Exploring frontiers of contemplative science—discussing mind, meditation, and more.
Robin Nusslock – How Stress Gets Under Our Skin
In this episode, Wendy speaks with neuroscientist Robin Nusslock. Robin has long been interested in the mind through both scientific and Buddhist lenses, and he trained with Richie Davidson. His work focuses on the brain's role in our emotional life, how stress impacts many of our bodily systems, as well as social determinants of health. This conversation covers many topics, including:
his long interest in mind & Buddhism;
basic pathways of how stress gets into the body;
how the brain learns threat and safety;
effects of early life trauma on brain and behavior;
our brain's reward systems and relevance to Buddhist ideas;
craving and addiction;
pathways toward change, neuroplasticity and pause;
social and environmental determinants of health;
epigenetics and intergenerational trauma;
biology is not destiny;
how we can intervene and promote flourishing;
family-level interventions;
reducing exposure to adversity;
economic interventions (e.g., universal basic income);
teaching science and research to Tibetan monastics;
studying lucid dreaming with monks;
and fruits of the exchange between Buddhism and science.
Full show notes and resources
12/14/2023 • 1 hour, 5 minutes, 21 seconds
Hanne De Jaegher – Making Sense Together
In this episode, Wendy speaks with philosopher and cognitive scientist Hanne De Jaegher. Hanne was influenced by Francisco Varela's ideas from an early age, and has been working to extend enactive theories of mind into social contexts. This conversation covers many topics, including:
roots in Varela's work and an early interest in thinking;
sense-making and embodiment as foundational to cognition;
how our habits and models fit (or don't) with our experience;
participatory sense-making and the primacy of interaction;
how interpersonal dynamics can have a life of their own;
loving and knowing, letting others be;
over- vs. underdetermining (how our projections of others shape interactions);
emotional capacity and dementia;
understanding autistic people from their own side;
the need for people in dominant positions to listen;
the importance of silence in dialogue;
problems with the way social media platforms discourage interaction;
interactions within one person;
synthesis and breakdown;
tension between self and interdependence (creating boundaries);
and applying these ideas to our relationship with nature.
Full show notes and resources
11/30/2023 • 56 minutes, 23 seconds
Grant Jones – Music, Meditation, and Healing
In this episode, Wendy speaks with musician, contemplative, researcher, and activist Grant Jones. Grant is working to develop and implement contemplative and liberatory tools for underserved populations. This conversation covers many topics, including:
blending music, psychology, contemplation, and activism;
music and mindfulness for healing race-based anxiety;
collaborating with Lama Rod Owens, Esperanza Spalding, and others;
the absence of research on black music;
music medicine vs. music therapy;
pleasure activism as a form of disruption;
balancing structure and freedom;
the Black Lotus Collective;
links between psychedelics and meditation;
potential benefits and harm of psychedelic treatment, and how race plays in;
the power of music to transcend language and culture;
balancing identity with non-self;
and letting go, having fun, and not being too serious.
Full show notes and resources
11/16/2023 • 54 minutes, 16 seconds
Linda Carlson – Mindfulness and Cancer
In this episode, Wendy speaks with psychosocial oncology researcher Linda Carlson. Linda has pioneered the application of mindfulness and contemplative practice for cancer patients, focusing on both psychological and biological outcomes. This conversation covers many topics, including:
her path to integrating psychology, mindfulness, and cancer;
early clinical trials and positive outcomes;
how and why meditation can help with the stress of cancer;
problems with battle metaphors related to cancer;
opportunities to re-evaluate self and identity;
connecting with boundlessness and interdependence;
living well vs. living long;
study design and control groups in meditation research;
effects of mindfulness on cellular aging (telomeres);
media coverage of meditation research;
the power of preference in interventions;
sneak preview of gene expression results;
impacts on inflammation;
increasing accessibility and diversity;
working towards structural change in health care;
and building an academic society for contemplative research.
Full show notes and resources
11/2/2023 • 1 hour
Paul Condon – Relational Meditation
In this episode, Wendy speaks with social psychologist and contemplative researcher Paul Condon. Paul's work integrates psychological theory with the Buddhist contemplative tradition, looking at meditation through the lens of attachment theory. This conversation covers many topics, including:
his long interest in the intersection between Buddhism and psychology;
measuring compassion in the real world;
meditation's effects on prosocial behavior and relating to suffering;
barriers to compassion;
the relevance of vulnerability and safety to compassion;
understanding secure and insecure attachment;
shifting our attachment style:
how contemplative practice can help develop our secure base;
security as adaptability;
limitations of viewing meditation as self-help and individual effort;
the relational starting point of meditation;
open vs. closed secular contexts;
identifying a caring moment or benefactor;
the power of mental simulation;
changes he's noticed from practice;
and what these practices can offer in our current moment as a society.
Full show notes and resources
10/19/2023 • 1 hour, 4 minutes, 53 seconds
Marieke Van Vugt – Finding Balance
In this episode, Wendy speaks with cognitive scientist, contemplative practitioner, and ballet dancer Marieke Van Vugt. Marieke is a pioneer in studying mind wandering and meditation through computer modeling, and is also advancing participatory research through her collaborations with Tibetan monastics. This conversation covers many topics, including:
her braided interests in meditation, dance, and cognitive science;
computer modeling of mind and meditation;
exploring distraction, mind wandering, and becoming aware;
how thoughts can get "stuck" in our minds;
creating a meditating computer;
the relevance of stuck thoughts to various mental disorders;
trauma through the lens of predictive models of mind;
analytical meditation and Tibetan monastic debate;
collaborating with monastics in research;
humility and fluidity of mind;
re-thinking the tasks used in cognitive science;
the phenomenon of brain synchrony;
dance and embodiment;
the roots of thinking in the body;
problems with abstraction in science;
curiosity vs. the critical mind in ballet;
flow, responsiveness, and compassion;
and advice to young scholars.
Full show notes and resources
10/5/2023 • 1 hour, 4 minutes, 58 seconds
Emeran Mayer – Biological Interconnectedness
In this episode, Wendy speaks with gastroentorologist, author, and microbiome researcher Emeran Mayer. Emeran is a world renowned expert in the connections between the gut and the mind, and brings a biological lens to the concept of interconnection. This conversation covers many topics, including:
his interest in mind-body connection;
microbiome overview & current questions;
how we've inherited systems of communication from microbes;
gut-brain connections, and the concept of the "second brain";
how meditation might affect our microbes;
gut-immune connections;
the importance of barriers, and what goes wrong in "leaky gut";
barrier compromise as common core of nearly all chronic disorders;
stress and diet as key factors affecting our gut permeability;
what we can do to protect our gut;
equity issues around healthy food access;
the gut as a sense organ;
reductions in the diversity of microbes on the planet;
the role of antibiotics and environmental destruction;
development of the microbiome in pregnancy and infancy;
implications for our concept of self;
balance between reductionism and embracing complexity in science;
and the need for more of the feminine archetype in our world.
Full show notes and resources
9/21/2023 • 56 minutes, 23 seconds
Rob Roeser – Transforming Education
To begin our seventh season, Wendy speaks with contemplative educator and developmental psychologist Rob Roeser. Rob has been working to re-envision the educational system for decades, and has been at the forefront of understanding how we can best integrate mindfulness and compassion into school settings. This conversation covers many topics, including:
his initial exposure to integrative school systems;
educating for life, instead of just participation in the global economy;
focus on the body, nature, and our inherent "earthiness";
studying schools in India that integrate meditation;
integrating science and viewing contemplative practice as building skills;
applying a developmental lens to contemplative education;
the key role of educating adults alongside children;
changing culture and norms;
how social processes drive the development of attention in children;
our innate tendencies towards both compassion and othering;
attention training as a relational practice;
the relevance of a secure base;
leveraging developmental "windows of opportunity";
practices that highlight our shared humanity;
systems thinking in education;
and re-enchanting the gift of learning.
Full show notes and resources
9/7/2023 • 52 minutes, 25 seconds
sujatha baliga – Healing Through Restorative Justice
In this episode, Wendy speaks with lawyer, activist, and restorative justice expert sujatha baliga. sujatha’s work reimagines our current legal and justice system in the United States, and emphasizes the full humanity of both those who experience harm and those who cause it. This conversation covers many topics, including:
growing up with sexual abuse, and the impacts it had;
meeting with the Dalai Lama, and his transformational advice;
the power of lovingkindness;
her choice to be a public defender;
responsibility & causes and conditions;
holding two competing ideas simultaneously;
problems with the traditional legal system;
the paradigm shift of restorative justice;
integrating contemplative practice into the process of restorative justice;
the role of the self in the experience of harm;
how we need to shift our language around labeling people;
reflections on forgiveness and justice;
and next steps for the movement.
Full show notes and resources
6/1/2023 • 1 hour, 10 minutes, 40 seconds
Fadel Zeidan – Mindfulness and Pain
In this episode, Wendy speaks with neuroscientist and pain researcher Fadel Zeidan. Fadel is one of the leading experts on understanding how mindfulness and other contemplative practices can be used to help relieve physical pain and promote well-being. This conversation covers many topics, including:
his interest in self, consciousness, mindfulness and the brain;
bringing mindfulness to special education classrooms;
historical use of mindfulness for pain;
intensity vs. unpleasantness of pain;
his early work showing that mindfulness induces pain relief;
making mindfulness training more accessible;
looking into the brain during pain;
using "fake meditation" in research;
understanding our natural opiate system and its role in pain relief;
bringing rigor to research with placebo controls;
the relationship of physical pain to more complex psychological pain;
working with families of children who were killed by gun violence;
studying psychedelics for phantom limb pain;
role of the default mode network in pain and self;
compassion meditation and increasing our connection to strangers;
the opioid crisis in the United States;
and the role of contemplation in larger society.
Full show notes and resources
5/18/2023 • 57 minutes, 3 seconds
Brendan Ozawa-de Silva – Embodied Learning
In this episode, Wendy speaks with Buddhist scholar and contemplative educator and researcher Brendan Ozawa-de Silva. Brendan has been studying and teaching mindfulness and compassion for over a decade, and has lately been focusing on integrating trauma-informed and embodied practices into his work. This conversation covers many topics, including:
his interest in contemplation (and an introduction to the Japanese practice of Naikan);
adapting contemplative training to a variety of settings;
the capacity of young people for compassion, mindfulness, and conceptual frames;
what's missing in contemplative research;
empathy/compassion as something that arises between people;
the embeddedness of researchers in the systems they study;
the SEE Learning program;
trauma in the body & nervous system regulation;
understanding different forms of trauma;
healing and forgiveness;
barriers to compassion, misunderstandings about the meaning of compassion;
how the world is built on compassion;
and new teaching endeavors with experiential learning.
Full show notes and resources
5/4/2023 • 1 hour, 7 minutes, 50 seconds
Ed Taylor – Leading by Example
In this episode, Wendy speaks with University of Washington vice provost and dean of Undergraduate Academic Affairs, Ed Taylor. Ed has made major contributions in the areas of contemplative education and leadership, with a focus on moral and integrative education and social justice. This conversation covers many topics, including:
growing up embedded in community and giant sequoias;
learning to be still with the mind;
teaching meditation amidst anger dysregulation;
embodying contemplative skills in the classroom;
the gap between our mind's story and our body in the moment;
the relevance of contemplation to wise and effective leadership;
moving from ego-system to ecosystem awareness (systems thinking);
implementing systems change in university settings;
normalizing failure and modeling vulnerability;
letting students lead in defining the community they want;
imagining the world you want to live in when things are not OK (reflections on the days after George Floyd was killed);
understanding critical race theory in education;
and the central role of community in healing.
Full show notes and resources
4/20/2023 • 51 minutes, 54 seconds
David Creswell – Exploring Equanimity
In this episode, Wendy speaks with social psychologist and contemplative researcher David Creswell. David has been studying the effects of meditation on stress and resilience for over a decade, and has conducted some of the most rigorous studies to date investigating which aspects of mindfulness interventions bring benefit. This conversation covers many topics, including:
integrating psychology and Buddhism since high school;
understanding stress and resilience;
acceptance and equanimity in mindfulness;
bringing scientific rigor to the study of mindfulness through dismantling trials;
effects of equanimity on the stress response and positive emotions;
how contemplative skills spill over from the cushion into daily life;
how practice changes the brain and why those changes matter;
a risky study with a president's daughter;
the promise of apps to deliver mindfulness;
how acceptance differs from passive resignation;
and viewing biology and psychology as two sides of the same coin.
Full show notes and resources
4/6/2023 • 1 hour, 2 minutes, 6 seconds
Jenny Mascaro – Compassion in Healthcare
In this episode, Wendy speaks with biological anthropologist and contemplative researcher Jenny Mascaro. Jenny's work weaves together meditation, compassion, psychology, and healthcare, and moves us toward a deeper understanding of interconnectedness. This conversation covers many topics, including:
her interest in social cognition in animals - and humans;
what compassion is, and how it's different from empathy;
biological basis of compassion, and the role of oxytocin;
how social factors and context shape compassion;
training compassion and the skills underlying it;
understanding self-compassion;
the under-appreciated role of hospital chaplains;
compassion training for chaplains;
preparing for interpersonal interactions;
how compassion shows up in language;
how compassionate care can help anxiety and depression;
responding to healthcare provider stress;
how meditation has changed her;
and building awareness of interdependence.
Full show notes and resources
3/23/2023 • 1 hour, 5 minutes, 16 seconds
Elissa Epel – Mind, Body, and Stress
In this episode, Wendy speaks with contemplative health psychologist and stress researcher Elissa Epel. Elissa studies how mindfulness, meditation retreats, and breathing techniques can help buffer stress processes, biological aging, and promote both physical and mental health. This conversation covers many topics, including:
her early roots of interest in the mind-body connection;
bringing contemplation into health and stress psychology research;
two key aspects of stress;
learning to deal with uncertainty;
uncertainty in the body;
acute vs. chronic stress response;
why we might want to intentionally induce acute stress to boost our health;
cell aging systems (telomeres);
contemplative practices as a way to reduce stress;
how our minds influence our cells;
the concept of cellular safety;
rest, retreat, and vacation;
how contemplative benefits can transfer to the next generation;
what it means to have a sensitive nervous system;
and the importance of focusing on joy and gratitude.
Full show notes and resources
3/9/2023 • 1 hour, 4 minutes, 48 seconds
Matthieu Ricard – Compassion and Care
In this episode, Wendy speaks with the renowned Buddhist practitioner and author Matthieu Ricard. Matthieu was integral to the founding of contemplative science, serving as both a participant and co-investigator in many early studies, and has deep expertise in compassion, altruism, and well-being. This conversation covers many topics, including:
his roots in both science and Buddhism, and his appreciation for rigorous inquiry;
his role as a participant and collaborator in contemplative science;
lessons from research on compassion vs. empathy;
how the self shows up (or doesn't) in compassion;
links between self-focus and vulnerability;
hedonia, eudiamonia, and self;
altruism and our current crises;
reconciling three time scales of concern;
sentience, life, and interdependence;
caring for our whole interconnected system;
the practice of awe;
using photography to share basic human goodness;
balancing fame and monastic life;
and a poignant example of his own personal experience of care.
Full show notes and resources
2/23/2023 • 1 hour, 4 minutes, 23 seconds
Jamie Bristow – Policy, Practice, and Planet
In this episode, Wendy speaks with mindful policy advocate and contemplative teacher Jamie Bristow. Jamie co-directs the Mindfulness Initiative in the UK, an organization that bridges contemplative practice and public policy, championing the inner dimension of social change. This conversation covers many topics, including:
why he first started meditating and the surprise that came with it;
his commitment to climate work;
integrating advertising talent into policy work;
mindfulness in the UK government;
development of the Mindfulness Initiative;
the nuts and bolts of mindful policy work;
policy advances in health, criminal justice, and education;
mindfulness as a foundational capacity (not just a skill);
how the mind relates to the climate crisis;
consequences of our failure to see the interconnectedness in the world;
how mindfulness and compassion can help with reconnection;
two modes of operating (holistic intuitive vs. verbal conceptual);
and where to go from here.
Full show notes and resources
12/16/2022 • 1 hour, 9 minutes, 45 seconds
Amy Cohen Varela – The Power of Undoing
In this episode, Wendy speaks with clinical psychologist and contemplative Amy Cohen Varela. In addition to her work as a psychoanalytic therapist, Amy is also the widow of Francisco Varela (co-founder of the Mind & Life Institute), and continues to share his vision and work through the offerings of Mind & Life Europe. This conversation covers many topics, including:
her dual interest in biology and literature;
the contemplative aspects of psychoanalysis;
skills learned from listening deeply to yourself and to others;
how she met Francisco Varela;
enaction, meaning, and participatory sense-making;
links between Francisco's ideas and Buddhist philosophy;
subjective and objective viewpoints, and how we oversimplify Buddhism and science in that dynamic;
how more than a decade with Francisco has changed her;
the power of curiosity and openness;
doing and undoing the self in psychoanalysis;
Francisco's reflections on the Chilean civil war, and implications for polarization;
the need for systems to be able to "undo" themselves;
and Mind & Life Europe's latest offerings.
Full show notes and resources
12/2/2022 • 1 hour, 10 minutes, 40 seconds
Zindel Segal – Mindfulness and Depression
In this episode, Wendy speaks with renowned clinical psychologist, researcher, and co-developer of Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT), Zindel Segal. Zindel's work has brought relief to many who suffer from depression, by sharing the tools and skills of mindful awareness. This conversation covers many topics, including:
his early experiences with meditation and psychology;
the development of MBCT and its evolution;
seeing thoughts as thoughts;
the power of curiosity, kindness, and an attitude of letting be;
clinical research on MBCT in depression;
staying with difficult experiences;
the latest thinking about how antidepressants work;
a short guided meditation;
the importance of sense foraging;
using digital platforms and increasing accessibility to mindfulness skills;
adapting practices for the challenges young people face today;
how MBCT can shift the sense of self and identity;
and how practice has changed him.
Full resources and show notes
11/18/2022 • 1 hour, 5 minutes, 31 seconds
Randima Fernando - Humane Technology
In this episode, Wendy speaks with Randima (Randy) Fernando, co-founder of the Center for Humane Technology. Over several decades, Randy has worked to integrate technology, mindfulness, and social impact, trying to find ethical solutions to some of our most challenging issues. This conversation covers many topics, including:
how the strands of Buddhism and technology have woven together throughout his life;
the challenges we face with tech today;
parallels between mindfulness and humane technology;
understanding the "race to the bottom";
breaking the myth that technology is neutral;
looking at technology through the Buddhist lens of dependent co-arising;
problematic incentives in the tech space (e.g., advertising as a business model);
the attention economy;
how technology trains our attention, emotions, and even our values;
technology's impact on the way we view our "self";
customized realities, echo chambers, and polarization;
how to avoid tech traps;
the core principles of humane technology;
building values/ethics into AI;
understanding dukkha;
the pros and cons of using technology to teach mindfulness;
and the latest resources from the Center for Humane Technology.
Full show notes and resources
11/4/2022 • 1 hour, 17 minutes, 37 seconds
Yuria Celidwen - Indigenous Wisdom
In this episode, Wendy speaks with contemplative scholar and Indigenous activist Yuria Celidwen. Yuria has worked across many sectors to bring Indigenous ways of knowing into conversation with Western approaches, particularly in contemplative science. This conversation covers many topics, including:
the importance of Indigenous languages;
her roots in a lineage of mystics, healers, and explorers;
insights from the Mayan calendric system;
bringing Indigenous ideas into a dualistic culture;
her own experience of othering;
the role of contemplative practice amidst today's challenges;
opening our awareness to interdependence;
bridging and safety as we come together across differences;
kin relationality and ecological belonging;
subtleties of language and what they reveal;
implications of the term "mechanism" in the scientific approach;
Indigenous contemplative science;
and an inspiring closing poem.
Full show notes and resources
10/21/2022 • 1 hour, 12 minutes, 20 seconds
Norm Farb - Meditation and the Brain
In this episode, Wendy speaks with contemplative researcher Norm Farb. Norm was one of the first people to study how meditation impacts our brains, and his broader work incorporates emotions, body sensations, and present-moment awareness. Their conversation covers many topics, including:
his initial research on meditation, neural networks, and modes of self;
predictive models of mind;
reinforcing vs. updating our model of the world (and implications for political polarization);
the default mode network and its role in cognition;
how meditation can help shift our habitual patterns;
what happens in our minds when we learn to meditate;
the concept of mental foraging;
interoception and how sensing the body might reduce conceptual processing;
depression & interoception, and getting stuck avoiding difficult feelings;
the self as the current model of the world;
a deeper look at the idea of no-self;
the ethics of updating our self model responsibly;
localization vs. distribution in the brain;
and the state of research on meditation and the brain.
Full resources and show notes
10/7/2022 • 1 hour, 4 minutes, 57 seconds
Tish Jennings - Contemplative Education
In this episode, Wendy speaks with contemplative educator and researcher Patricia (Tish) Jennings. Tish has been a pioneer in bringing mindfulness and compassion into school settings, with a particular focus on helping teachers. This conversation covers many topics, including:
her experience as an educator and a meditator;
how teacher stress contributes to the classroom environment;
how contemplative practice can help bring awareness to automatic responses, and help shift them;
the process of attunement and our core as social beings;
how teachers can be sensitive to students who have experienced trauma;
problems with the industrialized model of education;
how teachers can be a force for change from the inside;
yoga and body sensation as mindfulness for young children;
somatic awareness and understanding emotions;
and what young people need most right now.
Full show notes and resources
9/23/2022 • 55 minutes, 45 seconds
Sharon Salzberg - Love and Wisdom
In this episode, Wendy speaks with renowned and beloved meditation teacher Sharon Salzberg. Sharon has been teaching meditation in the West for over 40 years, and is the co-founder of the Insight Meditation Society. Their conversation covers many topics, including:
finding Buddhism and meditation as a teenager, and where it led her;
her experience as a woman in the early contemplative movement;
loving kindness & metta, and their relationship to prayer;
love as an ability;
the role of narrative and story-telling in our world and minds;
a call for balance and self-compassion on the path;
the role of the body in meditation;
why contemplation matters for societal change;
and living into our interconnection.
Full show notes and resources
9/9/2022 • 58 minutes, 33 seconds
Bob Thurman - Wisdom is Bliss
In this episode, Wendy speaks with Buddhist scholar and author Robert (Bob) Thurman. Bob is one of the foremost scholars in the world on Tibetan Buddhism, and played a major role in bringing Buddhism to America. This conversation covers many topics, including:
his entry into Buddhism, and befriending the Dalai Lama;
links between Buddhism and science (and why Buddhism is 1/6 religion);
problems with scientific materialism;
enlightenment and emptiness;
stories of the Buddha leaving home;
four friendly fun facts (noble truths);
realistic vs. right approaches on the path;
jumping into bliss prematurely;
Buddhist ethics;
practices to push against essentialism;
the key role of compassion in enlightenment;
how he thinks about reincarnation and continuation of consciousness;
the role of science on the contemplative path;
and Bob's parting fun fact.
Full show notes and resources
6/3/2022 • 1 hour, 9 minutes, 6 seconds
Lasana Harris - Flexible Social Cognition
In this episode, Wendy speaks with social neuroscientist Lasana Harris about his work on flexible social cognition—the variable ways that we perceive others. This conversation covers many topics, including:
his accidental entry into psychology;
what flexible social cognition is;
schemas and predictions about others' minds;
dehumanization and why we do it;
the role of propaganda and implications for the war in Ukraine;
how these processes scale up from individuals to societies;
bias and prejudice, and the key roles of threat and safety;
the inseparability of cognition and emotion;
how contemplative practice might help reduce dehumanization;
information overload and echo chambers, and what to do about them;
and looking at the concept of self to change social bias.
Full show notes and resources
5/20/2022 • 1 hour, 2 minutes, 24 seconds
Jessica Morey - Healing Attachment
In this episode, Wendy speaks with meditation teacher and co-founder of Inward Bound Mindfulness Education (iBme), Jessica Morey. Jessica has been working with the contemplative path through the lens of attachment theory, and shares how she blends these approaches for healing. This conversation covers many topics, including:
her long roots in the contemplative path;
meditation retreats for teens through iBme;
the basics of attachment theory;
contemplative approaches to healing attachment wounds;
subtle body and trauma;
developing embodied safety;
grounding practices with the earth;
why it helps to examine your own lineage;
benefactor practices and imagining perfect parents;
links between Buddhism and attachment theory;
and the joys and opportunities of working with teens.
Full show notes and resources
5/6/2022 • 1 hour, 1 minute, 32 seconds
Juan Santoyo - Practice and Peace
In this episode, Wendy speaks with contemplative researcher and social activist Juan Santoyo. Juan's work sits at the intersection of basic neuroscience and community-based programs; his central interest is in understanding the factors that are needed for peace and healing—both in the brain, and in the world. This conversation covers many topics, including:
his path into contemplative research;
neurophenomenology;
life in Colombia and reflections on the peace process;
working with ex-combatants through community engaged research;
Indigenous practices to connect with land and ancestors;
working with difficult emotions;
self-forgiveness;
the lack of land and ancestor practices in the West;
how oppressive systems impact the sense of self;
why contemplation matters for justice and equity work;
integrating basic neuroscience with healing in the world;
and investigating what is needed for peace.
Full show notes and resources
4/22/2022 • 57 minutes, 2 seconds
Al Kaszniak - The Universe of Verbs
In this episode, Wendy speaks with psychologist, contemplative researcher, and Zen Buddhist teacher, Al Kaszniak. Al has been in the contemplative science space since the earliest days, and his work has shed light on how meditation impacts our thoughts, emotions, and sense of self. This conversation covers many topics, including:
his parallel interests in Buddhism and neuropsychology;
research on meditation, emotion, and attention;
how our view of self impacts what seems relevant to us;
cognitive effort and emotion regulation;
how his own experience of self has shifted through practice;
attention and early emotion/affective tone;
shifting out of the conceptual mind;
the relationship of attention and emotion;
how decades of practice have changed his daily life;
free will vs. free won't (meditation as inhibition);
increasing access to contemplative ideas and practices;
mind as process, interaction, and context—and what that means for science;
and the value of interdisciplinary dialogue and the "in-between" spaces.
Full show notes and resources
4/8/2022 • 59 minutes, 13 seconds
Brooke Lavelle - Courage in Community
In this episode, Wendy speaks with Buddhist scholar, contemplative teacher, and social activist Brooke Lavelle. Brooke is the co-founder and president of Courage of Care, an organization that seeks to build transformational practice communities rooted in compassion, healing, and counter-oppressive frameworks. This conversation covers many topics, including:
her trajectory of work from mindfulness to compassion to relational practice to social justice;
relationality as the starting point for contemplative growth;
Courage of Care, and the CourageRISE framework;
routes to understanding oppressive systems;
the body as culture;
the skills needed to build multicultural community;
applications in climate work;
the non-dual frame as an antidote to othering;
and love as an organizing principle.
Full show notes and resources
3/25/2022 • 58 minutes, 16 seconds
Jud Brewer - Changing Habits
In this episode, Wendy speaks with addiction psychiatrist and contemplative researcher Jud Brewer. Jud is one of the leading figures in the use of mindfulness for addiction and anxiety, and his work emphasizes the brain's habit cycle, and how to change it. He's also developed a number of smartphone apps to deliver contemplative interventions widely, which research is finding to be highly successful. This conversation covers many topics, including:
his own use of meditation to relieve stress, and where that led;
the failure of willpower for treating addictions;
the benefits and downsides of the brain's habit mechanisms;
commonalities between Buddhist philosophy and modern psychology;
the key role of awareness in changing habits;
the basic "habit loop" (trigger - behavior - result);
anxiety as a habit;
mindfulness for habit change;
divisiveness as a bad habit;
research on the effectiveness of app-based interventions;
next steps for digital therapeutics;
insights on communicating science to the public;
and the power of kindness and connection as the ultimate reward.
Full show notes and resources
3/11/2022 • 1 hour, 2 minutes, 37 seconds
Roshi Joan Halifax - Enactive Compassion
In this episode, Wendy speaks with Zen Buddhist teacher and author Roshi Joan Halifax. A pioneer in the field of end-of-life care, Roshi Joan was instrumental in developing the dialogue between science and Buddhism, and has been an advocate for engaged Buddhism, social activism, and compassion in response to today's crises. This conversation covers many topics, including:
the birth of dialogues between the Dalai Lama and scientists;
how our minds are "enactive";
compassion as emergent and dependent on context;
the trainable factors that set the stage for compassion;
the importance of embodiment in health care;
non-referential compassion;
interdependence, compassion, and climate change;
working with dying people;
how letting go is safe;
clinical use of psychedelics;
and reflections on the field of contemplative science.
Full show notes and resources
2/25/2022 • 1 hour, 1 minute, 45 seconds
Cliff Saron - Embracing Complexity
In this episode, Wendy speaks with neuroscientist and contemplative researcher Cliff Saron. Cliff is a pioneer in studying the effects of meditation on attention and emotion, and has been deeply embedded in the field of contemplative science since the earliest days. This conversation covers many topics, including:
his winding path into contemplative research;
drilling down and pulling back;
conducting research with Tibetan monks in India;
how brain signals can predict behavior, and implications for free will;
the importance of context in meditation research;
effects of intensive meditation on attention, markers of cellular aging, and purpose in life;
community-engaged participatory research;
communicating the nuance and uncertainty inherent in science;
Ubuntu, and living into our interdependence.
Full show notes and resources
12/17/2021 • 1 hour, 30 minutes, 21 seconds
Bobbi Patterson - Contemplation, Place, and Resilience
In this episode, Wendy speaks with professor and Episcopal priest, Bobbi Patterson. Bobbi's work integrates Christian contemplation, Buddhist meditation, contemplative pedagogy, the role of place, and adaptive resilience. This conversation covers many topics, including:
contemplative Christian traditions;
the power of silence;
dialogue between Christianity and Buddhism;
a Christian contemplative view of mind;
women in the church;
how to listen to a place;
bringing students into nature and urban settings;
the role of the body in contemplation;
understanding burnout;
and adaptive and land-based resilience.
Full show notes and resources
12/3/2021 • 58 minutes, 19 seconds
Cortland Dahl - Integrating Science and Buddhism
In this episode, Wendy speaks with researcher, translator, and Buddhist teacher, Cortland Dahl. Cort's work integrates science, psychology, meditation, and Tibetan Buddhism. This conversation covers many topics, including:
how meditation helped with his social anxiety as a young person;
benefits and challenges in the dialogue between Buddhism and science;
customizing meditation practice in the Healthy Minds app;
understanding the diversity of contemplative practice;
analytical meditation;
meditation as a treatment for mental health problems;
transcending the conceptual mind, and loosening concepts of self;
seeing the limits of science;
looking at well-being through the lens of learning;
the key role of social connection;
and moving forward with intellectual humility (knowing that we don't know).
Full show notes and resources
11/19/2021 • 57 minutes, 56 seconds
Zenju Earthlyn Manuel - Identity as Path
In this episode, Wendy speaks with author, Zen priest and Buddhist teacher, Zenju Earthlyn Manuel. Zenju's work highlights how the various facets of our identity can become "fertilizer" for growth on the path of spiritual and personal development. This conversation covers many topics, including:
growing up in the Christian church, and the questions it raised for her;
her unusual path into Buddhism;
how to work with your identity while moving beyond the self;
the truth of interdependence and cause & effect;
two truths (relative vs. absolute) in relation to identity;
bringing together spirituality and social justice;
the central importance of embodiment;
integration with nature;
how contemplative science should proceed;
and the dance between delusion and enlightenment.
Full show notes and resources
11/5/2021 • 36 minutes, 15 seconds
Willoughby Britton - When Meditation Causes Harm
In this episode, Wendy speaks with clinical psychologist and meditation researcher, Willoughby Britton. Willoughby is a pioneer in contemplative research and one of the only people dedicated to understanding the possible negative outcomes from meditation (so called meditation-related adverse experiences). This conversation covers many topics, including:
how she came to study the negative side of meditation;
support and resources for those struggling with meditation-related difficulties (Cheetah House);
scientific research on meditation-related adverse experiences;
changes in perception and anxiety that can happen with meditation;
how the same experience can be positive or negative depending on context;
how the causes of adverse effects may be the same as for the benefits;
the science of measuring harms in meditation research;
what we know (and don't know) about these effects—who's at risk, how frequent they are, and how they show up for people;
whether or not these difficulties are "part of the path" of transformation;
grounding care in compassion;
and aligning practices with the outcomes you want.
Full resources and show notes
10/22/2021 • 1 hour, 19 minutes, 46 seconds
Nicholas Van Dam - Nuancing the Narrative
In this episode, Wendy speaks with meditation researcher and clinical psychologist, Nicholas Van Dam. Nicholas is the Director of the Contemplative Studies Centre at the University of Melbourne—the first such center in Australia. His work explores how meditation and mindfulness can support well-being, and help with conditions like anxiety and depression. This conversation covers many topics, including:
how an existential crisis led him to meditation practice;
bringing loving critique to contemplative science;
the complicated realities of mindfulness, how we measure it, and its impact on the brain;
looking at effects beyond just the individual who is meditating;
insights from a year of daily practice;
balancing personal interest vs. research objectivity;
the freedom that comes from letting go;
how skills learned on the cushion transfer to daily life;
deconstructing the self;
mindfulness and meditation for anxiety and depression;
getting out of your head and into your body;
connecting with Indigenous and other non-Buddhist contemplative traditions;
and advancing evidence-based research on meditation.
Full show notes and resources
10/8/2021 • 1 hour, 3 minutes, 35 seconds
Rhonda Magee - Mindfulness, Interconnection, and Justice
In this episode, Wendy speaks with law professor, author, and meditation teacher, Rhonda Magee. Rhonda's work has focused on bringing contemplative approaches into the practice of law, and the fight for social justice. This conversation covers many topics, including:
her path to contemplative practice from roots in the American South;
mindfulness in the fight for racial justice;
embracing equanimity when you really want a certain outcome;
contemplative approaches in law;
awakening to our interconnectedness;
challenging the idea of one winner/one loser (the adversarial model in law);
balancing individual rights with a connected whole;
restorative justice and collaborative divorce;
how racism harms us all (including white folks);
bias, fear and safety in the body;
how dominator culture cuts us off from our bodies;
racial capitalism;
ColorInsight vs. color blindness;
and the joy that comes from embracing our shared humanity.
Full show notes and resources
9/24/2021 • 1 hour, 21 minutes, 57 seconds
Jon Kabat-Zinn - The Heart of Mindfulness
We're back with Season 3 of the show, starting with renowned meditation teacher, author, and creator of Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR), Jon Kabat-Zinn. This spacious and personal conversation is full of insights on a wide range of topics, including:
what drew him to meditation;
his development of and vision for Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR);
the mystery of the line between the inside and outside of any system;
adapting Buddhist practices for Western audiences;
how mindfulness has been taken up in society, and science as a main driver;
moving from "me" to "we";
the challenges of repeatability in scientific studies of meditation;
weaving together art and science;
and how 50+ years of meditation has changed him.
Full show notes and resources
9/10/2021 • 1 hour, 42 minutes, 31 seconds
Vandana Shiva - Earth Democracy
In this bonus episode, we're sharing a special presentation from environmentalist, physicist, and eco-feminist Vandana Shiva. This session is from our Summer Research Institute, held in June of this year, entitled The Mind, the Human-Earth Connection, and the Climate Crisis. We're adding this to the podcast feed because Vandana speaks powerfully about how the mind contributes to so many of the world's current emergencies, including health, hunger, poverty, climate, extinction, and injustice, exclusion, and inequality. Countering these outcomes of disconnection, Vandana offers Earth Democracy as a worldview, paradigm, and practice based on the recognition that everything is interconnected. She covers a lot of ground, touching on topics such as:
the intellectual architecture of disconnection;
the many ramifications of Cartesian dualism;
the colonialist mindset of conquest and mastery;
mistaken frameworks that try to dominate nature;
how dead carbon leads to wars;
food and our microbiome;
quantum physics and interconnectedness;
statistics and updates on the science of climate change;
the economy of earth care;
and the power of self-organizing systems within nature to heal ourselves and our world.
Full show notes and resources
8/13/2021 • 53 minutes, 17 seconds
David Sloan Wilson - Conscious Evolution
In this bonus episode, Wendy speaks with evolutionary biologist David Sloan Wilson. This episode is being released in conjunction with Mind & Life's new film, Evolution of the Heart — a short documentary covering conversations between the Dalai Lama, David Sloan Wilson, and social scientist Pumla Gobodo-Madikizela from a 2019 Mind & Life event in Dharamsala, India. The theme of that gathering was Compassion, Interconnection, and Transformation; please check out the film here! David’s work extends beyond genetics to include personal and cultural evolution, and sheds light on how we can move forward as a global community. In this conversation, they discuss many topics, including:
the role of competition, cooperation, and prosocial behavior in human evolution;
how evolutionary pressure operates at both individual and group levels (multilevel selection);
the possibility of conscious evolution;
what it means to be part of a group;
expanding the notion of the self;
becoming "bilingual" in scientific and spiritual perspectives;
the need to create a system of ethics for the whole world;
and core design principles for creating more egalitarian and compassionate communities.
Full show notes and resources
7/9/2021 • 1 hour, 16 minutes, 48 seconds
Dekila Chungyalpa - Human-Earth Connection
In this episode, Wendy speaks with environmentalist Dekila Chungyalpa about her views of nature, the climate crisis, and her unique collaborations with faith leaders. Their conversation covers many topics, including:
growing up in the Himalayas and being interconnected with nature;
the dominance of dualistic thinking in the West, and the dangerous separations it creates;
embracing a framework of interdependence;
the role of indigenous wisdom in conservation;
her own experience dealing with eco-anxiety;
working with faith leaders to move the needle on environmental issues;
weaving together Buddhist values and activism;
bridging science and religion;
and the need for compassion and community in facing the climate crisis.
Full show notes and resources
5/21/2021 • 1 hour, 6 minutes, 20 seconds
Peter Wayne - Ecology of Mind
In this episode, Wendy speaks with clinical researcher Peter Wayne about his work on mind-body and movement-based interventions like tai chi. Their conversation covers many topics, including:
how a background in ecology informs his research;
embracing multiple causes of any outcome;
how to do non-reductionist science;
removing the hyphen from the mind-body system;
harnessing the wisdom of the body through contemplative practice;
the value of first-person narrative in research;
safety and trauma in the body;
the relationship between physical and emotional patterns;
how the concept of the subtle body relates to Western views;
the role of integrative medicine in dealing with climate change;
and bringing together multiple perspectives to investigate the mind & healing.
Full resources and show notes
5/7/2021 • 52 minutes, 2 seconds
Mingyur Rinpoche - Awareness, Compassion, and Wisdom
In this episode, Wendy speaks with Tibetan Buddhist teacher Mingyur Rinpoche about how contemplative practice can lead us to awareness, compassion, and wisdom. Their conversation covers many topics, including:
his involvement in early contemplative research;
translating concepts between Buddhism and science;
what Buddhists mean by "emptiness";
non-conceptual meditation, open presence and foundational awareness;
the three kinds of self, and which one is like shaving foam;
the problem of othering;
making friends with panic and difficult emotions;
the experience of a "wandering" retreat;
and building trust through contemplative practice.
Full show notes and resources
4/22/2021 • 41 minutes, 29 seconds
Buju Dasgupta - Social Context & Implicit Bias
In this episode, Wendy speaks with social psychologist Buju Dasgupta about her work on implicit bias, and the role of social context in shaping the mind. Their conversation covers many topics, including:
her path to merging science and social justice;
the crucial role of social context in implicit bias;
the malleability of implicit bias & the "wallpaper" of the mind;
how scientists measure unconscious processes (like implicit bias);
changing bias against women and underrepresented groups in STEM education;
links from this work into contemplative science;
increasing cross-disciplinary collaboration to advance research around equity;
the subtle ways we can change implicit bias by changing the wallpaper of our lives;
and turning research into social impact.
Full show notes and resources
4/9/2021 • 52 minutes, 33 seconds
Larry Barsalou - Habits of Mind
In this episode, Wendy speaks with cognitive psychologist Larry Barsalou about his work on grounded cognition, concepts, stress, and habits. Their conversation covers many topics, including:
a historical look at how psychology has viewed and studied the mind;
simulation and prediction in the brain;
what a concept is, and benefits and harms they can bring;
stereotypes, implicit bias, and how we might change them;
the "situated action" cycle that drives our behavior;
understanding habits, and the role of mindfulness in breaking unhealthy habits;
how humans form self-concepts, and how meditation can help us move beyond them;
the importance of context (situatedness) in cognition, and how to study it scientifically;
and how he got interested in contemplative science.
Full show notes and resources
3/26/2021 • 1 hour, 10 minutes, 1 second
Sona Dimidjian - Bringing Relationship into Research
In this episode, Wendy speaks with clinical psychologist and contemplative researcher Sona Dimidjian. Sona's career has focused on using contemplative practices to improve mental health, with a focus on systems of inequality. Their conversation covers many topics, including:
her path to contemplative practice and research;
using collaborative teams in science to reduce bias;
how she applies mindfulness to help with postpartum depression;
working with young women around stereotypes about appearance;
embodied practices delivered through peer instruction;
community-engaged participatory research, working "with" and not "for";
creating digital platforms for more equitable dissemination of contemplative programs;
and how she brings a lens of anti-racism to her research and teaching.
Full show notes and resources
3/12/2021 • 51 minutes, 31 seconds
John Dunne - At the Crossroads of Buddhism and Science
In this episode, Wendy speaks with Buddhist scholar John Dunne. John has interfaced with contemplative scientists for over two decades to help advance rigorous research on meditation by incorporating a nuanced Buddhist perspective. They touch on many topics, including:
his path to integrating Buddhism and science, and the early days of contemplative research;
defining "meditation" for research purposes;
focused attention vs. open monitoring meditation;
a deep dive into meta-awareness;
subject/object duality and whether anything really exists;
the different ways we experience the sense of self;
hallucinogens, ego dissolution, and non-dual practices;
decentering and dereification;
and where he thinks the field should go next.
Full show notes and resources
2/26/2021 • 1 hour, 11 minutes, 13 seconds
Eric Garland - Working with Addiction & Pain
In this episode, Wendy speaks with clinical researcher and psychotherapist Eric Garland. Eric has spent his career developing effective ways to use mindfulness and other contemplative approaches for problems like addiction and chronic pain. Their conversation covers many topics, including:
how early mystical experiences led him to a contemplative path;
the power of meditation to heal and restore well-being;
self-transcendence and non-dual states of consciousness;
the features of his intervention, Mindfulness-Oriented Recovery Enhancement (MORE), and its application for addiction and chronic pain;
how reappraisal can help in difficult situations;
the role of savoring and reconnecting with natural rewards;
deconstructing pain;
a large clinical trial showing how effective MORE is, and how it might work;
and the biggest lesson he's learned from his work so far.
Full show notes and resources
2/12/2021 • 57 minutes, 52 seconds
Anne Klein - The Wisdom of the Body
In this episode, Wendy speaks with Buddhist scholar and teacher Anne Klein. They speak about the role of the body in practice and transformation, and touch on many topics, including:
her interest in Buddhism as a lens on the mind;
the role of the body in contemplative practice;
the dangers of not being embodied;
microphenomenology;
Eastern conceptions of the subtle/energy body;
the construction of self and other;
how the body can help us break out of rigid self-concepts;
the power of the imagination;
why we think things will always stay the same;
and how studying the feminine sheds light on interdependence.
Full show notes and resources
1/29/2021 • 1 hour, 4 minutes, 58 seconds
Lisa Feldman Barrett - Your Emotions Aren't What You Think
We launch our second season featuring a conversation with psychologist, neuroscientist, and emotion researcher Lisa Feldman Barrett. She and Wendy discuss a broad range of topics about the mind, including:
her unexpected path into studying emotions;
how our brains construct and predict our reality;
the brain's essential role in regulating the body;
emotions as interpretations of our bodily state;
how our past shapes and filters our present experience;
the difference between affective feelings (mood) and emotions;
our capacity to influence our own emotions;
deconstructing our experience through mindfulness;
how to improve our emotional lives;
connections with Buddhist theories of mind;
implications for our understanding of the self;
how we regulate not only our own, but others' nervous systems;
and how stress and modernity might lead to clinging to entrenched views.
Full show notes and resources
1/15/2021 • 1 hour, 15 minutes, 6 seconds
Jack Kornfield - Wisdom For Our Times
As 2020 draws to a close, Wendy speaks with Buddhist teacher, author, and psychologist Jack Kornfield in a special episode. Their conversation covers a wide range of topics, including:
how he's interpreting our current moment, and what's needed most;
his path into Buddhism & psychology, reflecting on family and coming of age in the 1960s;
the value of going on a meditation retreat;
links between Buddhism and psychology in terms of healing and self;
the problem of spiritual bypassing;
how to work with difficulties through allowing and gratitude;
the role of Buddhist ideas in activism and social justice work;
and the most important thing researchers can measure as an outcome of meditation practice.
Full show notes and resources
12/9/2020 • 57 minutes, 21 seconds
Adam Hanley - Taking Your Mind Off Autopilot
In this bonus episode, Wendy speaks with psychologist and contemplative researcher Adam Hanley. Adam studies mindfulness-based interventions for addiction and pain, seeking to understand how they work, and how they can best be applied in these populations. In this conversation they discuss:
how he became a contemplative scientist;
automaticity, habits, and addiction;
his research showing how mindfulness may help us de-automatize our thought processes, and stay more in the present;
self-transcendence and how he's beginning to study it;
and the importance of understanding the nature of self, and moving beyond egocentric views, as we seek to build a healthier society.
Full show notes and resources
10/23/2020 • 25 minutes, 17 seconds
Andreas Roepstorff - Interacting Minds
In this episode, Wendy speaks with anthropologist and neuroscientist Andreas Roepstorff. Andreas has been a pioneer in integrating these two approaches, examining how social context impacts the mind and brain. Their conversation covers a range of topics, including:
navigating academic training in two disciplines, and how he bridges the different perspectives of neuroscience and anthropology;
how being a research subject changed his view of subjective experience;
intersubjectivity, and his work to bring together first- and third-person perspectives;
research on fire-walking;
meditation and microphenomenology;
studying playfulness;
predictive models of mind;
the power of mindfulness to help with rumination;
and the importance of exploring how two minds can process and respond differently to the same experience.
Full show notes and resources
9/2/2020 • 50 minutes, 20 seconds
Evan Thompson - Expanding Our View of the Mind
In this episode, Wendy speaks with philosopher of mind Evan Thompson about embodied cognition and contemplative science. Evan is one of the earliest contributors to advancing the dialogue between Buddhism and Western science through his work with Mind & Life co-founder Francisco Varela, and he's spent decades exploring how the human mind extends beyond the brain, throughout the body and into the world. In this conversation, they discuss:
his unique upbringing and educational path;
his work with Francisco Varela and the beginnings of the conversation between Buddhism and cognitive science;
why philosophy matters;
the project of neurophenomenology and the integration of first- and third-person methods;
the problem of neurocentrism;
4E cognition (that mind is embodied, embedded, extended, and enacted);
the “self” as construction vs. illusion;
how predictive models of mind line up with the enactive view;
whether or not meditation is a special avenue to reveal the nature of the mind;
the need for more thought systems and religions at the table in contemplative science;
and why it's critical today to understand the human mind in nuanced ways.
Full show notes and resources
8/19/2020 • 1 hour, 38 minutes, 42 seconds
Doris Chang - Critical Consciousness
In this episode, Wendy speaks with clinical psychologist Doris Chang about her work on race, ethnicity, culture, and other dimensions of social identity as they shape psychological experience and mental health treatment. They discuss a number of topics, including:
Critical Consciousness as the ability to recognize and analyze systems of inequality, and the commitment to take action against these systems;
that race is a social construct, not a biological fact;
the impact of race on measures of well-being and health;
how she brings critical consciousness into the classroom, and how it unfolds with students;
the role of contemplative practice in becoming aware of systems of oppression;
her research on these training programs;
where contemplative science needs to go next, and other topics.
Full show notes and resources
8/5/2020 • 47 minutes, 32 seconds
Richie Davidson - The Science of Meditation
In this episode, Wendy speaks with neuroscientist, psychologist, and director of the Center for Healthy Minds, Richard (Richie) Davidson. Richie is one of the founders of contemplative science, and shares his perspective on the past, present, and future of the field. Their conversation covers many topics, including:
his early interest in the mind and experiences with meditation;
the beginnings of meditation research, and a challenge from the Dalai Lama;
what we know (and don't know) about how meditation changes the brain;
how investigating the self can lead to resilience;
current challenges to the field of contemplative science;
the need for research on analytic meditation;
negative findings and publication bias;
promises and pitfalls of research on psychedelics;
the value of training well-being, and other topics.
Full show notes and resources
7/22/2020 • 48 minutes
Tanya Luhrmann - How Social Worlds Shape Our Minds
In this episode, Wendy speaks with anthropologist Tanya Luhrmann about how practices embedded in social realities change our minds and our experiences. They discuss:
her research on unusual spiritual experiences (voices, visions);
her work with magic practitioners and evangelical Christian communities;
the boundary between reality and imagination;
local theory of mind;
the psychological constructs of absorption and porosity, and how they relate to these spiritual experiences;
how mental training and mindfulness affect the way we relate to our thoughts;
the impacts of a relationship with the divine for self and society, and other topics.
Full show notes and resources
7/8/2020 • 55 minutes, 43 seconds
Amishi Jha - Attention, Mind Wandering, and Stress
In this episode, Wendy speaks with cognitive and contemplative neuroscientist Amishi Jha about using mindfulness to train attention, and its usefulness particularly in high-stress situations. They cover many topics, including:
her own experience of high stress and how that brought her to contemplative practice;
her research on how mindfulness can train attention and working memory;
the relationship between attention and stress;
bringing mindfulness to military populations;
the pros and cons of a wandering mind;
mindfulness during COVID;
the state of contemplative science, and current issues around gender and racial diversity.
Full show notes and resources
6/24/2020 • 1 hour, 4 minutes, 19 seconds
john powell - Othering and Belonging
In this episode, Wendy speaks with law professor and civil rights expert john a. powell about his work at the intersection of social justice and spirituality. This conversation was recorded during the 2019 Summer Research Institute. They discuss a wide range of topics, including:
the problem of othering;
the roots of whiteness;
recent changes in the world and how we react to them;
how our minds create mental schemas;
implicit bias and how to change it;
the importance of narrative and bridging stories, and the role of leadership;
the self as a construction;
spirituality and interconnection;
the roles of science and religion in society;
identity politics, and more.
Full show notes and resources
6/10/2020 • 59 minutes, 53 seconds
Willa Blythe Baker - Meditating with the Body
In this episode, Wendy speaks with meditation teacher and Buddhist scholar Willa Blythe Baker about her work, and how the body is relevant in meditation. They cover many topics, including:
the roots of her interest in Buddhism and early experiences of Buddhism in action;
a research study about meditation and real-world compassionate behavior in which she was involved and various interpretations of the results;
how qualities like curiosity and compassion that we develop toward our own mental states in meditation might transfer to others;
the most relevant outcomes for contemplative scientists to be measuring;
role of the body in contemplative practice;
three natural metaphors for what she calls "somatic mindfulness" practice;
the role of letting go, and the importance of trust and how to foster it;
and implications of these ideas for how we view ourselves, and our interconnection with others and the world around us.
Full show notes and resources
5/27/2020 • 49 minutes, 34 seconds
Anil Seth - How Our Minds Predict Our Reality
In this episode, Wendy speaks with cognitive scientist Anil Seth about his work on consciousness and the mind. They discuss:
the idea of the brain as a prediction machine;
how perception is a kind of "controlled" hallucination;
the self as a construction and implications for psychiatric disorders;
connections between this view of the mind and Buddhist ideas;
how these views might inform our subjective experience;
the important role of the body in perception;
the connection between life and mind (and Anil's views on panpsychism);
emotions as prediction and interoception;
the question of free will;
communicating science to a public audience, and other topics.
Full show notes and resources
5/13/2020 • 1 hour, 3 minutes, 46 seconds
Thupten Jinpa - Cultivating Compassion
In this inaugural episode, Wendy speaks with Buddhist scholar, author, and longtime translator for the Dalai Lama, Thupten Jinpa. Their conversation covers many topics, including:
how he met and started working with the Dalai Lama, and insights from 35 years of translating for him;
the relationship of language and mind;
how to deal with self-consciousness;
the dialogue between Buddhism and science;
first- and third-person ways of investigating the mind that are central to the science of meditation;
sources of valid evidence and knowledge;
the mind as more than the brain;
the relevance of compassion for well-being and a program he developed to cultivate it;
the value of mental training in the time of COVID, and other topics.
Full show notes and resources
4/29/2020 • 1 hour, 4 minutes, 58 seconds
Mind & Life Trailer
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Read more about the show in this interview with host Wendy Hasenkamp.