Understanding and Using Dreams to Learn and to Forget

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  • Опубліковано 21 лис 2024

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  • @winbalingit8502
    @winbalingit8502 3 роки тому +875

    I recently had a patient with PTSD have an anxiety attack while we were waiting for his doctors appointment, I am a case manager. After listening to your podcast, I took him outside and told him to scan the horizon back and forth as we walked. I don’t know if I did it correctly, my grasp of EMDR is remedial at best, but it worked! He was so relieved, he now uses it himself as a tool to help cope with his anxiety!Your tools definitely bumped up my nursing game!!😁👍🏽Thank you!!🙏🏽

    • @ultragirl7202
      @ultragirl7202 3 роки тому +12

      Love this ❤️

    • @cavelleardiel
      @cavelleardiel 3 роки тому +30

      Way to go!! Have you looked at somatic healing? Your ability to learn about how to help your patients makes you an incredible nurse. Thank you

    • @winbalingit8502
      @winbalingit8502 3 роки тому +11

      Thank you so much for all your kindness!!!🙏🏽

    • @hubermanlab
      @hubermanlab  3 роки тому +208

      That is wonderful to hear. Thank you for sharing! And for your interest in science!

    • @JohnMoseley
      @JohnMoseley 3 роки тому +19

      ​@@hubermanlab Does one have to be a qualified doctor, psychotherapist or psychiatrist to learn EMDR? Bessel van der Kolk, who is an MD, indicates in his book The Body Keeps the Score that it's quite an easy technique to learn. Seems like it might be good if it could be taught to a wide range of healthcare professionals and maybe social workers so they could use it in instances like this.

  • @johnnyregs2378
    @johnnyregs2378 3 роки тому +245

    The Professor himself back to serve us up the sweet nectar of knowledge! Monday's are now my favorite days.

  • @elainejarvie5458
    @elainejarvie5458 3 роки тому +270

    I must tell you that enjoying the morning and evening light each day has changed my sleeping 100%. I have struggled for over 25 years to fall asleep. I literally thought I had tried everything. Immediately, I am sleeping so soundly that I wake up with a huge smile on my face. And...I love to walk outside and notice the sun rising and setting. What a beautiful way to bookcase my day.

    • @ingeholmes9923
      @ingeholmes9923 3 роки тому +2

      That makes so much sense to me as
      a none medical person. Will try that, in spite of my husbands need for evening tv.

    • @JakeRichardsong
      @JakeRichardsong 3 роки тому +1

      What exactly are you doing? Walking in morning and evening?

    • @1289sandman
      @1289sandman 3 роки тому +2

      Incredible difference indeed- light exposure has been a revelation for my sleep cycle as well. Best wishes to you!

    • @nate8415
      @nate8415 3 роки тому

      Awesome!Do you limit blue light at night?

    • @DaveE99
      @DaveE99 3 роки тому +1

      Next look into Rhonda Patrick’s interview with dr. Panda (forget his first name) and he is a circadian researcher.

  • @RunToTheHills999
    @RunToTheHills999 3 роки тому +40

    Empowering regular people with knowledge and free tools to live a better life. A very noble act, I bow to you with respect.

  • @Fastfatfurious
    @Fastfatfurious 10 місяців тому +11

    I found this guy by googling subjects to learn about why I felt the way I do. I have the intuition to know what is going on in my body, but I don’t have the scientific knowledge to explain exactly what is happening.
    This podcast has been a blessing in that sense. Letting me know I’m not crazy, validating that I can trust my intuition, and ultimately giving me the answers to questions I’ve had for years - in a way I understand.
    Has someone ever told you something that you kind of already knew, but they say it in a way that makes it click and it shifts your perspective? I feel that for 2 hours whenever I watch these.

  • @taylorbartholomew6161
    @taylorbartholomew6161 3 роки тому +75

    The fact that you disperse this information for free means more than you know to me, and im sure many others. Thanks man

  • @anaespinosa5084
    @anaespinosa5084 3 роки тому +523

    This comment section is the most polite section I've ever seen

    • @hubermanlab
      @hubermanlab  3 роки тому +331

      Hopefully it’ll stay that way. If people have questions or would like to engage in healthy debate I’m always happy to do that. I think we’re all here to learn: including me!

    • @anaespinosa5084
      @anaespinosa5084 3 роки тому +41

      @@hubermanlab yes, I hope so too. It is a breath of fresh air! Thank you for providing such a good learning environment so far

    • @purplepeopleperson3815
      @purplepeopleperson3815 3 роки тому +9

      You are too kind! : ]

    • @psmith9789
      @psmith9789 Рік тому +15

      Because we're intelligent people. We don't waste our time with stuff like that.

    • @krombopulosmicheal3845
      @krombopulosmicheal3845 Рік тому +1

      I'm here for it lol

  • @fannabee3209
    @fannabee3209 3 роки тому +185

    I love this podcast. It is brilliant. The humor is A+. Also the self-correction in the end is an other reason why I honor and look up to this professor a lot. Thank you so much! Long live Costello!

    • @Sbannmarie
      @Sbannmarie 3 роки тому +2

      Here’s the best

    • @AgendaInMind
      @AgendaInMind 3 роки тому

      Most of the more severe illnesses happen to people by surprise, unexpectantly, impacting first in the brain, then in the corresponding organ which that part of the brain controls. The end of WWI had absolutely everything to do with the Flu and lung TB outbreak that occurred killing millions. In nature, the biological conflict linked with a territorial fear (just what it means-a fear in your territory, your home, your community, etc.) is a widening of the bronchia (tissue loss). Your body attempts to widen your bronchia in order to allow more air into your lungs to give you more strength and energy to fight to keep your territory safe. Stay with me.......The biological conflict linked with a death fright impacts the lungs. The lungs attempt to grow larger in order to allow more air in because breath equals life, as we all know. No breath equals death.
      While you are in the fear or death fright conflict, you notice no symptoms of “disease”, except you have cold hands, cold feet, you can’t sleep, you awaken at 3 AM every night, you have little appetite. During the war, millions of people were in fear of the bombing of their homes and cities where the war was most active. Fearing for their lives, their loved ones in the war, their ability to survive. The food in the stores was sparse due to shortages. This lasted for 4 long years! The longer the conflict, the worse the healing phase. Within 2 weeks of the German Chancellor announcing the end of WWI, these millions of people ALL went into the healing phase all at the same time. It is during the healing phase that you experience symptoms of illness! What is the healing phase of the bronchia widening? Severe bronchitis, pneumonia. The body attempts to refill this lost tissue and you experience inflammation, fever, coughing, body aches, fatigue, etc. What is the healing phase of the extra lung tissue that grew? Decomposing of the tissue by TB bacteria and fungi. The symptoms of this healing phase are: severe coughing up of blood and tissue, fever, inflammation, severe mucous, body aches, fatigue. During this decomposing of the extra tissue (tumor), the body expels a lot of protein, and without replenishment, severe protein loss can result in death. Antibiotics did not exist yet. If TB bacteria does not exist in a person or they have been vaccinated against TB (big mistake), then the tumor will simply encapsulate and become dormant and not harm you. Who died during the Spanish Flu? Mainly the poor who could not afford to buy meat and proper nourishment, and the people who were directly impacted by the bombings and destruction of their homes.
      Millions of people suffered fear and death frights during the fighting of WWI, and millions of people all went into healing at the end of it. Not everyone was affected because not everyone suffered the same way.
      It’s not a “flu”, it’s not something you “catch”. It’s biological, meaningful, and unavoidable. One hundred years later, a Fear Campaign begins, using the media to spread it......

  • @roscoetosscobble5657
    @roscoetosscobble5657 3 роки тому +30

    You can’t possibly know what these videos have meant to me personally. After years of being awake for 2, 3 days and nights in a row, when I recently went 4 days and nights without sleep I found your podcasts and for the first time in years, slept 3 nights in a row. It was the information learned about light that really helped. Thank you, thank you, thank you.

    • @roscoetosscobble5657
      @roscoetosscobble5657 3 роки тому +1

      Once I establish that what I am doing to get light cues works consistently, I aim to work on making number of hours of sleep per night consistent.

    • @ioan-darianladunca7780
      @ioan-darianladunca7780 3 місяці тому

      How has your life been in the three years since you received that information about outside light?

  • @global_serenity
    @global_serenity 3 роки тому +159

    I just discovered these podcasts. I am learning so much and taking so many notes that I feel like I am back in school. This information is useful and fascinating. I plan to watch them all. Thank you.

    • @pranavbhushan5391
      @pranavbhushan5391 2 роки тому +4

      Me too. I discovered them a lot earlier but I have to watch them again because I forgot a lot and this time, I am also taking notes.

    • @hosseinvendetta2844
      @hosseinvendetta2844 Рік тому

      Does anyone know what`s the meaning of Bismal that Andrew Huberman said ? I couldn`t find it`s meaning on Google.

  • @donatotaglialatela854
    @donatotaglialatela854 3 роки тому +263

    Every monday i'm here, It's starting to become a habit

  • @DreamsofStardust75
    @DreamsofStardust75 3 роки тому +16

    You just answered in a scientific way, why I kept having dreams about my ex-husband for so many years after our divorce. I always tried to tackle this from a spiritual view point and you just helped me understand what my brain was doing in a matter of 20 minutes. It's been self-induced therapy! WOW!!

  • @gemmamccabekelly4629
    @gemmamccabekelly4629 3 роки тому +41

    As a Psychotherapist, I am deeply thankful for you taking the time to educate us all. Thank you so much.

  • @jeffferris5880
    @jeffferris5880 Рік тому +47

    This man is life changing gift to all of us❤.

  • @shirleykathan-sayess5764
    @shirleykathan-sayess5764 7 місяців тому +2

    Absolutely fascinating! I dream nightly and remember my dreams. I swear that my dream life is far more interesting than my awake life. I have longed to experience lucid dreaming, but never have.
    ❤ Shirley

  • @rishavkumarsingh2245
    @rishavkumarsingh2245 3 роки тому +26

    Whenever you explain a concept/theory, you simultaneously give an example too, that helps me understand, keep it up.

  • @mikekiraly1967
    @mikekiraly1967 3 роки тому +21

    Please know your efforts are deeply appreciated. Your work is important, and making it accessible to all is very generous.

  • @xorencryption
    @xorencryption 3 роки тому +52

    For once UA-cam recommendations proved to be very useful and I have been consuming any speech ,presentation, pod cast you have ever produced 😀

    • @yes0r787
      @yes0r787 3 роки тому

      Yes! So am I, slowly.

  • @chezfavi
    @chezfavi 3 роки тому +50

    Got to love his enthusiasm and passion for neuroscience! Plus over one hour of free educational content by this guy, it's just mindblowing. Thank you!

    • @hosseinvendetta2844
      @hosseinvendetta2844 Рік тому

      Does anyone know what`s the meaning of Bismal that Andrew Huberman said ? I couldn`t find it`s meaning on Google.

    • @HamedDaemkar
      @HamedDaemkar Рік тому

      good luck dude

    • @hosseinvendetta2844
      @hosseinvendetta2844 Рік тому

      @@HamedDaemkar do you know the meaning of bismal by any chance..?

  • @softgoodsint
    @softgoodsint Рік тому +2

    What an exceptionally effective and gifted teacher/presenter - obviously as enthusiastic as he is knowledgeable. And I see his upcoming one on "Alcohol & my health" - I suspect I might be breaking that questionable habit after watching that presentation.
    Compelling listen, thank you Mr. Huberman!

  • @RubberDuckling5789
    @RubberDuckling5789 3 роки тому +56

    These podcasts are just incredible. Been waiting for such quality informational videos for years!

  • @katiemarcionese8176
    @katiemarcionese8176 3 роки тому +125

    You need to upload recordings of the snoring for our deep sleep so we can retain all this information 🐶❤️

    • @hubermanlab
      @hubermanlab  3 роки тому +79

      That’s the plan!

    • @yuriylysak4792
      @yuriylysak4792 3 роки тому +3

      ohh yees sounds like a good technique to memorize all of the content :D you were so attentive to previous episodes when Andrew stated that it amplifies a memorization process :)

    • @dp2404
      @dp2404 3 роки тому +4

      🤣🤣🤣
      Great idea. We also need a mic 🎤 for Costello snoring so we can hear it better

  • @Dessauvages1
    @Dessauvages1 3 роки тому +60

    We love Costello however loud he is. Thank you for the info. Fascinating stuff

    • @hubermanlab
      @hubermanlab  3 роки тому +14

      Thank you. We appreciate that.

    • @susieq1699
      @susieq1699 3 роки тому +3

      I listened with my earbuds and could really hear Costello. Until I fully realized what it was I kept wondering why my dog was snoring so loud during the day. She typically saves that for nighttime. It wasn’t her. 😂

  • @thehardhustlers
    @thehardhustlers Рік тому +31

    I'm really glad Dr. Huberman has such a large and positive community here on UA-cam. These videos are bigger for shaping my life more than any other person/creator. Thank you!

    • @hosseinvendetta2844
      @hosseinvendetta2844 Рік тому

      Does anyone know what`s the meaning of Bismal that Andrew Huberman said ? I couldn`t find it`s meaning on Google.

  • @dragonnym
    @dragonnym 3 роки тому +3

    Thank you so much Andrew for all your knowledge, interest and generousity to provide this science and your brilliant mind and kind heart to help humanity cope with our sometimes mysterious bodies and emotions. So much suffering can be prevented or minimised with your offerings. I love everything about the podcasts. So comprehensive, informative, well sequenced and just generally enjoyable. I see so many people benefiting from your work in such a broad range of life events, job applications, and strengthening connection to our bodies, nature and community. I have such a huge teacher crush.Your voice accompanies me during my day, and no doubt my sleep. I think of you as I alter my breathing to cope with life, as I eat my fibrous vegetables first, as I sunbathe my face for my circadian clock, as I look at my drawing of an apple as I go to bed, as I see others in distress from lack of REM sleep or non-complimentary eating habits. Your work is changing the world and no doubt will reach many more and bring your love into their lives. Much love

  • @ricardotemporalgrein4482
    @ricardotemporalgrein4482 3 роки тому +37

    Hey Dr.Andrew, just wanted to come here and say thanks. Im a lawyer from brazil, actually with 27 years old, had an brain aneurism with 24. Doctors here in Brazil said that aneurism doesnt cause pain... But i've been experiencing disconfort on my brain since then... I was kinda traumatized by the experience of going through this so young, so Im gradually trying to learn whatever I can to take control of my brain and body back. Thanks for this free content, wish I could thank you in person someday soon.

    • @Marcotonio
      @Marcotonio 3 роки тому

      Força, Ricardo! 30 anos na cara e só agora aprendi como dormir direito, graças ao Dr. Huberman.
      We all have our walks of life, these tools seem to be helping everyone in some way or another, no matter their backgrounds. Amazing.

    • @Danilobioaterramento
      @Danilobioaterramento 2 роки тому

      Oi Ricardo você deveria considerar o bioaterramento, vai diminuir sua dor e afinar seu sangue. Veja bioaterramento no Instagram, ou earthing ou grounding . Boa sorte !

    • @Bigboro
      @Bigboro Рік тому

      @@Danilobioaterramento ou punheta ! Eu bato 4 punhetas antes de dormir e consigo um sono profundo. Abraços 🤗

    • @Danilobioaterramento
      @Danilobioaterramento Рік тому

      @@Bigboro sim o orgasmo relaxa , já fiz isso tb. Mas é interessante vc aprender a deixar a testosterona crescer ao longo da semana, por isso q muitos lutadores não tem orgasmo antes de lutas. Caminhe descalço em piso de pedra ou grama ou cimento cru por 30min inspirando profundo exalando lento

  • @Cinerouquine
    @Cinerouquine 3 роки тому +282

    Since the movie theaters are closed, every Monday morning feels like a movie premiere...

  • @maribelmontero5911
    @maribelmontero5911 3 роки тому +7

    in this brave new world of general sensory deprivation, your stimulating neuroscience lectures are life-saving: thank-you, Andrew!

  • @gravijax
    @gravijax Рік тому +5

    This is an incredible series. I’m not kidding when I say these last 5 episodes have likely been the most informative and transformative hours of my life (even including my masters!). After years of low mood and general anxiety, I’m only a week into adapting some of the techniques you discuss but already reaping dividends (particularly the impact of light exposure). I am actively sharing this podcast to everyone I know. A wholehearted thank you.

  • @SegnoongeS
    @SegnoongeS 3 роки тому +7

    Andrew maaaan. Internet is greatful for people like You. Thank You

  • @ayacabrera
    @ayacabrera 3 роки тому +474

    "I'm not saying that people's alien abductions were not legitimate alien abductions. How could I, I wasn't there. And if I was there I wouldn't tell you 'cause that would make me an alien. And I wouldn't want you to know." - Andrew Huberman at 27:18 🤣🤣🤣👽

    • @mendositamm3878
      @mendositamm3878 3 роки тому +33

      And he didn't even blink!!!!

    • @Cinerouquine
      @Cinerouquine 3 роки тому +10

      I know! Funniest thing today 😂

    • @mamadukes3551
      @mamadukes3551 3 роки тому +4

      😂 😸 😹 😂 😂

    • @Cinerouquine
      @Cinerouquine 3 роки тому +13

      @Important History Lessons - Dr Huberman basically saying « Nobody consulted me on the design. » 😂

    • @ayacabrera
      @ayacabrera 3 роки тому +8

      @Important History Lessons something an alien would say! 🙄😆

  • @manuelap6322
    @manuelap6322 3 роки тому +21

    I wasn't a podcast person until I stumbled on yours! Thanks for spreading knowledge and information. I love this and I'm so excited for next weeks' topic!

  • @deln644
    @deln644 9 місяців тому +6

    Great poscast.
    Dreams are an untapped resource of creativity and inspiration.
    I am 70 years of age and have been writing my dreams down in 'dream journals' since I was a teenager. Having documented my dreams throughout my life, I am convinced that it is the content of our dreams that the science community should be researching, and where we go when we are asleep. The ancient Egyptian, Greek and Roman civilisations were all fascinated by dreams. Why do we, who consider ourselves intelligent, in this so-called ‘civilised’ society that we live in, simply dismiss dreams? But very few people, it seems, are interested in dreams at all, possibly because they do not remember them, and the science community seem to only be interested in our sleep patterns and ignore the actual content of our dreams, which I find absurd.
    I believe that when we are asleep here, we are awake there (in the ‘dream’ world). But where 'there' is, I have no idea. However, I do believe that the dream world(s) are other dimensions, and I have come to believe this because of many years of writing down my dreams and studying them. Certainly, time is different there. A minute of dreaming here can contain several hours of wandering around there. Distance too is strange. You can look across a lake at a tree and see a tree, but you are also able to see the leaves of the tree close up, the veins in the leaves, the texture of the leaves, the branches and the bark. Or you can look out of a window at someone walking across a field and see them both at a distance and also close-up at the same time.
    I have 12 books, all filled with my life's dreams and nightmares, my lucid dreams, my flying dreams and what I call 'message' dreams, dreams in which there is no visual image, just a word or two, a spoken line, or a few words or names eg. 'In the mudhut eye of the honey god.' I have typed up many of them in Word documents, but there are just so many dreams that I have barely touched the surface.
    I have been telling people for years that 'dreams are an untapped resource of creativity and inspiration' and have used my dreams to create many drawings and illustrations, also I have gathered together several dreams and written a few short stories.
    Dreaming (even nightmares) can be fun when you write them down and analyse them…
    Some of my dreams:
    Train to Narnia
    I was on a tube train with a load of schoolgirls going to Narnia. The journey to Narnia was mostly vertical. We tried once or twice previously to get in, but it was closed. The train hurtled down the near vertical track, across many other rail tracks on a horizontal section down which we could see the other trains, waiting to let us pass.
    Journey in a Long Glass Hall-like Vehicle Through the Galaxies
    Had a great dream last night. I dreamed that a friend of mine was driving a long - very long - glass-like vehicle, which had a glass ceiling, through which I could see the sky which was filled with spiral clouds (or were they galaxies?). They were beautiful and filled the sky. Strangely, we were moving forward, but he was at the back of this long vehicle, facing the other way! As we moved along, I called out to him that the sky was beautiful tonight, but he was so far away, driving, that he couldn't hear me. I made my way down to the back of the vehicle, where he was situated, and repeated what I had said. The Vehicle was so long that it resembled a long hallway.
    Walking to Charing Cross
    Had another dream that I was walking home from work with someone in Soho. We were heading to Charing Cross station to get the train to SE London. Then somehow, I was by myself -" and really tall - walking high above the trees in that little park in Leicester Square (where the cinemas were). I was trying to tread really carefully in case I trod on the people hurrying home far below. When I reached Charing Cross Station, I found my companion again. He asked where I went. I told him that I was there walking to Charing Cross too. 'Well,' he said, ''I didn't see you.' 'You didn't look up', I said.
    Last Order for Oysters (a dream with no visuals)
    'Last order for oysters!'
    Japanese Teabag Soup
    I dreamed that me, another person and a Japanese girl friend of mine went to a Japanese restaurant to have a meal. She chose what we would have, but when it arrived, I saw to my horror that it contained many different coloured teabags - blue, red green, yellow.... I fished one out, then another. Then I realised that the 'soup' was just tea, which I hate!
    Tenebrous
    A friend of mine was being really secretive. He had something hidden in (what looked like) an underground car park. I went down and down to find out what he and another guy had been working on. I knocked down a wooden wall and found it. It was a spaceship! I walked around, trying to look over the walls at it (or was I IN it?) The word 'Tenebrous' keep cropping up. Had he called it 'Tenebrous'? It was gigantic! But I didn't really care if it flew or fell out of the sky...
    Painting Shadows in a School Playground
    I was looking down on a group of young people who were hiding in the alleyways behind a school playground. They were whispering and trying to decide how best to slip away unheard and unseen (from what?), while I was hurriedly drawing and colouring the shadows around them of the chain link fence, the walls, the school building, so that they were darker and so that the youths could not be seen and could escape unseen...
    Horses, Sharks and Vampires
    I dreamed (viewpoint from below) that I was looking up at many horses treading water in the sea. I could only see their lower bodies and their legs. They were being attacked by vampires, who took hold of a leg, grasping it with their hands and feet, sinking their teeth in and breaking the bones with such a loud snap/crack that it made me jerk in my sleep. Later, the vampires became sharks circling the horses. They sharks bit into the horses legs and tore them off one by one. Again, with such a loud snap/crack that it made me jump in my sleep (and Oscar, my dog, leapt off the bed and wouldn’t get back on again.)

    • @MatiaFidi
      @MatiaFidi 7 місяців тому

      The way you explained ‘Journey in a long glass hall like vehicle through the galaxies’ made me feel like I have dreamt something like that before.

  • @daniellaferreiragil9326
    @daniellaferreiragil9326 Рік тому +24

    I genuinely love this guy, Huberman. Thank you

  • @josephdtarango
    @josephdtarango 3 роки тому +1

    The ability to focus and clearly communicate key takeaways shows how Andrew is truly an exceptional scientist. Keep up the impactful research and sharing of knowledge!

  • @green_adventures
    @green_adventures 3 роки тому +27

    Am I the only one listening to these podcast episodes multiple times??

  • @marthahorton5350
    @marthahorton5350 3 роки тому +19

    I must be deaf, I honestly don't hear the snoring. I was listening to the podcast on spotify while I was walking and getting my morning light I didn't hear it🤷‍♀️. One thing that I keep hearing is how important regularity and routine are for our brain. 5 hrs of sleep everyday vs. 9 hrs every 3 day, that's good to know.
    As for Angetinian Tango I strongly suggest you maybe start just listening to the music and familiarize yourself with the tempo. As a former begginer ballroom instructor, I can tell you it's a very difficult and sophisticated dance. It's like going for clean jerk press when you have never lifted a dumbell 😄. Thanks again for this amazing content!

    • @winbalingit8502
      @winbalingit8502 3 роки тому +1

      Thank you! Will be happy to attempt dancing!!💃🏽😂👍🏽

    • @marthahorton5350
      @marthahorton5350 3 роки тому

      @@winbalingit8502 Maybe if you learn Argentinian Tango you might dance with Andrew some day! 😄 I was staring to learn Kizomba pre-covid. Hopefully will restart after vaccination! Dance is so good for the brain! 🧠❤

    • @winbalingit8502
      @winbalingit8502 3 роки тому

      Martha, that idea is intimidating as heck!!! Better Dr. Huberman suspect that I am lame than to have it confirmed!!!!😂🙈✌🏽

    • @marthahorton5350
      @marthahorton5350 3 роки тому

      @@winbalingit8502 🤣🤣 thanks for the laugh!

  • @anneis8319
    @anneis8319 3 роки тому +13

    I had a personal experience with EDMR.
    I was recounting a story to a psychologist about a traumatic childhood event. It was so traumatic that I started to feel numb and dizzy and then when the pyschologist did the EDMR on my eyes. ( I had to follow her fingers moving from side to side)
    In about 5 minutes I went from complete fear to complete peace. It was so quick!

    • @hubermanlab
      @hubermanlab  3 роки тому +4

      That’s an impressive shift! Thank you for sharing!

    • @anneis8319
      @anneis8319 3 роки тому +2

      @@hubermanlab Thankyou for your great work Andrew. Love it

  • @krmmzz
    @krmmzz 3 роки тому +1

    There is only one corner of the universe you can be certain of improving, and that's your own self.
    Make happen!
    Thanks professor Andrew D. Huberman

  • @wretchedsoullikemine
    @wretchedsoullikemine Рік тому +2

    I can’t thank you enough for sharing all of this in a digestible way, and helping me finally make more sense of some intense experiences I’ve had. My mother has paranoid schizophrenia and I worry I might also, I feel like I have a delicate psyche, and I can identify how recreational drugs (specifically the cleansing phase, a few weeks into quitting them) and emotionally heightened states have induced some profoundly intense experiences. Understanding it better prevents delusions of grandeur. And helps me realize the importance of staying drug free. For better or worse I do not trust others to diagnose me or prescribe me with medication for my brain, not after I’ve seen how it affects my mom. Thank you for helping me take control of my life.

  • @benwalker5803
    @benwalker5803 3 роки тому +10

    The best Podcast since a long time! Evidence based and deep into the subject and not this currently typical "do this today to become a superhuman" sh*t. I would be happy to hear a lot more from you Prof. Huberman! Thank you so much!

  • @scotth1807
    @scotth1807 3 роки тому +9

    I thought I was dreaming about watching The Hube-Cast show about dreams, but then realized I'm just up at like 4 am ACTUALLY watching it!!! Can't wait for Monday Mornings, keep 'em coming!

    • @rishavkumarsingh2245
      @rishavkumarsingh2245 3 роки тому

      Waking at 4am!!, Brother, you are lacking some REM sleep, if you are sleeping late.

  • @robertmartin513
    @robertmartin513 3 роки тому +430

    If you sold Snoozing Costello stickers or shirts I bet you could fund this podcast.

    • @hawkarae
      @hawkarae 3 роки тому +25

      I love your creativity and generosity. If we work together we can change the world ❤🤍🖤💛🤎

    • @agee1961
      @agee1961 3 роки тому +32

      I'm with you I want a sleeping Costello shirt ASAP!!

    • @Cinerouquine
      @Cinerouquine 3 роки тому +20

      Would buy.

    • @ernewmarket
      @ernewmarket 3 роки тому +20

      I’ll buy the t shirt. For me, my bf and my daughter. Please do it!

    • @imm0rtalitypassi0n
      @imm0rtalitypassi0n 3 роки тому +13

      100%

  • @Fiawordweaver
    @Fiawordweaver Рік тому +1

    I was tasked to watch my new baby brother at 6. I remember be proud of being given such an important task. Since my brother was comfortable with my frequent interactions, I was able to calm his crying when other family members couldn’t. At 8 i was tasked to watch the next baby brother along with my two year old brother. 6 year olds can conceptualize and problem solve more than they are given credit.

  • @bigalexg
    @bigalexg Рік тому +1

    Started meditating in 1973. During meditation I eventually experienced a profound calmness that was very unlike regular waking consciousness. From time to time "difficult" memories of things that happened during my day or maybe further in the past would pop up, as if my brain said "here, what went wrong and how do we fix it" and feeling so increadibly clam and fearless I reimagined the experience but this time "protected" by this unshakeable calmness, freely willing to look at the things that had been so painful and examine them, and my own mistakes, which were numerous, LOL - I would see myself going about things differently - not reacting with anxiety or avoidance but calmy doing the rational thing and finding it worked. "damn, I thought, if this happens again REMEMBER this, do it like this!" and then came step 2, I gradually gained the presence of mind to recall the meditative reimagining and actually do it. This took many times and a lot of trial and error - it was a slow evolutionary process over decades of twice daily meditation.
    This way countless painful and inefficient things I had been mindlessly doing got corrected. And I "reconditioned" my emotional response, eventually feeling that calmness all the time.
    I am convinced meditation does something similar to the sleep in the way it reconditions away the traumas, big and small, and removes the pain and the fear etc. But you are wide wake during the process, which would seem to help, to make it stick and be recallable so to speak. Never tried to do any of this, it all unfolded more or less spontaneously, though I did consciously appreciate it and help it along a bit, but I never turned this into a conscious method per se. I doubt such an effort would have gone as deep or as authentic as the one that unfolded on its own. Though over the long lapse of time becoming privy to the mechanics of this I did eventually start doing my own cognitive therapy all the time. Now it's like there is a dispassionate therapist always self-talking, anticipating, adjusting etc., laughing at me worldly self and I care or worry little about that little guy's ego. I'm something else, watching it all go by in amusement and delight.

    • @kau0303
      @kau0303 Рік тому

      Hello, and thank you for this comment. I have done yoga in the past and felt happiness and calmness like none other, they it felt like all my problems i felt so agonized by were just tiny dots like stars in sky that i can observe from afar. I lost touch of it for a timebeing due to my health and i am trying to get back through meditation. Did you do the type of meditation where you focus on your inner body and breathing? Or outward world? Your comment gave me so much hope and i really congratulate you for being able to achieve your bliss in life.

    • @bigalexg
      @bigalexg Рік тому

      @@kau0303 It was eyers closed, mantra meditation but we just let the mind gravitate to the mantra, we didn't try to think it clearly - so it was "do nothing" meditation but with a mantra you didn't "try" to think in any particular way, neither did you try to stop thinking - this actually worked, if I let my mind gravitate to whatever form of the mantra was there then it would carry me down to deeper relaxation. It was so easy and so pleasant to meditate this way I was able to do it twice a day for many, many years, with clockwork regularity. Good thing I stuck with it because at first it didn't seem all that impactful. I'd say very gently and patiently add it to your daily routine with no particular expectations and after some time you will notice things are starting to happen.

  • @eduardoretana952
    @eduardoretana952 3 роки тому +3

    Excellent Podcast. I'm an engineer, but someway passionate about how our body and brain work. I wouldn't have noticed the tiny misspoken details, but what has amazed me it's Huberman's humbleness to recognize his tiny errors according to others' corrections. I want to emphasize 'tiny'. Dr. Huberman, that increases even more the confidence and trust which I hear this podcasts with. Thank you and I'll be following your new releases. Greetings from Costa Rica!

  • @adrianacallerio3193
    @adrianacallerio3193 3 роки тому +73

    Could you please put a podcast together focused on addiction and codependency as it relates to what we know about what is happening in terms of neurotransmitters?

    • @hubermanlab
      @hubermanlab  3 роки тому +68

      Yes. Will do! Fascinating topic.

    • @sheilarustad7199
      @sheilarustad7199 3 роки тому +5

      @@hubermanlab Can't wait for the podcast(s) on addiction....please include sugar/eating disorders as much as you can too...... Thank you:). I am finding all this information so helpful for myself and for my work!

    • @jugb30
      @jugb30 3 роки тому +2

      @@sheilarustad7199 eating disorders and food addiction is a huge topic. Would love it to be included in the topics.

    • @hankriseshill1898
      @hankriseshill1898 3 роки тому +6

      @@hubermanlab awesome! I’m a pothead that is constantly slipping back into my old habits. Very much looking forward to this.
      ...no pressure!!

    • @dp2404
      @dp2404 3 роки тому +3

      @@hankriseshill1898 I would love to hear about that too

  • @cygarner1834
    @cygarner1834 3 роки тому +5

    I'm so grateful for the opportunity to be informed of the things that can be beneficial to my life and keeping my activities and body and mind to coordinate effectively so I can be sure to be making myself do the things that I can to be a better friend, and Father, for the kids I'm so grateful to be their dad.

  • @seekingWackernagel
    @seekingWackernagel 3 роки тому +8

    I'm heading back to school next year for the first time in a long while, so I'm going through all the episodes of this podcast and taking notes of all the pearls of wisdom and tools I can implement. This first section on sleep and the nervous system has been a game changer! Viewing morning and evening light, in particular, has radically improved my quality and duration of sleep in a really short amount of time. Thank you!

    • @ilovecheese111
      @ilovecheese111 Рік тому

      Hi I went back to college recently at age 26 and I hadn’t been in school since age 19. My best advice is to just be yourself and try your best on all of the homework!

  • @habib2003
    @habib2003 3 роки тому

    I have been listening to his various podcasts and interviews all across UA-cam, and I’m very excited to know he now has his own personal channel. Hubbard is an amazing and wonderful teacher. I love how I’m able to follow complex concepts of neurology because he explains it in such simple and effective way. I love it!!! Totally recommend listening to all this professor has to say.

  • @Catalystresource
    @Catalystresource 3 роки тому +8

    I used EMDR in therapy for childhood sexual abuse and it was very effective, and then I did it on my own. Off topic but I also use EFT, emotional freedom technique, and am a practitioner in it. Different method, similar outcome. The brain is miraculous and there are so many tools now to influence it! Check out Jim Kwik's videos too.

  • @aletich2
    @aletich2 3 роки тому +3

    Andrew, I'm so so grateful for your work. The tools and explanations that you offer are a great help to my life and also to my clients. I am a psychologist and psychotherapist from Santiago, Chile, and your lessons and tools are changing my clients lives!!! Big hug and forever grateful to you!!!

  • @polymathpark
    @polymathpark 3 роки тому +39

    It's great to have a neuroscience podcast on the same level as Sapolsky's human behavioral biology lectures at Stanford. Keep up the good work.

    • @hosseinvendetta2844
      @hosseinvendetta2844 Рік тому

      Does anyone know what`s the meaning of Bismal that Andrew Huberman said ? I couldn`t find it`s meaning on Google.

    • @kirillslatin
      @kirillslatin 10 місяців тому

      it was "abysmal"@@hosseinvendetta2844

    • @ahem8013
      @ahem8013 9 місяців тому

      @@hosseinvendetta2844abysmal? it means very bad.

  • @KinGJA1M3S
    @KinGJA1M3S Рік тому +2

    Wow!! Thanks Dr.H. I appreciate you speaking of your knowledge to Everyone that doesn't know much. You clearly answered what has happened to me 2 or 3 times in my mid 20s. I'll be 37 in a week and I've always wondered if it was just me that it's been happening to.. waking up at 3-4 A.m and not being able to move your body & Just your eyes is some scary S**T!!

  • @ac12484
    @ac12484 Рік тому +1

    On of the best videos on the channel! (Been watching many.)

  • @tb8827
    @tb8827 3 роки тому +6

    Your voice is soothing. Sometimes I put on podcasts or videos that contain deep male voices to facilitate sleep. That, or recorded thunderstorms. My husband's snoring does not help me.
    Thanks for the tips.

  • @olenagreatlifeu4200
    @olenagreatlifeu4200 3 роки тому +7

    Love the explanation about children’s emotions and that their emotions take time to untangle during sleep. This helps me understand my child better. And thank you for mentioning Sarah McKay!! Thank you!

  • @Mercury_EG
    @Mercury_EG Рік тому +7

    I'm a vet with PTSD and they tried EMDR with me having a variable effect. As you said it was good for specific events but, as you can imagine, war has a complex manner and is tough to just target one feeling or event. Paired with a total lack of sleep on deployments to help process this stuff, it becomes very ingrained.

    • @teresaspensley5640
      @teresaspensley5640 Рік тому

      EMDR is really good 👍🏻 I never remember any dreams .

    • @jenniferharwood6604
      @jenniferharwood6604 Рік тому

      Try mixing EMDR with safe sound protocol (SSP) and tapping.

    • @pinnihriver8355
      @pinnihriver8355 Рік тому

      I am sorry you had that experience. I can well understand that the combination of war and sleep deprivation is the worst circumstance possible. I hope you find a way to heal.

  • @christinemuga5716
    @christinemuga5716 3 роки тому +1

    It's a beautiful habit.....
    How foods and Nutrients control our emotions.....that got me rethinking how I imagine my health versus how I conduct myself.....

  • @andrewwoode
    @andrewwoode 3 роки тому +20

    9:00 - Neuromodulators - bias systems in our brain
    Slow-Wave
    11:30 - Slow-wave sleep - no acetylcholine, which is associated with focus. little Norepineferine. Seretonin more abundant, associated with bliss-wellbeing-relax.
    13:17 - Slowwave / non-wave sleep (lumping): consolidates motor patterns, movements, learning - fine or coarse movements. (dance, piano, etc)
    13:58 - Slowwave sleep helps with remembering specific details about specific events.
    14:47 - slowwave sleep early in the night (3-4 hours into night)
    17:35 - REM throughtout the night, more so as you get towards morning
    18:40 - REM becasue of connection between Pons (on brain stem), and areas of the thalamus and top of brainstem that are invloved in generating movements in all dirrections
    REM
    19:40 - serotinin and epinephrine is absolutely absent in REM.
    20:25 - REM sleep, we are in atonia (paralyzed). And we are dreaming/ hallucinating.
    21:29 - with epinephrine (the hormine for fear and anxiety from adrenals and brain) gone in REM sleep,
    22:20 - it allows us to replay memories or event hallucinations in the "absence" of fear and anxiety, chemically blocked.
    23:30 - so nightwares may most likely occur during slow-wave
    25:00 - waking up stressed
    29:50 - lack of REM sleep makes people irritable - catastrofizes small things, can't unlearn emotional components (see 34:00)
    30:40 - replay of spacial activity during REM sleep (navigating new place like a room or city. Solidifed in few days if important)
    31:45 - forming a relation witth rules and algorithms - forming meaning
    33:15 - lack of Rem - making odd associations (lump, batch things together), things look destorted. Hallucianations with prologed lack of REM
    34:00 - too much associations
    34:50 - eliminates meanings that do not matter, REM. (children vs adults - children have too much conductivty. Ice cream truck example)
    EMDR - eye movement desensitation reprocessing
    38:00 - one of few behavior treatmeant approved by the american psychology association for the treatment of trama
    38:45 - recount trama with laternal eye movements, which 40:30 mimick us movething through space.
    41:30 - EMDR studies, publishes and credibility. Laternal eyemonts suppress activity of the amygdula (brain region involved in threat detections, stress, anxiety, fear). Repeat trama with suppressed/ reduced emotional load with this EMDR - 43:05. Better for single events
    45:06 - Ketamine triggers long term potentiation (change in connductivity, so less intensity to trigger). See chicken soup example.
    52:55 - more important to have the same amount of sleep each night, then total sleep time, for learning new infomation and pefomance (54:25). Limit your variation in sleep, as...
    55:10 - for every hour variation in sleep, there was a 17% reduction in performance
    56:00 - when bladder is full, there is a neural connections that wakes us up (anxiety invoking). Bed wetting is failure of circuits to maturate
    57:00 - remember dreams more - drink more water to go in and out of dreams due to walking up constantly
    58:50 - increase slow wave sleep through resistance exercise

    • @DihelsonMendonca
      @DihelsonMendonca Рік тому

      Thank you so much for these timestamps on important information. 🎉❤

    • @andrewwoode
      @andrewwoode Рік тому +1

      @@DihelsonMendonca No prob man

    • @missjoya1299
      @missjoya1299 3 місяці тому

      Thank you ❤

  • @theemperor4901
    @theemperor4901 3 роки тому +22

    Started from episode 1, I am here to stay.

  • @maryam4everful
    @maryam4everful 3 роки тому +3

    What an amazing gift you are giving to the world. Thank you for your concise, thoughtful and generous information

  • @belovedchild9812
    @belovedchild9812 3 роки тому +1

    I used to have excellent dream recall. I awakened to the fact that I have childhood trauma and a series of abusive relationships in adulthood. This happened 3 years ago. For the last 3 years I had zero dream recall. I’ve been doing a lot of work on the trauma and made very good progress. In the last few weeks I have started to remember fragments of dreams.

  • @themis828
    @themis828 3 роки тому +4

    I love these pod casts. There is so much information in them, I literally listen to the on repeat for days before moving onto the next episode. I find i take in more if I listen to it over and over rather than just once.. thank you for covering so much in each episode and sticking to the subject. Side note.. these have changed the way I live, in daily day to day tasks. Thank you so much 🙏

  • @JaeggerPendoley
    @JaeggerPendoley 3 роки тому +15

    Making Monday mornings magical 🧙‍♀️ 🙌🙌🙌

  • @donbeck5771
    @donbeck5771 3 роки тому +24

    Put the podcast episode number in the title, it'll show up more in people's feeds and is easier to scroll through to find what you're looking for.

  • @winbalingit8502
    @winbalingit8502 3 роки тому +5

    I think that Dr. Huberman’s skate/punk roots come out in subtle ways, and having a similar background from my Santa Cruz roots, I really notice and appreciate it!!!😎✌🏽

  • @DeadbeatGamer
    @DeadbeatGamer Рік тому

    Thanks to knowing more about testing if you are dreaming, trying to float longer than a few seconds proved it was a dream.

  • @micacherimoya2498
    @micacherimoya2498 Рік тому +2

    Such a good episode again. You basically just explained to me why I recovered from c-ptsd within 18 months without actiual therapy or medication of any kind i think. Since I go on long walks pretty much daily with my dog, like long walks. That is when significant memories tend to come up, but I feel I process them effortlessly whilst walking. EMDR ok:) I do call those walks my therapy, I guess that was more accurate than I realized. I sleep well again too thankfully. That sure helps immensely. The wisdom and tools you are providing ongoing Andrew, are simply off the charts. Thank you. 🌼

  • @V.Day24
    @V.Day24 3 роки тому +23

    Leave Castello alone and let him sleep. This has been a very interesting and exciting series. Looks forward to learning more.

  • @cholakicha
    @cholakicha 3 роки тому +5

    Castello might become your trademark, Doc! Nothing to be sorry about :)
    You mentioned students sleeping in your lectures. I can see why. You are a kind of comforting fellow. Nice voice, calm friendly energy.
    Rock on!

  • @shubhreetlalli8671
    @shubhreetlalli8671 3 роки тому +20

    I didn't pay so much attention in my university class as I do to your podcast. And I paid for going to class!!!!
    And I'm not even from a biology or science background.

    • @bharath952
      @bharath952 3 роки тому +1

      me too man. Im from a business background. i listen to huberman for controlling my emotion when investing

  • @sonjaforrester9255
    @sonjaforrester9255 2 роки тому +2

    The sound of Costello has always been so relaxing and comforting to me!♥️. I'm sorry he is gone.

    • @kathrynrice638
      @kathrynrice638 Рік тому

      Oh no. What happened? I must not have got to that episode

  • @sunshinelively
    @sunshinelively Рік тому +1

    Helps explains why I find motorcycle rides so relaxing - all that looking around not to mention everything else that goes with riding!

  • @tonibojones
    @tonibojones 3 роки тому +4

    At the beginning of the podcast and I can tell I'm one of those people experiencing lucid dreaming ever so often, and having dreams that are not really restorative.

  • @benjaminscanlan381
    @benjaminscanlan381 3 роки тому +15

    You're gonna change the world. From a fellow former skate punk

  • @amf2701
    @amf2701 3 роки тому +7

    9:44 Neuromodulators vs. music -- this is such a brilliant and beautiful analogy! The creativity and humor in these episodes don't go unnoticed. They're much appreciated.
    For a future episode: how many neuroscientists does it take to explain a joke? The neuroscience of what makes us laugh. A neural circuit for jocularity? Looking forward to it! :)

  • @TheKadster
    @TheKadster 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you for the free high level education Andrew.
    Grade school ain't got shit on what I've learned from this podcast so far.
    I'm actually benefitting from what I learn here.

  • @SkyRiverhawk
    @SkyRiverhawk 3 роки тому

    I experience sleep paralysis, with hallucinations and have done so, since I was three years old: alien abductions, spirit visitations, being murdered/strangled by a faceless man sitting on my chest. Understanding why this happens has been empowering as I hae been practicing consciously manipulating the hallucination and it has help significantly to sleep longer than 3 hrs a night without fear. Thank you for being part of my tx plan : )

  • @adrianagNeuroFit
    @adrianagNeuroFit 2 роки тому +21

    Love rewatching this and hearing Costello in the background. He will always be remembered, and can't to see the new member of the Huberman family soon🐾🐾🧠💪🏽💜

  • @sonals2021
    @sonals2021 3 роки тому +6

    Listening to your podcasts is one of my night time sleep rituals, I find the voice soothing and the fact that I have to pay attention takes away from my sleep anxiety. How much information would I take in if I listen to your lectures whilst falling asleep?

  • @corinacarson1616
    @corinacarson1616 3 роки тому +9

    I would love to learn more about neuroscience concepts that influence motivational psychology especially when it pertains to functional task completion for people who have depression.

  • @Cinderelement
    @Cinderelement Рік тому

    I really appreciate you. Thank you! I've been self treating/suffering a complicated PTSD for approx 15 years. You're informative talks here are a box of treasures that make fascinating since for me, especially as a retired paramedic. Also I want to mention how amazing we are made with all the self Maitenance our mind and body is capable of when properly cared for. It's too bad we often have no faith in that and turn to destructive things to self medicate.

  • @rustycalvera977
    @rustycalvera977 Рік тому +1

    scientists deserve credit for taking on these hugely complex biological issues and trying to figure out how these processes work. That these elements act in harmony with other elements and so to adjust any one element effects the relationship to many others down the line.

  • @neilbrewster24
    @neilbrewster24 3 роки тому +4

    Thank you Dr Huberman for sharing your academic work in a really accessible way for the general public. Easy to forget we’re domesticated primates 🙂 Knowledge is power! Balancing the pseudoscience that’s out there. Glad Costello will be there for the long haul!

  • @OkinawaKoko
    @OkinawaKoko 3 роки тому +6

    This was amazing.. So informative and it explained so much about my own sleep cycles. I often wake up in the middle of the night and can't go back to sleep so I do some NSDR and always have extremely vivid dreams afterwards. Mind blown listening to this, thank you!

    • @DaveE99
      @DaveE99 3 роки тому

      Nsdr?

    • @OkinawaKoko
      @OkinawaKoko 3 роки тому

      @@DaveE99 Non sleep deep rest (he mentions it also). I practice it in the form of yoga nidra

  • @tinacoach4263
    @tinacoach4263 3 роки тому +4

    Andrew Huberman, you are my hero 👍. Thank you 🙏

  • @foxie8638
    @foxie8638 3 роки тому +1

    I wanted to give many many thanks to The Professor 😁 Your teaching have such a positive impact on my life, like on my sleep, on understanding myself, my emotions. I'm sometimes overwhelmed by my emotions who sometimes lead to panic attack and the breathing technic have helped me soooo much! I'm so happy about the YT recommandation 😁 Wanted to thanks you from the deapest of my heart and wish you a good day 🤓👍🙏

  • @Gilded-girl
    @Gilded-girl Рік тому

    When I was old enough to walk- I would sleep walk. My mom would find me asleep under the kitchen cabinets and one time I even walked to the neighbors house at 3am ringing their doorbell. I’m 54 now and my whole life have been plagued with night terrors, hallucinations and sleep paralysis happened to me twice. Very terrifying!! I find what helps ( and this is just me) that I pray about it and ask for peaceful sleep. I still have very vivid and fascinating dreams but not ones that terrorize me anymore. It’s a real thing and I’m watching this to try to understand. I’m an artist and a creative person , so I always felt that may contribute to my wild dreams . It’s a mystery to me .

  • @NikkiSchumacherOfficial
    @NikkiSchumacherOfficial 3 роки тому +7

    Listening on my sunrise walk 🌄

  • @13Nicozurdo
    @13Nicozurdo 3 роки тому +11

    This podcast are fantastic! Great job Andrew.
    Your knowledge is huge and you do an incredible service to the community in sharing it.
    Waaaaaaay off-topic, but I'm extremely curious if you'll do a podcast (or several hahah) about psychedelics. It'd be amazing to learn about that subject from such a wise man as you.

  • @ShirleiBarnes
    @ShirleiBarnes 2 роки тому +5

    I adore this episode 😍 I've been keeping dream journals for about 4 years. Decided to start writing them because I recall extremely detailed info in my dreams.
    My behaviour of wanting to share my dreams with others is to tell the story, and why not!? I am fascinated by dreams, and am still to understand recurring dreams. Would love to know more about it.
    Loved the information you shared👌 I truly appreciate it.
    About being a alien 👽 my goodness this was funny 😂

    • @FXCartel
      @FXCartel Рік тому

      Where can we read your dreams

    • @stst77
      @stst77 Рік тому

      I believe reoccurring dreams are your mind trying to tell you the same thing over and over but you are not getting it. Once you get it the dreams will stop.

  • @ALMArt-ko9yu
    @ALMArt-ko9yu 3 роки тому

    Tonight is the 1st night in 20 years I attempt to sleep without smoking cannabis.
    Thank you for all the valuable information that you share, the world need more human beings like yourself!

  • @AD-ir9jw
    @AD-ir9jw 3 роки тому

    It’s currently rainy season here, I’m always sleepy in this season even after having enough sleep, so I took this cold shower in morning to see if it makes me active, it indeed did and turns out my body very much loved cold shower, it wasn’t hard for me at all and I’ve been taking it since then. Thanks, Dr Huberman.

  • @valerieb2963
    @valerieb2963 3 роки тому +6

    I am still amazed this is free and so easy to understand and comprehend. Looking forward to the next one. will come in handy when I start studying next month... :-)

  • @robinrosenqvist4773
    @robinrosenqvist4773 3 роки тому +6

    As a future psychologist I would love an episode/part of an episode to learn about the neurological foundations of classical and operant conditioning, to understand it more thoroughly. Thanks for all the great content.

  • @caw7007
    @caw7007 3 роки тому +10

    I love hearing Costello being near you! 💖

  • @sheetaljagannatham7317
    @sheetaljagannatham7317 3 роки тому +1

    Thank you Dr.Huberman for bringing your valuable research findings and science knowledge to us 💙😇 this is a podcast I cannot just play in the background while I get other things done, there's so much to take in, I need to sit down and take notes and so that's what I do 😁🗒️✍🏾

  • @cameronking9311
    @cameronking9311 3 роки тому +1

    Thank you for the content. I've had consistent episodes of sleep paralysis monthly for at least 15 years and it helps to understand why.

  • @laurat1012
    @laurat1012 3 роки тому +5

    Thank you so much for sharing this incredible information for free!! 🙏🏼 it is life changing