4.9 • 2.1K Ratings
🗓️ 14 August 2023
⏱️ 78 minutes
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Ep 83. Today's guest, Dr. Anna Lembke, explains exactly how to reset your brain's reward system so that you can feel happy again — without reaching for something external. Dr. Lembke is a psychiatrist, author, and Chief of the Addiction Medicine Clinic at Stanford University. This incredible woman changed my life and I believe she is the antidote our world needs as we navigate never-ending stimuli from tech, social media, and dopamine-releasing pleasures.
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0:00.0 | Okay, okay, look, I know that I've said that a lot of different episodes are my all-time favorite |
0:07.4 | episode. I'm a Leo. I'm dramatic. I love things really hard. But let me tell you something. This right here |
0:14.5 | is my favorite episode. I'll go on record. Hold me to that if I ever say this again. There will never be |
0:20.7 | another Dr. Anna Lemke. |
0:22.4 | Okay, this woman changed my life and is exactly the antidote that our world needs as we are |
0:30.0 | heading for a little bit of disaster because of the way that we're so addicted to our phones |
0:35.9 | and to a lot of different pleasurable things |
0:38.2 | and just not able to be present with one another anymore. Dr. Anna Lemke's book, |
0:43.2 | Dopamine Nation, is the most impactful book that I've ever read. And you guys know that I've |
0:48.7 | been on my journey of breaking my addictions the last year or so. And I have given up everything from cannabis to caffeine to sugar or really hyper palatable |
1:02.0 | foods and decided to eat simply for a while and see what I did if I couldn't have processed |
1:07.5 | foods and candy and chocolate all the time. And I can't believe the difference that I've |
1:12.8 | experienced in my brain since I chose to not feed myself so much pleasure at every whim and |
1:20.0 | decided to live a life of more discipline and pain. I used to be somebody that experienced |
1:26.9 | really severe depression. I would experience that experienced really severe depression. |
1:29.1 | I would experience a bout of severe depression quarterly. |
1:32.6 | I'd be like, all right, I'm good for a month or two months, and all of a sudden, |
1:35.8 | oh crap, I feel this feeling coming back. |
1:38.1 | And I started to realize that that feeling of the depression creeping back in was actually |
1:44.1 | more a feeling of this anhedonia, |
1:48.0 | this absolute unenthusiasm. Nothing is interesting or stimulating whatsoever that would wash |
1:55.3 | over me or anything real and good and true. And a smile from Nick or a hug from a loved one just didn't |
... |
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