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The FitMind Podcast: Mental Fitness, Neuroscience & Psychology

Podcast

The FitMind Podcast: Mental Fitness, Neuroscience & Psychology

The FitMind Podcast explores the science of mental fitness through conversations with neuroscientists, psychologists, Buddhist monks, and professional athletes. Host Liam McClintock, founder of FitMind and a Yale graduate studying applied neuroscience, discusses topics including meditation, psychology, brain science, productivity, and Stoicism. The show bridges ancient contemplative practices with modern neuroscience to help listeners enhance their mental performance and well-being.

Mental HealthNeuroscienceMeditationPsychology

Hosts

FitMind LLC

Episodes

The FitMind Podcast: Mental Fitness, Neuroscience & Psychology

#114: Mindfulness, Medicine & the Biology of Stress - Dr. Craig Hassed

In this episode of the Fitmind podcast, Professor Craig Hassed from the Monash Centre for Consciousness and Contemplative Studies shares his remarkable journey from a disillusioned 19-year-old medical student to a pioneer in integrating mindfulness into medical education. Craig recounts his first meditation experience at age 19, where without any books, teachers, or prior experience, he discovered a profound truth about the nature of consciousness—that beneath all thoughts and anxieties lies an unchanging sense of being that remains undisturbed. This pivotal moment set him on a path to incorporate mindfulness and compassion training into the medical curriculum at Monash University, giving future doctors tools beyond prescription pads to help patients manage stress, chronic pain, and mental health challenges. The conversation delves deep into the biology of stress, exploring how chronic activation of the fight-or-flight response creates "allostatic load"—a physiological wear and tear on the body. Craig explains how stress affects us at the genetic level through epigenetics, influencing which genes are expressed and which remain dormant. He discusses groundbreaking research on telomeres, the protective caps on chromosomes that shorten with stress and aging, and how meditation can actually slow this shortening and even reverse biological aging by activating repair enzymes. The episode also explores the crucial distinction between empathy and compassion, revealing how empathy can lead to burnout in healthcare professionals through empathic distress, while true compassion activates different neural circuits associated with positive emotions and affiliation without triggering the brain's stress response.

63 minMindfulness · Epigenetics

The FitMind Podcast: Mental Fitness, Neuroscience & Psychology

#113: Zen & the Science of Living Well - Robert Waldinger, MD

Robert Waldinger, director of the Harvard Study of Adult Development and a fully ordained Zen Roshi, explores the intersection of contemplative practice and scientific research on human flourishing. The conversation delves into findings from the longest longitudinal study of human life ever conducted, which began in 1938 and continues today with over 2,500 participants across multiple generations. Waldinger explains how the study revealed that social connection is the most significant predictor of health and longevity, with loneliness operating as a chronic stressor that keeps the body in a perpetual fight-or-flight state, leading to elevated cortisol, weakened immune function, and chronic inflammation. The discussion uniquely emphasizes Waldinger's integration of his roles as psychiatrist, researcher, and Zen teacher—three perspectives he initially kept separate but now sees as pointing toward the same truths about human thriving. He shares his journey of 'coming out' about his Zen practice in 2010 and how this integration has enriched both his clinical work and research. The conversation explores practical aspects of building meaningful connections, the surprising diversity of paths to a fulfilling life revealed by the study, and how vulnerability and interdependence are essential to well-being. Waldinger emphasizes that there is no single prescription for a good life, but rather many different ways people find contentment and meaning through relationships and activities they care about.

63 minloneliness and health · social connection

The FitMind Podcast: Mental Fitness, Neuroscience & Psychology

#94: Exploring Consciousness & Deep Awareness - Doug Kraft

In this episode of the FitMind podcast, host Liam McClintock welcomes back longtime mentor Doug Kraft after a year-long hiatus. Doug, a 75-year-old meditation teacher, psychotherapist, and former Unitarian Universalist minister, discusses his extensive exploration of consciousness from multiple angles including meditation practice, neuroscience, and ancient Buddhist teachings. He shares insights from his recent meditation retreat and explains his current practice of meditating 2.5 to 4 hours daily while maintaining a balanced life. The conversation delves deep into Buddhist concepts of dependent origination and the nature of self, exploring how everything we identify as 'ourselves' is actually a temporary collection of qualities arising from prior causes and conditions. Doug explains consciousness through the lens of homeostasis and survival mechanisms, referencing neuroscientist Jaak Panksepp's work on primal emotions and their role in maintaining consciousness. He emphasizes the importance of observing the mind with kindness and wisdom rather than trying to control it, using the metaphor of 'putting a basket of puppies to sleep' to describe the meditation process. The discussion bridges ancient Buddhist wisdom with modern neuroscience, exploring how consciousness emerges as an integrated workspace for managing conflicting biological imperatives.

3583 minconsciousness · meditation practice

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