The 4 Chemicals That Run Your Brain…and Your Life | Tj Power

The 4 Chemicals That Run Your Brain…and Your Life | Tj Power

Four chemicals, produced by your brain, serve as a master switch for nearly everything you think, do, and feel. In no small way, they also control our lives. But, all too often, instead of harnessing them to fuel amazing experiences and outcomes, we are controlled by them. Today, we learn how to take back control and harness them for good.


Our guide is TJ Power, lead neuroscientist at the DOSE Lab and the author of The DOSE Effect. His research investigates how modern sedentary, digitally saturated lifestyles are reshaping the brain chemicals that govern how we feel, connect, focus, and recover from stress. He has delivered live experiences to over 75,000 people at institutions including Oxford University, Amazon, and the NHS.


His DOSE framework centers on four chemicals: Dopamine, Oxytocin, Serotonin, and Endorphins. These chemicals evolved over hundreds of thousands of years for a very different experience of life. One with more movement, more connection, more sunlight, more sustained effort, and far less of what TJ calls dopamine land, the scroll-and-reward loop that phones have engineered into our days.


In this conversation, you will explore:

  • Why dopamine is not the reward chemical you were taught it was, and why the phone has hijacked the system that was supposed to motivate you
  • The difference between dopamine and oxytocin, and why TJ believes we are pursuing the wrong chemical as a species
  • How 90% of your serotonin is manufactured in your gut, and what ultra-processed food is actually doing to your mood
  • Why stress evolved to be released through physical movement, and why sitting still with your problems makes them worse
  • The 20 free behaviors from The DOSE Effect that recalibrate all four chemicals without cost, pills, or a major life overhaul


If you have been wondering why certain things that used to feel easy now feel effortful, this conversation gives you a biological explanation and a practical path forward.


You can find Tj at: Website | Instagram | Episode Transcript


Next week, we are sitting down with Dr. Vonda Wright to talk about why most of what you have been told about aging is actually data about people who did nothing. The decline curve, it turns out, is negotiable, and ages 35 to 45 are the highest-leverage window. But she also makes the case that the door never closes. Be sure to follow Good Life Project wherever you get your podcasts so you don't miss it.


Check out our offerings & partners:

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Det här avsnittet är hämtat från ett öppet RSS-flöde och publiceras inte av Podme. Det kan innehålla reklam.

Avsnitt(1160)

What Lucky People Do Differently, According to Science | Tina Seelig

What Lucky People Do Differently, According to Science | Tina Seelig

Luck is not a personality trait you either have or you don't. It is something you build, and science tells us there are specific, learnable skills behind why some people consistently seem to be in the...

11 Juni 49min

Why Rituals Matter More Than You Know, And How to Design Your Own | Bruce Feiler

Why Rituals Matter More Than You Know, And How to Design Your Own | Bruce Feiler

There is a particular kind of loneliness that hits in the middle of a full life. Not because you are isolated. Because the relationships that used to hold you steady are all being renegotiated at once...

8 Juni 54min

Dating in Midlife…Oh My! | Bela Gandhi

Dating in Midlife…Oh My! | Bela Gandhi

Here is something most of us have never been told: falling in love was never supposed to be easy, and the fact that it hasn't been isn't a character flaw. It's a design problem. Your biology may be wo...

4 Juni 57min

Your Ambitions Might Not Be Yours | Tom Rath

Your Ambitions Might Not Be Yours | Tom Rath

Most of us reach our 40s and discover something unsettling: the ambitions we've been chasing weren't entirely ours. They came from parents, from culture, from the two or three careers we happened to s...

1 Juni 46min

Why Can’t Anyone Tell Me What’s Wrong? | Alexandra Sifferlin

Why Can’t Anyone Tell Me What’s Wrong? | Alexandra Sifferlin

Ever have something clearly wrong, and yet no expert can tell you what’s causing it? Or, worse, they DO tell you, but they’re wrong?Nearly everyone will experience at least one diagnostic error in the...

28 Maj 57min

How to Finally Have the Talk You've Been Avoiding | Jonathan Fields

How to Finally Have the Talk You've Been Avoiding | Jonathan Fields

There is a conversation most of us are carrying right now. Not one we lack words for. We have plenty of those. One we keep finding reasons not to have. Not because we don't know what we'd say, but bec...

25 Maj 45min

Invisible Grief: How Hidden Loss Holds You Back (and how to release it) | Dr. Lucy Hone

Invisible Grief: How Hidden Loss Holds You Back (and how to release it) | Dr. Lucy Hone

There is a gap between where your life is and where you thought it would be. That gap has a name. It is grief. A kind of hidden, invisible grief. And most of us are walking around carrying it without ...

21 Maj 51min

Populärt inom Utbildning

rss-bara-en-till-om-missbruk-medberoende-2
historiepodden-se
det-skaver
nu-blir-det-historia
not-fanny-anymore
harrisons-dramatiska-historia
johannes-hansen-podcast
roda-vita-rosen
allt-du-velat-veta
rss-viktmedicinpodden
sektledare
sa-in-i-sjalen
i-vantan-pa-katastrofen
rikatillsammans-om-privatekonomi-rikedom-i-livet
rss-foraldramotet-bring-lagercrantz
rss-max-tant-med-max-villman
rss-om-vi-ska-vara-arliga
rss-sjalsligt-avkladd
rss-ar-det-rimligt
rss-relationsrevolutionen