Life Kit - Boost your mood in 15 minutes
Episode Date: September 3, 2024Sometimes you're just feeling blah: the weather's bad, you can't get out of bed and you're struggling to shake off that listlessness. In these moments, the solution is often simpler than we think. Thi...s episode, NPR's science desk and Life Kit staff present research-backed mood boosters to instantly shake yourself out of a slump and turn your day around.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Hey everybody, it's Mariel
The other day I woke up feeling sad
And I wasn't really sure why
It just got worse as the day went on
I started wondering
What is bothering me? Is it a dream I had? Am I stressed about something?
Some unresolved trauma I should dig up
Then around 2.30 in the afternoon
I finally had lunch
I bit into a juicy salmon burger
With pickles and aoli on top
and realized, oh, I was just hungry.
Yeah, bad moods, sometimes they have a big underlying emotional reason,
and sometimes they're a signal that we need to meet one of our basic bodily needs,
like eating or drinking water or talking to another human.
Now, let me be clear, it's okay to be in a bad mood.
As we know from inside out, all of our emotions, sadness included, serve a purpose.
But let's say you want to pivot.
There are a lot of things you can do.
On this episode of Life Kit with help from NPR Science Desk, we are going to hand you a menu of research-backed mood boosters.
These are actions you can take when you've got less than 15 minutes to spend and you want to escape that gloomy cloud hanging over you.
Just a note here, none of these actions on their own can treat serious mental health conditions.
But they can supplement your pre-existing mental health routine and they can help you shake off that bad vibe, at least in the moment.
Our first mood booster is a cool one, a really cool one.
Our first mood booster is a cool one. A really cool one.
You ever heard of a polar bill?
plunge. That's when a bunch of people get together, sometimes as a New Year's Day tradition,
and jump into the freezing ocean. Ready guys?
Going to walk in. Walk in with intention.
Well, people are now doing this all year round. It's called cold plunging.
Ready?
Go. One, two, three.
And cold plunging is exactly what it sounds like. You submerge yourself in cold water.
Usually in the studies, we're talking about temperatures lower than 60 degrees, but there's no one definition.
People are practicing it in different ways depending on what they have access to.
That's NPR Health and Science correspondent Will Stone.
He lives in Seattle and cold plunges a few times a week.
You're hearing him on an outing with a group called the Puget Sound plungers.
And some of their members told him that a cold plunge can feel transformative.
If there's this point where you hit a level where it's not cold anymore and this, like, calm washes over you, it's pretty cool.
Any anxiety, anything I'm struggling with, it's just gone.
And when I come out of the water, I've left it in the water.
Okay, Will, what do we know, broadly speaking, about the benefits of cold plunging?
You've reported a bit on what happens in those first moments when you get into cold water.
Yeah, that's right.
There is a first kind of physiological reaction you have, which is cold.
the cold shock response.
This is when your body basically freaks out.
You know, your heart rate jumps, your blood pressure spikes.
It activates your fight or flight response.
This is called the sympathetic arm of your nervous system.
You'll have a release of like stress hormones, like adrenaline.
And scientists do believe that, you know, some of the benefits that we see specifically around mental health has to do with that first intense, this cold shock response.
that you have to kind of deal with and encounter when you first get in.
Okay. Well, let's talk more about the mental health benefits.
What is the evidence that you've seen?
So I would say the evidence is still pretty thin, but I do see it as one of the most promising areas of research.
There's a one small study from the UK that shows even a quick dip in the cold water can improve your mood.
And this one study on mood found it didn't really matter if it was five.
or 10 or 20 minutes in the water, it all seemed to help about have the same effect.
All right, so that's our first mood booster.
Try a cold plunge.
If it's your first time, Will says find a body of water somewhere in the 50 to 60 degree range
and prioritize safety.
Make sure you have a friend with you and a plan to warm up fast after.
And if you can't get to a pool or a lake or the ocean quickly, a cold shower or an ice bath
can give you similar benefits.
Our next mood boost starts with a team of researchers aiming to answer this question.
What is the least amount of movement needed to offset the risks of sitting?
Researchers at Columbia University Medical Center recruited a bunch of middle-aged and older adults
and had them sit for eight hours, a typical work day.
And then they started including breaks for them to walk on a treadmill.
NPR's Alison Aubrey reported on this.
They learned that just taking a one or two-minute walk once,
per hour help to lower blood pressure. And this wasn't a huge surprise because it's known that when
you stand up, when you move, your muscles burn more fat and you increase blood flow. So that's
very beneficial. That's helpful. But when the participants upped it to twice an hour on the treadmill
for longer periods, up to five minutes, they saw more impressive results. So I have to tell you,
I just did this. I put my shoes on, walked out the door, set a timer for five.
minutes and just kind of walked around, walked a few blocks, had the sun on my face. Nice. How did you
feel? It felt really good. I mean, I do try to stand up from my desk, but the walking part of it
felt there was something else about that. It was like, suddenly my problems didn't feel as heavy.
Wow. Okay. Well, that's big. That's worth noting. And I'll point out that there was one more benefit
of these short, frequent breaks that was noted in the study.
I spoke to Kathleen Jans.
She's a health promotion researcher at the University of Iowa.
And she points out that the participants in the study felt better when they built in more walking breaks.
People felt less fatigue.
People were in a better mood because they took those breaks.
I wonder, too, do you have to walk to get the benefits of this?
Can you just move for five minutes?
Like, can you vacuum or can you dance or?
around your apartment for five minutes and get the same benefits? Absolutely. So however you do that,
however you build in movement, that's the goal here. And if you're bored by walking, you can dance,
as you say. That's our second mood booster. If you have 15 minutes, five minutes, one minute,
get up out of bed or away from your desk and go on a walk or dance around your apartment or do
some upright stretching or just do a load of laundry. Move that body.
All right, our next mood booster comes from Life Kitt's digital editor, Malika Grieb.
Malika, I know that is your 9 to 5 being our digital editor, but you actually have a 5 to 9 after that.
What is your other job?
Yeah, I actually love that phrasing.
I do a myriad of things.
I am a cartoonist.
I'm writing a screenplay.
I'm a graphic novelist.
Doing these things makes me feel really relaxed.
and it's my way of expressing myself and my emotions and helps me understand what's going on
inside. It's like a compulsion. It's a compulsion to help me understand myself and the world.
Yeah. So you've actually looked into this why it feels so good to make something. What is the
benefit we get from, whether it's doodling or some other creative hobby?
Yeah. So I reached out to experts about this.
I talked to Girija Kaimal, and she's a professor at Drexel University and a researcher in art therapy.
Things change in your body.
Your stress levels go down.
Your sense of perceived stress.
Your mood improves.
And so one of the coolest things that she told me about this need and the reason why we make art is that it may serve an evolutionary purpose.
Giridja has this theory that art making helps us navigate problems that might arise in the future.
And she wrote about this in a 2019 study in the Journal of the American Art Therapy Association.
So this act of imagination is actually an act of survival.
It is preparing us to imagine possibilities.
And that makes sense, right?
We've been making art since we were cave dwellers.
And maybe making art helps us prepare for problems in our lives or helps us imagine better futures for ourselves.
I feel like it can also take emotion.
that are in here and get them out there so you can start to, I don't know, it's almost like
to remove them from your body and put them on the page. It almost sounds like a cliche, but yes,
it's helping you process what maybe you didn't even fully understand you were feeling. Art can do
amazing things and it can improve your mood in a big way. Engaging in any sort of visual
expression, coloring, doodling, free drawing, results in the reward pathway in the brain being
activated, which means that you feel good, and it's perceived as a pleasurable experience.
So the researchers have also found that coloring and other forms of art, they lower stress
and anxiety, right?
Yeah.
There was this 2016 paper in the Journal of the American Art Therapy Association that Giridjo worked on,
and she and some researchers basically measured cortisol levels of 39 healthy adults,
and they found that 45 minutes of creating art significantly lowered cortisol levels.
Okay, so I wonder, Amalika, is all art equally beneficial in this way?
You know what? That's a really cool question.
Hirajja recommends using modeling clay to just mess around with,
take some in your hand and make a bowl or make a sculpture, just do anything with it.
Some media like clay, which engages perhaps both your hands and therefore many parts of your brain,
your sense of touch is deeply engaged, your sense of three-dimensional space, sight, maybe a little bit of sound, all these are engaged.
So when you are using several parts of yourself for self-expression, that's likely going to be more beneficial.
But really, she says, just do whatever feels good to you.
You know, if you really like making zines, which is what I'd like making, make zines.
If you really like painting, paint, do whatever feels good for you.
You just want to be able to keep coming back to do that art thing.
All right.
So, Malika, what is a good creative exercise someone could do if they have, say, 15 minutes and they want to lower their stress or feel like they're getting that reward?
Yeah.
So I'm the queen of micro art projects.
Love it.
I'm a big believer of making things sloppy and fast, just so that you get that high of having completed something.
And so one of the things that I love to recommend to people is to challenge yourself to make a little mini-zine.
It's an eight-page mini-zine in one sitting.
And like in one sitting, it can be in five minutes or in ten minutes.
You can finish a zine.
Just like tell a story in eight pages and get it done.
Mood booster number three, create something.
thing.
And Malika says, don't be too precious about your creations.
These do not have to be perfect.
We will have more Life Kit after the break.
Before we dive into the rest of the show, I just wanted to check.
Have you followed us on Instagram?
Yeah, we have an Instagram now.
It's at NPR Life Kit.
There you'll find exclusive videos, comics, and more.
Again, that's at NPR Life Kit.
See you there.
Okay, so now we're going to enter a rapid fire round of mood boosters with NPR journalist Ryan Kelman.
Hey, Ryan.
Hey, Mariel.
All right, so a few years ago, Ryan, you got together with some other folks at NPR to look at research-backed ways that we can make ourselves feel good, right?
Yeah, that's right.
So, you know, we were coming sort of out of the pandemic at the time, which was incredibly isolating.
for a lot of people, and, you know, people had been deprived of many of their sources of joy
that they once had. So we had the idea to create an app to help counteract some of that,
shake off some of those, you know, pandemic feelings. Big shout out to Meredith Rizzo,
Kamau Roth, and the whole news apps team here at NPR. And basically, the app offers a menu of
ways you can enter different positive emotional states, like wonder, gratefulness, anticipation,
that kind of thing.
The app is called NPR Joy Generator.
You can find it at npr.org slash joy.
All right, Ryan, let's go into some of these techniques.
Let's, uh, how about this?
How about we test them out on you?
Okay, I'm down.
So what I want you to do is listen to this for me and tell me how it makes you feel.
I don't like it.
I don't like it.
That's fair.
That's fair.
That's not the sound for everyone.
What that actually is, is someone playing with slime.
Sounds weird, I know.
But for some lucky people, like myself, sounds like that will give you this sort of brain-tingly sensation.
It's called Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response, otherwise,
known as ASMR. Yeah, I have seen ASMR videos and some of them I like and some I don't.
I get that sensation when I watch people put makeup on other people. Oh, I like that fun
specific detail about you. Fantastic. Yeah, so there actually isn't a ton of research,
but in one study from 2018 that was published in the journal Plus One, a team of researchers
hooked up dozens of participants, people who got this ASMR feeling, to biological feedback
machinery. And they found that when they watched ASMR videos, hearing those sounds of things like
plastic wrappers crinkling, peeling garlic, pouring a fizzy drink.
When they heard those sounds, their heart rates decreased on average by more than three beats per minute.
And they got these pleasurable chills, you know, these goosebumps or shivers up your spine.
For me, personally, it's hard to describe, but it's something like what you might feel when you're listening to a really good song.
I think what I like is about those makeup videos is that often the person putting the makeup on is talking very softly too, like they're sort of.
of talking like this. And I think that that's the kind of ASMR that I like.
Absolutely. Yeah. Whispering is big in the ASMR community for sure.
And how much, I wonder, like, how much ASMR would you need to listen to to get that
mood boosting effect? Well, with the videos that the researchers showed, and that's one study,
they were showing about three minute videos. So, you know, conceivably, you can get those
tingly sensations pretty quickly. All right. Mood booster number four.
or tap into ASMR to calm your mind.
Watch a soothing video online.
Figure out the triggers that are most pleasing for you.
What is the next mood booster?
Well, let me ask you this.
Are you a cat person or a dog person?
I would say dog person.
Okay, good answer.
No wrong answer there, folks.
It's all good.
But here, I'm going to send you this link of a YouTube video to watch for me.
Okay, so we're watching this puppy pile.
dog video, right? Yeah, it's just like it looks like maybe a mama dog with her little baby
puppies sleeping next to her and they're just like breathing and somebody was petting their
fur. Is this a live stream? Yeah, this is a live stream. So what's going on here, what's meant to be
happening here is the power of cuteness. Some lucky researchers at the University of Leeds
actually have attempted to look into why we like watching puppies.
and kittens, stuff like that so much.
And they showed 30-minute montages of cute animal videos to stressed out college students,
and they found that their blood pressure, heart rate, and anxiety all dropped.
And it's like you don't actually even need to be with a puppy.
You could just look at videos of puppies.
Yeah, right?
There's a reason that, you know, so much of my social media is subscriptions to
dogs doing things and other cute animals, right?
Mood booster number five.
Maybe you could have guessed this one, but cute animals make us feel good.
So sidle up next to your cat or dog or parrot or rabbit or snake, if that's what you're
into.
No pets in your house?
Those live puppy cams and cat cams on the internet do the same thing for us.
Okay, so I have one last thing for you to listen to.
And I just want you to sort of note what you're feeling as you listen to it,
Does it evoke anything?
Does it remind you of anything?
So let's check it out.
Ooh, it feels cozy.
Huh.
I'm feeling like cozy mystical beachfront.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, yeah, homie, right?
That's kind of homie.
So, yeah, what we were doing in creating this app for this particular chapter,
of it, right? We were trying to put together sounds and visuals that might evoke memories
and for, you know, a broad generation of listeners, right? So from the sound of a disc drive
booting up to a cat purring to, you know, rain on a window pane. So these are things that
might feel like familiar and take you back to your childhood, remind you of your past.
And what we were trying to tap into is nostalgia. And that's that bit of a bit of a bit of,
sweet yearning, right, we feel to go back in time. And it's a pretty intricate emotion, actually.
For one, nostalgia is actually a universal experience, and even kids feel it.
Okay, so why, sometimes when I think of nostalgia, I think it feels a little sad. So I'm
surprised this is a mood booster. Right, right. So what scientists think is that nostalgia has a
couple of different functions, right? For one, tapping into these memories might help us when we're
lonely, right? The good ones by reminding us of fond, personally meaningful times. And when we're
nostalgic, people report feeling a stronger sense of belonging and describe their lives as more
meaningful. And these memories remind us also to strengthen our current relationships. Yeah. It sounds
like nostalgia can be a little reminder of what we love or what matters to us.
Right, exactly.
How would you put yourself in this state apart from listening to some audio like we just did?
Yeah, you can actively put yourself in this state.
You could go through your camera roll and like pull up pictures from, you know, years ago or
not even that long ago.
You could cook an old family recipe or read your favorite kids.
book from growing up right um you know i something i like to do is like listen to the music i listened to
in high school which you know actually had like different meaning for me then but i still look
back on it with nostalgia uh there's that one song it's like fall as a fall out boy i hope it's
sugar we're going down down down in an early around oh yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah going down swing
yes yeah who is that
Fall up boy.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it is.
That song takes me back.
Thank you, Ryan, for all these mood boosters.
Yeah, happy to be here.
So mood booster number six, nostalgia is a powerful, complicated, but deeply enriching emotion.
Spend a few minutes looking back in your camera roll.
Maybe go through the pictures you took on this very day,
five, ten, or fifteen years ago.
Or Ryan says you could listen to your favorite song.
from high school just to feel that connection to your younger self okay it's time for a recap if you're
feeling low energy or listless or just having a ble day that's the scientific term for it i've heard
we've got tips for you that research shows will help make you feel better shock your body with
something cold cold plunge a splash at the pool a cold shower move your body maybe go in a walk
or a dance around the house or wave your arms around create something make a fast
and messy. This isn't the time to be precious.
Watch some ASMR videos to get those nice brain tingles going.
Spend some time loving up on cute animals virtually or in person.
And tap into your nostalgia.
Crack open the old Facebook albums.
Take a little virtual walk down memory lane.
For more Life Kit, check out our other episodes.
We've got one on different stress resets to snap out of your anxiety
and another on longer-term ways to feel happier in life.
You can find those at npr.org slash life kit.
And if you love LifeKit and want even more,
subscribe to our newsletter at npr.org slash LifeKit newsletter.
Also, we love hearing from you, so if you have episode ideas or feedback you want to share,
email us at LifeKit at NPR.org.
This episode of Life Kit was produced by Margaret Serino.
Our visuals editor is Beck Harlan,
and our digital editor is Malika Greed.
Megan Kane is our supervising editor,
and Beth Donovan is our executive producer.
Our production team also includes Andy Tagle,
Claire Marie Schneider and Sylvie Douglas. Engineering support comes from Quasi Lee. I'm Mariel Segarra.
Thanks for listening and please take care of yourself.
Support for NPR and the following message come from the Limelson Foundation, working to harness the power of invention and innovation to accelerate climate action and improve lives around the world. Learn more atlimson.org.