Science of the Spirit
What often goes unnoticed, though, is that anxieties about exhaustion are not peculiar to our age. Those who imagine that life in the past was simpler, slower and better are wrong. The experience of exhaustion, and anxieties about exhaustion epidemics in the wider population, are not bound to a particular time and place. On the contrary: exhaustion and its effects have preoccupied thinkers since classical antiquity.
It's hard to write, or speak in public, or ... do anything, really, if you're worrying at the same time. Overthinking helps no one and often leads to choking under pressure; or, as Beilock rhymes, "It's paralysis by analysis." However: Writing seems to help. From the WSJ:
As a general piece of advice, she encourages people to write down their worries before an event. In a paper published in the journal Science in 2011, she studied groups of students about to take a test. Those who spent 10 minutes before the test writing down their worries scored higher than those who didn't, and especially students who reported being anxious about tests got higher scores.
Changes in sense of humour could be an early sign of dementia, a new study finds.
A shift to preferring slapstick humour — like Mr Bean — over satirical or absurdist comedy, such as Monty Python, could be an early sign of Alzheimer's.
Friends and relatives of those with dementia reported seeing changes around nine years before the more typical memory problems.
Dr Camilla Clark, who led the study, said:
The study included data from 48 friends and relatives of people with dementia."As sense of humour defines us and is used to build relationships with those around us, changes in what we find funny has impacts far beyond picking a new favourite TV show.
We've highlighted the need to shift the emphasis from dementia being solely about memory loss.
These findings have implications for diagnosis - not only should personality and behaviour changes ring alarm bells, but clinicians themselves need to be more aware of these symptoms as an early sign of dementia.
As well as providing clues to underlying brain changes, subtle differences in what we find funny could help differentiate between the different diseases that cause dementia.
Humour could be a particularly sensitive way of detecting dementia because it puts demands on so many different aspects of brain function, such as puzzle solving, emotion and social awareness."
Comment: There are many natural means of combatting the brain changes dementia brings:
- Symptoms of dementia can be reversed with natural therapies
- From slight memory loss to dementia: How to avoid losing mental capacity
- Read, Eat Well and Keep Spirits High to Avoid Dementia
- What's a ketogenic diet, and can it really boost brain health?
Derek Taylor, a 90-year-old man from London, England, felt lonely and isolated following the deaths of two loved ones. So he decided to do something about it, and now he's sharing his wisdom with the rest of the world.
"I'd lost a partner, and my sister had passed away," Taylor told the BBC. "And the older you get, the less people seem to contact you. And I thought, 'What can I do to stop being lonely?'"
And now scientists have discovered one reason why they seem to go so well together.
For the same chemical system in the brain that produces feelings of pleasure as a result of having sex, taking recreational drugs or eating tasty food is also stimulated by listening to a favourite tune.
To test the theory, the researchers found a way to temporarily block the natural opioid substances produced when we are having a good time.
Seventeen test subjects were then played music to see if doing this had an effect.
Dr Daniel Levitin, a neuroscientist at McGill University in Canada as well as a musician and record producer, said: "The impressions our participants shared with us after the experiment were fascinating.
"Empathy affected assessments of dogs' facial expressions even more than previous experience of dogs, probably because the face is a biologically important stimulus for humans," Miiamaaria Kujala, a postdoctoral researcher at Helsinki, said in a news release. "Our earlier studies have showed, however, that when considering the entire body language of dogs, previous experience of dogs increases in importance."
In some ways, the findings aren't all that surprising. Darwin noted similarities between the facial expressions of different mammal species. Numerous studies have illuminated said similarities. But only a few studies have examined cross-species facial expression understanding.
The findings of the latest study -- published in the journal PLOS ONE -- showed highly empathetic people tend to recognize the expressions of dogs more quickly, accurately and intensely than others. Researchers say it's possible the participants are overstating the emotions expressed by the dogs.
"Empathy speeds up and intensifies the assessment of dogs' facial expressions, but defining the accuracy of such assessments is currently unreliable," Kujala said. Previous research has shown dogs possess cross-species emotional intelligence, too.
Comment: A basic, bare bones definition: Emotional intelligence represents an ability to validly reason with emotions and to use emotions to enhance thought.
Do dogs have this capability, or do they have refined instincts? Or both?
Comment: Physiological responses and cognitions: It is more likely dogs read human emotions far better and more accurately than we do and they don't need a non-conclusive study to prove it.

University of Delaware professor Jared Medina and graduate students Yuqi Liu and Kyle Vietz are working to shed light on mirror-touch synesthesia.
In an article published in Cortex, UD researchers reveal new information about MTS based on one of the largest studies of its kind. The subject pool was more than 2,000 undergrads from multiple sections of an introductory psychology course who volunteered as research participants over the past few years.
"Some of the students in our study didn't know that what they were experiencing was different from the rest of the population, and it blew their minds," says Jared Medina, assistant professor in UD's Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences. "But if you have mirror-touch synesthesia, there's nothing wrong with you. It's just an interesting difference, like being double-jointed."
Comment:
- Tactile synesthesia: What it's like to have emotions in your fingertips
- Synesthesia: When Tuesday is the color red
- Tasty letters? Sensory connections spill over in synesthesia
- 6 intriguing types of synesthesia: Tasting words, seeing sounds, hearing colours and more
- Synesthesia May Explain Healers Claims of Seeing People's 'Aura'
Eight weeks of mindfulness meditation significantly reduced anxiety for GAD sufferers, a new study finds.
The study, published in the Jan. 24 edition of Psychiatry Research, confirmed that eight-weeks of mindfulness meditation can be crucially beneficial for those who suffer from anxiety.
Researchers from the Georgetown University Medical Center selected 89 people who suffer from generalized anxiety disorder to undergo one of two different forms of treatment. One group took an eight-week Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) course, which centered around meditation, and then determined whether or not it helped them relax. Those in the control group took an eight-week stress management education course, which centers more on habits such as diet, sleep, and general wellness.
Before and after the study, participants underwent the Trier Social Stress Test, a common experimental practice for inducing a stress response. Participants are asked on a moment's notice to perform one of the most anxiety-causing tasks for many people: give a speech in front of an audience.
Comment: We predict that mindfulness will beat out psychiatric drug therapies but drugs will continue to be used as the gold standard of treatment regardless of the evidence.
"I think a unique thing is happening which is illustrated by the election of Donald Trump," Zimbardo tells Fairfax Media. Nations across the world are "moving from democracy to right-wing totalitarianism".
But the worst part of apologizing is obvious, too: It's deeply uncomfortable. No one likes to talk about how they screwed up, nor does anyone enjoy making themselves vulnerable. Which means that we often make clumsy attempts to get to the good stuff without the requisite unpleasantness, offering up a non-apology that doesn't require you to acknowledge any hard truths, but doesn't really smooth things over, either. In a New York Times column earlier this week, writer Jane Brody highlighted one easy way to render an apology ineffective: Using the word "but." As in, "I'm sorry, but ..."
"Offering an apology is an admission of guilt that admittedly leaves people vulnerable," Brody wrote, citing therapist Harriet Lerner's recent book Why Won't You Apologize? (Science of Us has previously interviewed Lerner about how rushing to forgiveness can be worse than holding a grudge, another topic covered in her book). Adding a "but" to the end, then, is "an excuse that counters the sincerity of the original message. The best apologies are short and don't include explanations that can undo them."














Comment: Read more about the benefits of writing for better mental and emotional clarity: