Modern Life Numbs You. Here's The Neuroscience Of Waking Up | Tali Sharot

Modern Life Numbs You. Here's The Neuroscience Of Waking Up | Tali Sharot

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It's so easy, especially these days, to numb out. To get bored. To move through life on autopilot. There is even a scientific term for this: habituation.

Today we're talking to a researcher who co-authored a new book about the neuroscience of habit and how to wake up again. To make things exciting. Or as she says, to "re-sparkle".

Tali Sharot is a professor of cognitive neuroscience at University College London and MIT. She's written several books including The Optimism Bias and The Influential Mind. Her latest, co-written with Cass Sunstein, is called Look Again: The Power of Noticing What Was Always There.


In this episode we talk about:

  • What habituation is and what's going on in the brain when it happens
  • How it negatively impacts the joy we feel in life – and inversely – how it can make us stop noticing the bad stuff
  • Key strategies for disrupting habituation and introducing change and variety into your life
  • The interesting relationship between creativity and people who habituate slowly
  • How habituation impacts our relationships
  • Why it's important to break up the good experiences, but swallow the bad whole.
  • How to wake up from a "technologically induced coma"
  • How people emotionally habituate to dishonesty and lying
  • And lastly, we talk about the dangers of habituating to a slow, incremental rise in tyranny – and how dis-habituation entrepreneurs can help


Related Episodes:

#345 How to Change Your Habits | Katy Milkman

How Turning Habits Into Rituals Can Help You At Home, At Work, And When You're Anxious | Michael Norton

Making and Breaking Habits, Sanely | Kelly McGonigal


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Full Shownotes: https://happierapp.com/podcast/tph/tali-sharot-828


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