4.8 • 1.2K Ratings
🗓️ 11 November 2025
⏱️ 77 minutes
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Episode Summary: Training Your Brain for Performance and Health
Dr. Jordan Feigenbaum welcomes Anne-Sophie Fluri, a neuroscientist with a background in experimental neuroscience and Parkinson's disease research, who now runs Brain Wave, focusing on mental fitness and performance workshops.
This episode leverages Anne-Sophie's expertise to discuss powerful mental strategies applicable to life, stress management, and athletic performance. The conversation provides an evidence-based breakdown of meditation (what it is and what it isn't), the neurological mechanisms behind visualization (process vs. outcome imagery), and how these practices contribute to mental resilience and improved self-efficacy—a core component of the Barbell Medicine definition of health.
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I. Meditation: Training Focus and Battling Distraction
Dr. Feigenbaum and Anne-Sophie begin by clarifying that meditation is not about emptying the mind or achieving spiritual transcendence. It is a simple mental practice used to train attention and awareness by focusing on an anchor (breath, sound, sensation). When the mind inevitably wanders, the practice is to bring focus back to the anchor.
The True Benefits of Training Attention
While many people turn to meditation for sleep issues and stress relief, the strongest evidence points to its benefit as a tool to train focused attention.
II. Visualization: Mental Rehearsal for Performance
Visualization, or mental imagery, is a form of meditation used to create mental images of desired outcomes or processes. Research suggests this practice can have a direct carry-over to performance by activating overlapping areas in the brain as if the action were happening in real life.
Process, Outcome, and Safety
III. Mental Resilience and the Definition of Health
Anne-Sophie defines mental resilience mechanistically: the ability to return to an original form after force or pressure is applied. This aligns closely with the Barbell Medicine definition of health (from Huber, 2011) as the ability to adapt and self-manage in the face of social, physical, and emotional challenges.
Self-Efficacy and Control
Mental resilience is directly linked to self-efficacy (confidence in one's ability to exert control over one's life). Those with high self-efficacy feel in control, have good insight into their circumstances, and feel they have the resources to change the outcome.
The key components of mental resilience include:
The Path to Resilience
To develop mental resilience, Anne-Sophie recommends developing self-awareness and reflection through regular practice:
Connect With Anne-Sophie Fluri and Barbell Medicine
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
| 0:00.0 | Welcome back to the Barbell Medicine podcast where we bring modern medicine to strength conditioning and strength conditioning to modern medicine. |
| 0:05.9 | I'm your host, Dr. Jordan Feigenbaum. |
| 0:07.6 | And today we have a very special guest, Anne Sophie Flurry. |
| 0:12.1 | Now, Anne Sophie is a neuroscientist who's worked in both industry and academia over the last 12 years. |
| 0:17.6 | She has a master's of research in experimental neuroscience and has published papers relating to |
| 0:21.8 | the vestibular system. That's the sensory system in your inner ear, plays a crucial role in |
| 0:26.5 | balance and spatial awareness, as well as in Parkinson's disease. More recently, she started the company |
| 0:31.1 | Brainwave, where she runs mental fitness and performance workshops for companies. And in this podcast, |
| 0:36.3 | we're going to leverage her expertise and talk about some mental strategies to improve your life and your workouts. Specifically, we're going to talk about meditation, visualization, and how to develop mental resilience. And Sophie, welcome to the show. Hi. Thank you so much for having me. Did I miss anything about your background? I like to lay out the CV, you know, the pertinent. |
| 0:55.0 | Yeah, no, you actually, you actually added some things that I'd forgotten about. |
| 0:59.0 | Oh, yeah. |
| 1:00.0 | The papers I published, which was years ago when I was doing my master's, and in the early stages |
| 1:07.0 | of my PhD, which I just continued, I totally forgot about those. We did some really strange |
| 1:12.0 | experiments. They're putting water into your ear. I saw. I read that. Yeah. I read that. Like my friend |
| 1:18.3 | mentioned it the other day, he was like, I was reading your paper and you put water into the |
| 1:23.1 | ear to make people feel dizzy. And I'm like, did I? That seems like a dick, a long time ago. |
| 1:29.3 | No, your master's research looked far more interesting than mine. |
| 1:33.8 | Mine was on the anatomical presence of a specific muscle, this vastest medialis obelicus. |
| 1:41.0 | It's supposed to be this muscle at the distal end of your vastest medialis, part of your quadriceps. |
| 1:46.0 | Anyway, have you heard of the AAA? Most people think that's an insurance company. |
| 1:50.4 | Yes. But it's actually an anatomical society in America. And I'm a proud card carrying member of that group, which I think if people were like, is he a nerd or nah? And I am. I'm a nerd trapped in this Chad body. And I don't know what to do about it. So I feel like similar. I feel like I'm a similar kind of person. Like I didn't get on with anyone from my, from my study. Like I think that's why I quit my PhD. It's like I couldn't relate to anyone. Yeah. I don't belong here yeah no but then a lot of my friends were like creatives but then i also couldn't relate |
| 2:20.6 | to like i mean, I'm like, I am a creative person, but then I didn't fit into those industries at all either. I'm like, I just. Yeah, you're too, too diverse for the system. Nice. Well, we're super, I'm super excited to have you. Obviously, we've |
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