we talk about:
Amy recommends that those looking to improve their relationships first take her free Relational Assessment. You can get in touch with Amy on Twitter, Facebook, and check out her column on Psychology Today: Wired to Love Other books recommended by Dr. Banks in this episode:
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Podcast music attribution: Bust This Bust That (Professor Kliq) / CC BY-NC-SA 3.0Â
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0:00.0 | Welcome to the highly sensitive person podcast, a podcast for people who experience the world intensely. |
0:11.4 | Join me on a journey of acceptance of our highly sensitive person traits. |
0:18.2 | Welcome to the podcast. I'm your host, Kelly. Today I am happy to have a special guest here, Dr. Amy Banks. And the reason I wanted to bring her on the show is because I read an article that she was interviewed for recently on vice.com, where she talked about loneliness. |
0:36.9 | The title of the article was, |
0:39.3 | An Expert explains why you feel so lonely all the time. |
0:43.7 | Yeah, and that title really grabbed me because it's something I see come up all the time |
0:48.3 | among introverts and introverted HSPs, that we love our alone time, we love solitude and peace and quiet, and we sometimes |
0:56.8 | think we can go through life alone and not needing other people because making and having friends |
1:01.9 | and even dealing with family can be stressful and tiring. So we think maybe I don't really need |
1:09.2 | that many people. But then we realized that being |
1:12.5 | alone is pretty awful too and we actually do need people. So this article really spoke to me |
1:18.9 | and I think this topic may be of interest to some of you as well. So I was very pleased |
1:24.8 | when Dr. Amy Banks agreed to be on the show to share her expertise. |
1:30.0 | So before we jump in, I'd like to tell you a little more about her. |
1:33.9 | Amy Banks' MD was an instructor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, |
1:38.6 | and she's now the director of advanced training at Gene Baker-Miller Training Institute |
1:43.1 | at the Wellesley Centers for Women. |
1:45.6 | Her newest book is called Wired to Connect. |
1:49.3 | Dr. Banks has devoted her career to studying the neurobiology of relationships and how our |
1:55.0 | social interactions shape our brains. She treats patients who suffer from chronic disconnection, which is the result of years of |
2:03.2 | focusing on individual success and neglecting relationships. Amy, thank you so much for taking |
2:09.8 | the time to speak to me today. Thanks for having me. So I wanted to start off by asking you, |
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