4.6 • 7.3K Ratings
🗓️ 20 June 2019
⏱️ 51 minutes
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In this episode of Bulletproof Radio, you’ll hear from an expert psychologist who is known as an innovative thinker, trainer and speaker.
Joan Rosenberg, Ph.D., guides individuals to achieve their highest potential by helping them create, master and sustain desired life changes. Her newest book: “90 Seconds to a Life You Love: How to Master Your Difficult Feelings to Cultivate Lasting Confidence, Resilience, and Authenticity,” puts you in control of your own emotions.
“My approach is centered on helping people experience and move through eight unpleasant feelings (or emotional states),” Joan says. “Sadness, shame, helplessness, anger, vulnerability, embarrassment, disappointment and frustration.”
Within those eight, you’ll find a commonality.
“The single most important thing I can do is to recognize someone's pain, and just in essence, hold a mirror up to it, even if it sounds like you're saying the things that are so obvious,” Joan says. “It has a huge impact of calming someone else's nervous system down.”
And you’ll learn the art of productive confrontation.
“If it’s coming from a place that’s positive, kind, and well-intended, people will feel more well-understood and validated,” Joan explains. “Confrontation is one of the deepest forms of empathy.”
Joan puts it all out there and doesn’t let anyone off the hook—asking you to take a look at your life stories and then making sense of them through a series of questions that get right down into the impact and meaning of your life experiences.
Dealing with unpleasant feelings, is, well, unpleasant. So, let’s get to it and hack those emotions.
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0:00.0 | You're listening to Bulletproof Radio with Dave Asprey. |
0:16.4 | Today's cool fact of the day is that there's a new artwork created by artificial intelligence |
0:22.9 | that does really weird things to primate brains. |
0:27.3 | Turns out that when strange images made by computers get shown to a species of monkeys, |
0:34.5 | they cause nerve cells in the monkeys brains to fire more than pictures of real-world objects. |
0:40.8 | And the AI could design patterns that activated specific neurons while suppressing others, |
0:46.3 | according to researchers. |
0:48.6 | That's nuts. |
0:50.2 | The AI responsible for those mind-bending images is an artificial neural network, which |
0:56.2 | is a computer model that's made of neurons that have a feedback loop similar to the way |
1:00.5 | your prefrontal cortex and most of your neurons work. |
1:03.7 | And it's modeled after something called the ventral stream, which is part of the neural pathway |
1:08.1 | involved in vision. |
1:11.4 | They program this AI to see by studying a library of about 1.3 million images that were |
1:16.6 | labeled. |
1:18.2 | And it turns out that these new neural networks are neuroscientist best computer models |
1:22.5 | of the ventral stream. |
1:24.8 | This is unprecedented because this is the first time that we've had control over neural |
1:29.5 | activity using just images in a predictable way. |
1:33.2 | And it may lead to treatments for mental disorders, and it offers some really cool insight |
1:39.4 | into how we may make computers act more like brains. |
1:43.4 | Imagine though, if you are using virtual reality and the people who put together, say, a |
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