The One You Feed - Move Your Body, Free Your Mind: The Science of Movement and Mental Health with Caroline Williams
Episode Date: May 16, 2025In this episode, Caroline Williams shares how moving your body can free your mind as she dives into the surprising science of movement and mental health. Caroline spent years studying the brain until ...she realized she was ignoring half the equation. She explains how movement of all kinds, walking, stretching, dancing, and even laughter can reshape our emotional landscape. Key Takeaways: The connection between physical movement and mental health. The role of interoception in understanding bodily sensations and emotions. Evolutionary perspectives on the brain's function related to movement. The impact of physical activity on brain chemistry and emotional well-being. The importance of posture and its influence on emotional states. The benefits of strength training for mood and self-esteem. The decline in physical strength among youth and its implications for mental health. The concept of "movement snacks" and integrating small bursts of activity into daily life. The relationship between dance, rhythm, and emotional connection. The significance of breath control and its effects on relaxation and mental clarity. If you enjoyed this conversation with Caroline Williams, check out these other episodes: Understanding Choice Points for Lasting Changes in Eating and Exercise with Michelle Segar The Science of Breathing with James Nestor For full show notes, click here! Connect with the show: Follow us on YouTube: @TheOneYouFeedPod Subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Spotify Follow us on Instagram See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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It's the most common beat in Western pop music.
And it's also this resonant frequency at which if you just let people walk,
that's what they will go to.
And if you get people to tap along to a beat in a lab,
that's also the beat that they are most accurate at.
Welcome to The One You Feed.
Throughout time, great thinkers have recognized the importance of the thoughts we have.
Quotes like, garbage in, garbage out, or you are what you think ring true.
And yet, for many of us, our thoughts don't strengthen or empower us.
We tend toward negativity, self-pity, jealousy, or fear.
We see what we don't have instead of what we do.
We think things that hold us back and dampen our spirit.
But it's not just about thinking.
Our actions matter.
It takes conscious, consistent, and creative effort to make a life worth living.
This podcast is about how other people keep themselves moving in the right direction.
How they feed their good wolf.
What if one of the most effective tools for your mental health was your body, not as a
replacement for therapy or medication, but as something with profound power in its own
right?
For me, if I could only choose one intervention for my mood, for my mental health, it would
probably be exercise. If I could only choose one intervention for my mood, for my mental health, it would probably
be exercise.
And today's guest, Carolyn Williams, helps explain why.
As a science journalist, she spent years studying the brain until she realized she was ignoring
half the equation.
In this conversation, we'll explore how movement of all kinds, walking, stretching, dancing,
even laughter, can reshape our emotional landscape.
I'm Eric Zimmer and this is the one you feed.
You're listening to an iHeart Podcast.
This week on Dear Chelsea with me, Chelsea Handler, Ed Helms is here.
I of course was drawn to the LSD story.
This was all under official government activity.
They built an apartment that had a glass mirror where he could sit there and watch.
And then they would drug these customers and he was just sort of taking notes and God knows
what else behind this double mirror.
And this was all in the name of science.
This just sounds like a guy f***ing off behind a wall.
It does.
Listen to Dear Chelsea on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
I want you to ask yourself right now, how am I actually doing?
Because it's a question that we rarely ask ourselves.
All of May is actually mental health awareness month and on the psychology of your twenties,
we are taking a vulnerable look at why mental health
is so hard to talk about. Prepare for our conversations to go deep.
I spent the majority of my teenage years and my 20s just feeling absolutely terrified.
I had a panic attack on a conference call. Knowing that she had six months to live, I
was no longer pretending that this was my best friend.
So this Mental Health Awareness Month, take that extra bit of care of your wellbeing.
Listen to the psychology of your 20s
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
I found out I was related to the guy that I was dating.
I don't feel emotions correctly.
I collect my roommates' toenails and fingernails.
Those were some callers from my call-in podcast,
Therapy Gecko.
It's a show where I take phone calls
from anonymous strangers
as a fake gecko therapist and try to learn a little bit about their lives. I know that's
a weird concept, but I promise it's very interesting. Check it out for yourself by searching for
Therapy Gecko on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi Caroline, welcome to the show. Hello, thank you very much for having me.
I'm excited to talk to you about your book.
It's called Move, How the New Science of Body Movement Can Set Your Mind Free.
And listeners know I am a big proponent of moving my body primarily in order to make
my mind feel better.
So we'll get into all that in a little bit. but let's start like we always do with a parable.
In the parable, there's a grandparent
who's talking with their grandchild,
and they say, in life, there are two wolves inside of us
that are always at battle.
One is a good wolf, which represents things like kindness
and bravery and love, and the other is a bad wolf,
which represents things like greed and hatred and fear.
And the grandchild stops
and thinks about it for a second and looks up at their grandparents and says, well, which
one wins? And the grandparent says, the one you feed. So I'd like to start off by asking
you what that parable means to you in your life and in the work that you do.
I think it's a really fascinating one because not only is it true in life, but in science, there's a real basis
for this. Before I got really into movement, my career as 20 years or so as a science journalist
was looking at the plasticity of the human brain and how it changes. It really is true
that what we do, the way we behave, the way we think, gets written into our brains in, you know,
physical connections between neurons and in the pathways. And, you know, as you
sort of walk these paths through your brain, they become more, more...
Worn in.
Worn in. Yeah, that's the word. I'm thinking of indented, but that's not really the word I mean.
But yeah, they become like paths through long grass. They become better traveled. And so,
yeah, it's absolutely true that if you choose to be positive and to choose kindness and
compassion, that's been shown many times that that can actually change the way your brain
works and the way you live your life. So there really is something solid behind that. And
that's sort of the way I like to operate. I guess I'm a bit of
a natural skeptic. I want to look for the science, look for where the evidence lies, and it absolutely
does back that up for sure. So I try to live that way myself. Yeah, I was reflecting earlier today
on, you know, I occasionally just somewhat jokingly say like, well, I'm just a bag of chemicals,
right? Like, at the end of the day, we've got neurotransmitters
and we've got hormones and we've got electrical connections
and synapses and it's just all very physical.
You know, it has a very physical element to it.
It's chemicals, all that sort of stuff.
And yet, those things both control how we feel
and then also the things that we do can change those
chemicals. There's just such an interesting interaction between the two
that you would think like well if it's all chemicals then the way to intervene
is chemically but not necessarily and your book is a big testament to that
that there are ways of changing what's happening inside not just our body but
our brain through the way we move.
Absolutely, I mean that's one of the things that got me started on this whole thing. I've
been so interested for many years in what's happening in the brain and how to, you know,
change brain chemistry, how to change the way you think and feel focused on the brain.
And then it sort of became obvious to me that thinking of your brain as if it's not attached
to the rest of you is kind of
weird. Of course, there's all this pipe work that all the blood flow packed with hormones
and all kinds of other stuff and all the wiring and the electrical activity that's going up
and down our nerves, that all impacts what happens chemically, physically and as a result,
emotionally and the way that we are able to think.
So obviously, what happens below the neck matters for how we think and feel.
And going on from that, it became quite obvious that things that we do to our bodies can change
that chemical environment and change the electrical environment and as has a knock-on effect on
everything.
So in a way, it's liberating because you can then use your body as an extension to sort of tweak
these parameters and change the way that you feel and the way that life feels to
you as well, your sort of outlook on the world. Yeah I always find it funny when
people talk about like the brain-body connection as if they discovered
something radical like oh I mean obviously it's always been connected.
You know, I'm not quite sure how we got to it's so disconnected. I had a strangely, and I'm taking
things off topic here, sort of, not really. I had a epiphany about a week and a half ago. I was doing
loving-kindness meditation, and it was a guided meditation, and the leader of the meditation instructed
you to try and notice where in your body you're feeling this thing happen.
And I realized where I was feeling it mostly was my face.
And I had been discounting the face as part of my body for a long time.
Every time I was told, look for where this emotion is in your
body, if I noticed it in my face I was like, no that's my head, where's in my
body? Yeah, yeah, yeah. But I had this moment where I was like, a dummy, hey your face...
Your face is part of your body....is part of your body. It is an emotional center.
It's where I happen to feel a lot of things and that's sort of on topic as
far as the brain-body connection. No, I mean it's really to feel a lot of things. And that's sort of on topic as far as
the brain-body connection.
No, I mean, it's really relevant
because a lot of people struggle to tune in
to where these feelings are.
So there's this thing called alexithymia
where people aren't able to put names to their emotions.
And if you can't do that,
then it's really hard to regulate your emotions.
So things like meditation and checking in
with your body can be a way of sort of tuning in and going, okay, so I'm feeling this right
now. I wonder how I can change what I'm doing with my body or with my face, which is part
of my body, and how that can then have a feedback that will maybe make me feel differently.
So yeah, that's really, really relevant. And so that came up quite a lot in my research that being able to tune into
your body and know what it needs, and know what your entire body, brain, mind needs is
a really important skill. And because, and often if we are so sedentary, we're so disconnected
from our body, we're up in our heads all the time that we don't often make that connection.
So it's a really important aspect of tuning in to your body.
Yeah.
So let's start with talking a little bit about what the brain evolved to do.
And I'd also like to talk a little bit about what certain people think the brain is doing,
what its role is.
Can we talk about those two things real quickly before we move into the specifics of movement? Absolutely, because this is where it all comes back to. So we tend to have
this idea that brains are there for thinking and working stuff out. But actually, if you look way
back in our evolutionary history, not every organism on the planet has a brain. Even a lot
of animals don't have brains. And at some point, evolution had to make a decision whether brains were worth investing in or
not. There's this very well-known neuroscientist called Rodolfo Linas from Colombia. He pointed
out that there's this creature called the sea squirt. In their adult form, they just
look like bagpipes stuck to the bottom of the ocean and they suck in water through one pipe and they blow it out through the other and they don't move. But in
their young form, in their larval form, they're sort of like tadpoles. They swim around the ocean
and their job in life is to find a place on the ocean to attach and live out the rest of their
lives. And when they're in this juvenile stage, they have sort of a very basic brain. And the
reason for this is that it needs to coordinate
its movements away from things that are harmful and towards rewards. It's a basic system,
what will kill me, what will help me pass on my genes. This basic brain is connected
to its basic tail and it swims around. When this lava finds the perfect spot, it attaches
basically by gluing its head to a
rock and one of the first things it does is reabsorb its entire nervous system and it
never makes any decisions ever again.
So Lina said, well, this just goes to show what a brain is for.
A brain is for informing your movements in the world so that it can increase your chances
of survival by taking you towards things that will keep you alive and taking you away from things that will kill you. If you're not going
to move, then you don't need the brain. They're expensive bits of kit. They're high energy
and they take a lot to run.
From right early on, brains were there to inform our movements in the world. You can
see that everything's been added on later, right up to our clever emotions.
In fact, emotion comes from the words in the Latin for to move away from something.
So emotions inform us about what we need to get away from and what we need to get to.
So everything else that's come since then has been about informing our movements in
the world, which is something that you don't often think about.
You think brains, yeah, yes, we've got a cracking brain for
thinking very clever thoughts. But at the basis of it, our brains are there to help
us move sensibly.
Yeah, I love that analogy of the sea squirt. It explains a lot about the editor of this
podcast, Chris, also, and what has happened to him. I think basically what you said is
once they stop moving,
they basically just get rid of their brain.
They just don't have it anymore.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It just gets recycled because the energy
can be reused for something else.
And you know, I'm not saying that, the poor editor,
I'm sure he's a lovely man, very clever man.
Let's just say he doesn't move much and he's not very smart.
I'm just making some connections here.
I wouldn't like to comment.
But it's true that in humans especially, this use it or
lose it nature of our brains became even more sort of tied together in the point of our
evolution when we became hunters and gatherers. Because then, you know, our ancestors could
maybe sit around in trees munching on fruit and get away with it and they were absolutely
fine. When we started moving further afield and looking for food, we had to evolve to
be able to stand on our feet and walk long distances and forage far and wide and hunt.
But we also needed to be able to work together to bring down prey because humans are quite
puny, really. We're not very fast, we're not very strong. We also needed to be able to, you know, communicate, to work together, to remember
the way home. There's a lot of cognitive work that goes into being a hunter-gatherer. And
so there's this idea that once we started taking this way of life, our physiology tied
together, moving around, being active with the health of our brain. And that explains why,
you know, we've known for a long time that physical activity prompts the brain to be
particularly plastic, it adds more connections, it adds more blood flow, you know, everything works
better when you've been active. And the reason for that is because these two things go together.
That point in our evolution, it stopped being optional to move because if we don't move as much as our
evolutionary history says we should, then the brain starts making savings. And over a lifetime,
that can be quite significant. So, you know, there is these quite frightening statistics that 13% of
Alzheimer's cases can be traced to a sedentary lifestyle. So over your lifespan, you know,
if you're too sedentary, yeah, that can have a real impact on how your brain ages
Yeah, Alzheimer's is a topic near and dear to my heart and my partner Jenny's heart
Her mom is deep in that disease now. So
Brain health in general is better
With movement lots of studies show that I want to pivot a little bit to mental health now, which is similar but slightly different.
You say that poor mental health might be part of the price we pay for a cushy life of sofas and supermarkets.
Yeah, I mean, because at the end of the day, we are the only creatures on the planet where movement is optional.
You know, we can get food, we can find a mate, we can entertain ourselves, we can do everything we like from
sitting down and just moving our thumbs and fingers a little bit if we want to. So we
have to seek it out. And statistics suggest that by and large, we don't, and also in working
life nowadays, even for people who write about movement for a living, spend a lot of time
sitting in this very chair and not moving. So we have to seek it out if we're going to do it. And obviously there's been a real change over
past decades. We move a lot less than even sort of our parents' generation. And we have seen this
catastrophic rise in mental ill health and loneliness and all these other sort of things.
Clearly there's more than one thing going on. I'm not saying, oh, well, that's a straight line
between our sedentary lifestyles and mental health.
But given that we have got this trend
and we know that movement, exercise,
even just going for a walk is really, really important
and really good boost for mental health,
as is strength training.
That's a really, really important one
that a lot of people neglect.
Being physically stronger has been shown really, really conclusively to help with anxiety and
depression and just make people feel more powerful in the world and able to cope. So this is measured
psychologists call global self-efficacy. And that's just basically a way of saying, I feel like I can
handle stuff. And when people have improved
their physical strength through weight training or body weight training, they do feel more
capable. So I think there's a real role to play in becoming more active in particular
ways as well that could really improve people's mental health.
I'm going to jump backwards a little bit, maybe. I want to talk a little bit about interoception
and what it is and how that leads to what certain scientists call a global emotional moment and then
link in how movement ties into that. Yeah, so interoception is sort of a little known
sense that we have. And it's the sense of the internal state of our body. So rather than thinking
of, you know, the brain as the master computer
that just sends messages downstream, interoception is about a crosstalk between the body and the
brain. So you think of the brain more as a sort of facilitator that takes all the information
that's coming in about what hormones are in the blood, whether you're hungry, whether you're thirsty, whether you're feeling, whether fight or flight responses kicked in, you know, all these kinds of things
that are going on, even down to our heartbeat, you know, the way that we're digesting our
food, all this information is being passed back and forth, bone and body, all the time.
And what we know is that slight differences in the messages that are going from the body,
these intraceptive messages, can really affect mental health.
And there's this whole body of research now that suggests that some people are more or
less sensitive to their intraceptive signals and that can make you more or less susceptible
to things like depression, anxiety, schizophrenia, all kinds of mental health issues.
And it's involved in things like autism and ADHD and all these kinds of mental health issues and it's involved in things like
autism and ADHD and all these kinds of things. The global emotional moment is
basically your brain's picture, you know, taking in all this information. So there's
a part of the brain called the insula that takes all this information and puts
it all together and comes up with a sense of how I feel now. The I bit of it, the me, the sense
of self comes from these bodily signals and putting them all together brings this global
emotional moment. It stands to reason that if you do anything to change these messages,
then that global emotional moment will change. I think tweaking the dials is something that
could really benefit people,
as I said earlier, tuning in, doing something to change the messages, and that will change the way
you feel in the moment, but also in the long term. The strength stuff is really interesting
because the idea behind why strength might make you feel more capable is that you're upgrading
these intraceptive signals from your muscles and from your bones that are just maybe given
this unconscious sense that I'm strong, it's fine, you can stand down the anxiety because
if anything happens, I can handle it.
And maybe that's what explains the very strong link between increased strength and feeling
more powerful.
Yeah, I think this is a really important topic, this idea of interoception and signals coming from the body that we
aggregate them generally and it creates this global emotional moment. Because
I've spent a lot of time thinking about do thoughts cause emotions, do emotions
cause thought, and you know it's a big debate a lot in psychology and I think
the answer is as near as I can tell it's a bi-directional relationship. I almost
more and more I'm starting to go are they even different or they co-arise?
Yeah.
The thing that first got me really going, wait,
I'm not sure that thought always causes emotion,
is because I was able to notice very clearly
some days I would wake up and I would just immediately feel
a certain way before I'd had any thought.
And then it felt like every thought got
filtered through that feeling and that's what you're describing that global
emotional moment is sort of like the weather that's inside our brain
and then our thoughts can't help but to some degree be influenced by that
weather. Yeah so one way way that I heard it described
that I really like is background music.
It's sort of like the background music to our lives.
So like when you're watching a film,
you know, you're watching a horror film
and you can't quite work out while you're feeling on edge,
but it's the background movement
that's kind of making you nervous.
And yeah, by changing these introspective messages,
you can change the background music on your life.
So that rather than feeling like, oh messages, you can change the background music on your life. So that rather
than feeling like, oh god, you know, you can actually do something that makes everything feel
a bit more positive and feel a bit more possible. That's what the power of movement is doing in the
moment and long term. That if you can change those messages, then in general, your background
movement to your life will be better and will be happier, will be more capable.
Yeah, we interviewed, it's been years ago, a woman named Michelle Seeger,
and she had done some writing on movement and how it makes us feel.
And she said something, I won't get it exactly right,
but it stuck with me all these years, all these interviews,
which is like, if your body doesn't feel good, your brain, your mental state,
you're going to feel like shit.
The flavor of that may depend on your particular neuroses and conditioning, but if the body
is out of whack, it's going to influence it.
And I think that's what we're saying.
And with interoception, what you're saying is when we move, it helps the body be in a
better place and thus the messages that we're getting in the brain are better, changing
that background music to something that is more enjoyable.
Yeah, and in sort of ways that you can't even put your finger on.
Yeah.
So just like, you know, when you're feeling down and depressed and miserable, sometimes
you don't know why.
Yeah.
You know, but if you can improve the background messages, then you can just feel okay for
reasons that you don't have to dwell on.
You just feel okay and you're bumbling't have to dwell on. You just feel okay
and you're bumbling along through your life and everything is groovy. So yeah, there's a lot you
can do. And I think it was not really a surprise to me when I started thinking of movement this way.
It was sort of a penny dropping. Like, well, of course, I never feel more like myself than when
I'm halfway through a yoga class or, you long walk or kayaking or just doing something active.
I know who I am. I feel good. I know what I'm capable of and everything's great. If
I'm slumped down, not moved, I mean, I had to isolate for 10 days when I had COVID. Oh,
my goodness. I was the worst version of myself ever. I mean, in theory, I could have written
several books in that time, but well, not really. But you know, I could have done a lot of work, but I was so miserable.
I was so lethargic, you know, and I think if anyone who is quite active sort of knows
this in themselves, but it's kind of interesting to put the science and the philosophy behind
it and say, yeah, for me, that means there are good reasons to seek it out and to not
be lazy, even though it's comfortable.
Yeah, this speaks to two of the mantras that I use on the show the most. One is depression hates a moving target. It has
always been true in my case. And then the other is sometimes you can't think your
way into right action, you have to act your way into right thinking, right? And
it speaks to the fact that the action, in this case we're talking about movement,
the actual physical movement, changes the way we think. Yeah. Versus just sitting there trying to feel better and think better.
Sometimes it just doesn't work.
So my previous book, Override, or My Plastic Brain in the US,
was all about trying to think, you know, trying to do something to my brain,
to change my brain's workings, you know, to make me less anxious,
to make me more creative, to change various things.
And especially when it came to anxiety, the thing that bugged me about it is that most
of the treatments revolve around thinking your way out of it, thinking, I feel anxious
about this. Logically, that shouldn't be the case. I can tell myself that I don't need
to be anxious about this. And that's not how it works when you're living it. You can't
think your way out of it. Of course, there's the issue with things like depression that getting moving in the first place is a problem.
And a really interesting research that I found was one of the first signs that an antidepressant
medication is starting to work is that people have an increase in voluntary movements. So people want
to move more and then that starts off the nice you know, the nice cycle of upward movement, hopefully.
But yeah, I think it's absolutely true that if you can get over that barrier and get yourself moving,
then you're off and running and that's been shown time and again.
Yeah.
I wish I had an easy answer to how to get off the chair in the first place, but...
I know. That is a cruel irony of really severe depression is that, yeah, one of the things that might help you a lot
is one of the things that's very hardest to do,
which is, you know, why really learning to start small can be helpful.
Like how, you know, what's the littlest thing I can do?
With physical activity, the thing I've noticed a lot is that,
let's say I'm thinking, all right, I need to do a 45-minute bike ride.
And my brain thinks about that and it thinks about the amount of energy a 45-minute bike
ride takes.
It knows what it takes.
It's done it.
It's like, okay, that's a lot of energy.
And it compares it to what it feels currently.
And it's like, that's not doable.
Which is why the strategy of like, all right, Eric, just put on your bike shoes, get in the
other room.
Works. This is my own sort of interpretation of what I think is happening in my brain.
But my brain is going, oh, bike shoes? Eh, you know, one unit of energy.
You've got one unit of energy. I can do it.
That way, until at some juncture, the energy starts to generate from the workout itself and propels me. So that strategy has saved me more times than I can count.
I've been quite slack on the getting out of bed and doing early morning yoga
of late but I was regularly getting up at six and going
sort of half an hour down the road and doing an hour and a half of yoga in the morning.
And the way I managed to do that was when I woke up and groaned, because getting out of bed is my least favorite thing in the world, I used to just
say to myself, tuck and roll. I would just tuck, roll out of bed and go.
Tuck and roll. That's good.
Yeah. Tuck and roll hasn't worked for me that well recently, but now I do go out on
a lot of bike rides with friends and having them appear at the door and say, why aren't
you ready? tends to spur me into action.
They don't.
Yeah. It's either pressure from outside or some sneaky strategy can be the way. But you
know, one of the people I met during the research for the book was Marcus Scotney, who's an
ultra marathon runner who has suffered with depression his entire adult life. And even
he said to me, I just couldn't understand how can I push myself to run an ultra marathon
over several days when my feet are bleeding and I'm absolutely exhausted and yet sometimes I can't get myself
out of this depression.
You know, I've clearly got the strength of mind to do that.
Why can't I do that?
So even the best movers struggle with it. This This week on Dear Chelsea with me, Chelsea Handler, Ed Helms is here.
I of course was drawn to the LSD story.
In the 1950s, the CIA scientists secretly bought the entire world supply of LSD embarking
on a horrific attempt to discover the secrets to mind control.
This is so insane.
This was all under like official government activity.
They built a apartment in San Francisco
that had a glass mirror where he could sit there and watch.
And then they would drug these customers
and he was just sort of taking notes
and God knows what else behind this double mirror.
And this was
all in the name of science.
This just sounds like a guy off behind a wall.
It does.
I would just also like to say if you don't have to take LSD like this, LSD can be micro
dose. It's like an upper of energy enthusiasm makes you less nervous if I'm going heli
skiing.
If it allows me to go hella skiing, then yeah. I'm hella on board.
Listen to Dear Chelsea on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I found out I was related to the guy that I was dating.
I don't feel emotions correctly.
I am talking to a felon right now,
and I cannot decide if I like him or not.
Those were some callers from my call-in podcast,
Therapy Gecko.
It's a show where I take real phone calls
from anonymous strangers all over the world
as a fake gecko therapist and try to dig into their brains
and learn a little bit about their lives.
I know that's a weird concept,
but I promise it's pretty interesting if you give it a shot.
Matter of fact, here's a few more examples
of the kinds of calls we get on this show.
I live with my boyfriend,
and I found his piss jar in our apartment.
I collect my roommates' toenails and fingernails.
I have very overbearing parents.
Even at the age of 29,
they won't let me move out of their house.
So if you want an excuse to get out of your own head
and see what's going on in someone else's head,
search for Therapy Gecko on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
It's the one with the green guy on it.
Hi, I'm Kristin Davis, host of the podcast Are You a Charlotte?
What we have all been waiting for. Sarah Jessica Parker is here. And she is sharing stories from the very beginning,
like the time she forgot we filmed the pilot episode.
I remember some things about shooting the pilot.
Right.
I have some memories I can fill you in.
And that you're going to fill me in.
Yes.
But then you forgot about it in the very long time
they took to pick us up.
And she reveals what she thought when
she read the script for Sex and the City the very first time.
He said he wrote this like I was in his head in some way, which I found really interesting.
And does she think Carrie is too good for Mr. Big?
She had inexplicable feelings.
Got it.
It is a human being that can't explain to her friends why somebody that might be beneath her is dictating the hunt.
You can't miss this.
Listen to Are You a Charlotte? on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Let's move into talking about some specific types of movement.
It's one of the things I loved about this book is you set it up as globally movement is really good for us.
But then we kind of go through different types of movement and
some of the specific benefits.
So let's talk a little bit about walking.
What did you find most fascinating about the research you did into walking?
For most people, it's, you know, such an accessible thing that most people can do.
I was surprised at how it's such a multi-use tool.
So there's the research into creativity,
so just in a brain-focused sense, we know that when activity is turned down in the frontal parts
of the brain, which is the bit behind the forehead, that we tend to think less in straight lines.
That's the part of the brain that keeps us tethered and keeps pulling us back and says,
don't be daft, that won't work and keeps us with the obvious options.
We know that artificially turning down activity in that brain region makes you more creative.
We also know that walking does something very similar to this brain region.
If you go out at a moderate pace where you're not having to expend much effort, you're
just sort of meandering and that tends to turn down this thinking bit of the brain and the brain goes wide and that's been
shown to increase creativity. So we have this idea I think in modern society that
if we need to work and come up with something new we need to sit at our
desks and bang our head against the desk until we come up with a great idea.
I mean that's completely not the way we should be doing it. Science says go for a
walk and go for a wander and I think we need to sort of rebrand working as something that can be done
on the move. So that's one way of using walking. It's really, really easy. And it sort of spills
over in experiments, like for about 20 minutes after you come back for the walk. So you have
a brainstorming meeting, go out for a wander, come back, and you should have better ideas.
Another way is that faster, more brisk walk. So there
was some really intriguing research I came across. This great guy called Dick Green,
who started off looking at pipeworks in oil fields and then turned his attention to pipework
of the human body and the blood vessels. And it's, you know, I guess it's sort of the same
thing really. And he found that we essentially have these pressure sensors on our feet. And
when we're putting weight on our feet and walking that sort of sets up turbulence in the
in the blood vessels which adds up to a boost of blood to the brain and I guess
that's in a way that's not that surprising that's why you feel a bit
more alert when you've been up on your feet moving but he found this sweet spot
where our footsteps are at 120 steps per minute and our heart rate is also at 120
beats per minute and our heart rate and our footsteps synchronize and this gives
you the best boost of blood to the brain something like 20%. The even cooler
thing about this is that 120 beats per minute it's the most common beat in
Western pop music and it's also sort of this resonant frequency
at which if you just let people walk, that's what they will go to. And if you get people to tap
along to a beat in a lab, that's also the beat that they are most accurate at. So there's something
magic about this, 120 beats per minute. The good thing about it being common in music, you can
Google any of your favourite genre of movement and 120 beats per minute and you can find the music
that you can step in time to and just get going. It seems to make when your heartbeat gets into
synchrony, that's when you get a boost. He doesn't have firm data that this is what happens and your
brain works better, but what he says is it could really account for this feeling of wellbeing we
get when we're out and moving briskly.
So if you want to not necessarily think broad thoughts, you want to get out there and after
a period of sitting and getting lethargic, you want to gee yourself up again and get
back in the room, then going for a very quick stomp is a really effective way of doing that.
At 120 beats per minute, I love that.
Yes. There's another idea in
that section on walking that says our bones are in constant conversation with
our brains. What does that mean? That's an intriguing statement. I know because we
tend to think of our bones as being these sort of dry dusty sticks that hold
us up and that they don't do very much but in reality they are a living tissue
that's constantly being built up if we stress them by putting weight on them or they get broken
down if we're not putting weight on them and we start to lose bone density. When we're
actually building up bone, there is a hormone released from that bone that goes into the
blood and it doesn't actually have anything to do with the bone building process. What it seems to do is travel to the brain, it sort of docks onto the part
of the brain called the hippocampus which is important for memory and it's been shown
in experiments to improve memory and just make the brain function better. It seems to
have an effect on anxiety as well. So this is all sort of connected again. So when we're
putting weight on our
bones, we're strengthening our bones and making our body more able to move us around away from
danger towards reward. It's also giving a boost to our brain to learn better and to retain information
better. To me, that was a really surprising one. You think of hormones, you think of glands, you
think of all different kinds of things. You don't think of your bones as secreting hormones that help your brain to work properly, but they absolutely do. So this is really
interesting research. So we're now looking into it in terms of cognitive aging because the bad
news is that when you get to about middle age, the production of this hormone, osteocalcium,
drops off. And so you have to do a lot of weight-bearing exercise to keep that going,
which is something that's very important, especially for women in middle age when drops off. And so you have to do a lot of weight-bearing exercise to keep that going,
which is, you know, that's something that's very important, especially for women in middle
age when estrogen starts to drop off. It needs to happen anyway, but this is another reason
to keep your bones healthy and to do that weight-bearing exercise. Not only will you
feel better, your brain might work better as well. So yeah, that was a real surprising
one for me.
And by weight-bearing exercise, in this case, we mean walking. Walking is a weight-bearing
exercise. Yeah. I mean, anything that's holding up your own weight-bearing exercise, in this case, we mean walking. Walking is a weight-bearing exercise.
Yeah.
I mean, anything that's holding up your own weight against gravity and moving counts as
weight-bearing exercise.
So we don't know yet.
It's too early in the research to know whether adding ankle weights while you go for a walk
gives you more osteocalcin or whatever.
So any form of weight-bearing exercise, we don't know whether more is better, but I would
probably suspect that more is better, but I don't have any data to back that up, so don't quote me
on it. But yeah, I mean, what's the worst that can happen? You can move better, get stronger,
all good things come from that. Yeah, it makes me feel like I need to walk more. My primary
cardio exercise is now this Peloton bike, which I love and has been great for my amount of time
I spend doing cardio and a lot of different things.
But it is not, as you say, a weight-bearing exercise in the same way. And the other thing
about it is it's not outdoors. Yeah, and then, you know, there's other stuff, this isn't in
the book, but I have written about balance and researchers who were working on, you know,
our balance is nothing that declines with age. And being on a stationary bike is great for cardio,
but if you're on an actual bike, you're having to fight gravity
and you're having to keep yourself upright.
So being on a stationary bike or a treadmill doesn't tax your brain
in quite the same way as being out in the real world and dodging obstacles
and having to look over your shoulder and that kind of thing.
Yeah, yeah. You write that depressed people walk differently than non-depressed people,
more slowly, hardly moving their arms and assuming a slumped posture with their eyes to the floor.
I was really struck by that last part, the eyes to the floor thing.
I've been doing something the last, I don't know, month or so, it's called the Alexander
Technique.
I don't know if you've ever come across it.
Yeah, I don't know much about it, but I have heard of it.
I don't either, about it, but I have heard of it. I don't either still after a month. But part of what the Alexander Technique is trying to do is to get you to recognize sort
of your habitual patterns of use, your body being, you know, the main one, and undo those
by sort of letting them go.
But one of the things that my Alexander Technique instructor has pointed out to me is that my natural use is head down
slightly looking more towards the floor. That's sort of where I naturally orient. And as I've
started to pay closer attention to that, I'm like, yeah, even when walking, I'm kind of
a little bit of that head down. So I was struck by that eyes to the floor piece. You actually
talk about it also in the section about core exercises also, that this is another thing. But I was really struck by that because,
like I said, it was just pointed out to me this week that I do that.
Yeah, I do it too. I catch myself all the time. And I have to remind myself, look up,
look out at the world and head up, posture matters. Yeah. And that's another thing.
it matters. Yeah, and that's another thing, the sort of the core research is really interesting and the effects of just changing the way, again, it's the messages that your body's
sending about how you feel. And, you know, we know that slumped posture, you know, everything
from, you know, a defeated chimpanzee will sit and slump down and sort of broadcast the
message, leave me alone, I give up. That sort
of come through to us as well. But the benefit of being a human is we can reflect on that
and we can change it. And then we feed back that, you know, the body then tells the brain,
okay, you're setting up straight, you must be feeling better. And there's some really
interesting research into what causes that. And I don't know whether your listeners will
probably know about Amy Cuddy's power-posing research that she got a really hard time because
she then linked changes in posture to changes in hormones in the body. That hasn't been
backed up by other research. But the fact of posture affecting the way you feel has
been backed up many, many, many times. We're just still looking for the killer mechanism that explains exactly. So I mean, there's one potential one that I go in the
book, which is really interesting to me for the same reasons I was talking about, like
thinking your way out of stress, because there are links that have emerged between like neural
links, literally wiring pathways between the adrenal glands that pump out stress hormones
and the
parts of the brain that control movement. So it's like this strip of brain tissue across
– sort of where your headphones go, across the top of your head. And these wires from
the adrenal glands end up in the part of the brain that controls voluntary movement of
the core. So the trunk muscles, the ones that keep you upright or not upright. And it's really interesting. There's something to do with movement. There's something to
do with this movement of this midsection of your body and the posture that you keep. It's
linked in with the stress system. And so to me, that suggests that rather than having
to think your way out of a stressful situation, there's something you can do with your body.
You can strengthen that core. You can change your posture. You can take control and tell
yourself via your body that everything's all right and that you can change your posture, you can take control and tell yourself
via your body that everything's all right and that you can stand down this stress response.
So to me, I mean, I'm hoping that there's going to be more research in this area, you know,
they're working very hard on it, that will show us exactly how to do that. But this link, given
that we know that posture makes you feel better and that these links are there, it would suggest
quite strongly that having strong
core a good posture can you know really effectively change the way you feel and how you deal with
stress. So listener in thinking about that and all the other great wisdom from today's episode if you
were going to isolate just one top insider gem that you're taking away, what would it be? Remember, little by little, a little becomes a
lot. Profound change comes as a result of tiny actions, not huge efforts. I mentioned earlier
that I've been thinking about relationships and how to improve the quality of them because they're
the cornerstone of our well-being. Thriving connections light up our world while strained
ones can dim even the brightest days. Too often we face relationship hurdles alone, feeling lost and powerless.
But here's the key, building strong relationships isn't just about chance.
It's about mastering specific learnable skills,
and here's a quick exercise you can do to improve your relationships.
Establish small daily or weekly rituals that foster connections such as shared meals or walks. Every small effort to connect with
a friend or family member can lead to a deeper or more meaningful relationship.
For example, Chris and I have a weekly ongoing social night commitment where
one week night every week we get together and do something and having it
scheduled just keeps us connected. So if you found this helpful, this tip came from this week's newsletter and you can sign
up for free and get more just like it at goodwolf.me slash relationships.
In that section on core, you talk about that neuro pathway, but you also say that it's
the area of the body where most of our internal organs are found, which means
it's the point of origin for a lot of our interoceptive messages that we were talking
about earlier. And so that that area being, you know, in good shape, so to speak, might
improve the way we feel also in that way, because the interoceptive messages.
Yeah. And then there's this also idea that, you know, this area of the body way because the interoceptive messages. Yeah. There's this also idea that this area of the body, because the organs are there,
so the messages from the heart, from the lungs, everything is coming from the stomach, everything
is coming from this region, that maybe this is a focal point. There's one neuroscientist
who thinks that this is why we have this sense of being in our bodies and looking out of
it because these interoceptive messages
are in our core of our bodies. So there's something special about our trunk because that's
where we are in some ways. So I think that's a really interesting viewpoint. A lot of people
think, oh, the me is in my head behind my eyes. Actually, maybe a lot of me is in my midsection
of my body where all the important stuff, well, the brain's important too,
but the other important stuff is.
There's a lot of other important stuff, yes.
Let's hit strength training a little bit more. You hit on it to some degree,
but there have been studies that compare different forms of exercise or they show and you write about that strength training is faster and more
powerful effects on self-esteem. of exercise or they show and you write about that strength training is faster and more powerful
effects on self-esteem. Yeah, yeah. So this was one of the things that really surprised me because,
you know, everyone knows cardio makes you feel good, gets the blood pumping and dolphins, blah,
blah, blah. But studies have shown that strength training alone, regardless of whether you're doing
cardio or other forms of exercise, do lift mood, they help you feel more powerful
and more capable in your life. So, and that's one area that I think is quite easy to neglect.
You can go out and go for a run, you can go and cycle or swim or whatever, but actually
focusing on your physical strength is something that's easy to miss. And it's really important,
especially in young people, because there's evidence that young people are less strong than they were 10 years ago, as are
a lot of adults as well. And maybe that's feeding into some of the anxiety issues that
we're seeing in young people and that they're feeling really under pressure, unable to cope.
So giving them strength at an early age can hopefully
give them some tools to take forward into their adult life and feel confident and feel
that they matter and that they've got something to offer the world. So it's something that
we're missing out on and I think we could definitely do better with.
Yeah, the studies that you reference were a little bit staggering, depending on how
you measure strength. We're talking about a 20 to 30%
decrease in youth since the year 2000. That is not very long ago.
I know. It's kind of terrifying really. You know, I have a 12-year-old and I think,
oh, luckily he's a fidget like I am, so he's always on the move and doing stuff. But yeah,
it's still very easy to go through school and come out the other end and feel that physical activity and movement is not for you and you're not a sporty kid
and you're not very strong.
And that's really got to change.
It's not helpful because those kids then leave and then they're not the ones who seek out
movement in adulthood.
And you know, when you really have to seek it out because you haven't got the time anymore
like you did when you were a kid.
So I think we need to do better for children in schools.
We're cutting down on PE time, we're cutting down on break time,
recess time, and kids aren't playing outside like they used to, they're not
walking to school like they used to. There's all kinds of things that
they're not doing that are playing into this and I think really needs to be
urgently looked at. Yeah and as you said strength training is one of the easiest areas to let go. Like I mentioned
the cardio bike that I have sitting next to me here, I just use it a lot and I love it. Strength
training has proven to be more challenging for me to do consistently. What's actually worked for me
is I found I've really needed a trainer, someone virtually, and luckily I'm in a position where I'm able to afford that from time to time.
But yeah, it is, it's a harder thing for me to motivate myself to do and to know like
what's the right level, how much should I be doing.
There's more nuance to it.
Yeah, it's not obvious, is it?
Going for a run, you know when you're breathless and you know you can go a bit further than you did last time. It's a bit tricky, but I mean,
it doesn't always have to be using weights and in a gym or, you know, doing anything
like that. We can build stuff into our lives. So I try and make an effort now, so you can't
see from the screen, but I'm actually really small. I'm 4'11", I'm quite slight. If I'm
out somewhere and someone says, if I'm carrying something and someone says, can I help with
that? I always say, no, no, I'm fine. I make an effort
to carry things because that's really important that you can use what strength you have and
keep it going. So it can be as simple as choosing to carry your shopping home, choosing to lift
and carry stuff rather than putting it in a shopping trolley. We can build these things
into our lives and after a while they become habits. So that's another way of doing it for people who aren't necessarily
into getting into lycra and lifting weights and don't necessarily, because a lot of people
don't feel confident in doing that. I'm not in lycra. I'm not wearing lycra. I'm not. I'm telling
you. No. Chris on the other hand, Chris is, no, poor Chris.
He's loving the lycra.
Well, he's halfway there then.
He's wearing lycra, but he's not, yeah, he's halfway there, but he's not moving.
Really tight lycra in this case.
Yeah, I mean, it can also be body weight exercise as well, because, you know, I spent some time
with the Move Nat community who are interested in using your body in a sort of human-animal kind of
way. So they don't lift weights, they lift boulders, they don't go to a swimming pool,
they might swim in a river. Things like crawling. I spent a morning crawling in a park in London.
My goodness. I mean, I really could not move the next day.
Crawling would do it. Yeah.
Yeah. I mean, it was quite incredible. So it doesn't necessarily have
to be that complicated. And even so, the main change that I've made to my working life,
to get more movement in is rather than sitting at my desk all day, I spend a lot more time
sitting on the floor, because the one thing about sitting on the floor, you have to get
up and you know, you're, you're leg pressing your entire body weight every time you do
that. And if you're like me and you keep forgetting you've lost your pen, it's upstairs, you
have to run upstairs to get it, you know, up down, up down.
And studies of, you know, people in the blue zones you may have come across, places in
the world where people are far more likely to live to a hundred than anywhere else.
So studies of these people, you know, there's lots of factors that seem to feed into their
long lifespan, but one of them is that they have movement as part of their everyday life. So these little old ladies in Okinawa and
Japan, they have low tables and they're constantly hopping up and down from these low tables
and going out gardening and foraging and bending down and stretching up. So sort of building
that kind of stuff into your life can actually improve your strength. They call them movement
snacks in Move Nat, which I love because it's a bit
like when you're sitting, eating snacks, they add up in terms of calories without you really
noticing and that can have a real physical effect. It's the same for movement snacks.
They add up over time. You don't notice that you're hopping up and down from the floor,
but you're still strengthening your legs. You're still improving your overall strength.
So it all counts. And the less you're doing in the first place, the more a small amount will have an impact. So it doesn't have to be going out and becoming Arnie
and getting really big bulging muscles. And in fact, that's the other thing about strength
training. The improvements in mental health and in feeling more confident and powerful,
they happened before any physical changes were detectable in the muscles. So it's not even that
you have to build more muscle, it's just letting your body know that you can do it and that the
strength is there and it sort of releases a bit of latent potential that you didn't necessarily
know you had. So yeah, you don't need to get buff, that's not necessary at all. This week on Dear Chelsea with me, Chelsea Handler, Ed Helms is here.
I of course was drawn to the LSD story. In the 1950s, the CIA scientists secretly bought
the entire world supply of LSD,
embarking on a horrific attempt to discover
the secrets to mind control.
This is so insane.
This was all under, like, official government activity.
They built a apartment in San Francisco
that had a glass mirror where he could sit there and watch,
and then they would drug these customers, and he was just sort of like, They built a apartment in San Francisco that had a glass mirror where he could sit there and watch.
And then they would drug these customers
and he was just sort of taking notes
and God knows what else behind this double mirror.
And this was all in the name of science.
This just sounds like a guy off behind a wall.
It does.
I would just also like to say
if you don't have to take LSD like this,
LSD can be microdosed.
It's like an upper of energy, enthusiasm, makes you less nervous. I would just also like to say if you don't have to take LSD like this, LSD can be microdosed.
It's like an upper of energy, enthusiasm, makes you less nervous if I'm going heli-skiing.
If it allows me to go heli-skiing, then yeah, I'm hella on board.
Listen to Dear Chelsea on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
I found out I was related to the guy that I was dating.
I don't feel emotions correctly.
I am talking to a felon right now
and I cannot decide if I like him or not.
Those were some callers from my call-in podcast,
Therapy Gecko.
It's a show where I take real phone calls
from anonymous strangers all over the world
as a fake gecko therapist and try to dig into their brains and learn a little bit about
their lives. I know that's a weird concept but I promise it's pretty interesting if you give it a
shot. Matter of fact, here's a few more examples of the kinds of calls we get on this show.
I live with my boyfriend and I found his piss jar in our apartment. I collect my roommates toenails
and fingernails. I have very overbearing parents.
Even at the age of 29, they won't
let me move out of their house.
So if you want an excuse to get out of your own head
and see what's going on in someone else's head,
search for Therapy Gecko on the iHeart Radio app, Apple
Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
It's the one with the green guy on it. Hi, I'm Kristin Davis, host of the podcast,
Are You a Charlotte?
What We Have All Been Waiting For.
Sarah Jessica Parker is here.
And she is sharing stories from the very beginning,
like the time she forgot we filmed the pilot episode.
I remember some things about shooting the pilot.
Right.
I have some memories I can fill you in.
And that you're going to fill me in.
Yes. But then you forgot about it?
I completely forgot about it.
And she reveals what she thought when she read the script
for Sex and the City the very first time.
He said he wrote this like I was in his head in some way,
which I found really interesting.
And does she think Carrie is too good for Mr. Big?
She had inexplicable feelings.
Got it.
It is a human being that can't explain to her friends why somebody that might be beneath
her is dictating the hunt.
You can't miss this.
Listen to Are You a Charlotte? on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
All right.
Dance.
Mm-hmm. podcast or wherever you get your podcasts. All right. Dance. Let's talk about dance. Of all the exercises that we've talked
about, probably the least number of listeners are doing.
Yeah. Yeah. Very, very few people dance. And when we get to adulthood, we seem to
stop dancing, which is a real shame. And it's a really fundamental part of what it
means to be human. So no other creatures dance, or if they do,
they're dancing a different rhythm that we can't work out. But they don't dance like
we do to the beats, 120 beats per minute like we do. And there are lots of theories about
why that is that humans are dancers. And one of the things is that it helps us bond. This
whole point of needing each other and needing to be socially
bonded, dance is a way of bringing us together. And so the idea behind this is that when we're
moving, you know, we have these proprioceptive inputs, so that's slightly different to
interoception. It's the bodily sense of where our body is in space without having to look.
And that's an important thing of knowing who I am and where I end and you begin. So when we're moving
we have this proprioceptive sense of where our body is in space. If we're moving in
synchrony with somebody else, then the information about their body movements coming in through
our other senses, our brains get confused. They can't really separate the two. And
so this sort of breaks down the barrier between me and you and we start to feel more connected.
And there's all these intriguing experiments where they get people to move in time together and then they get them to
do kind of gambling tasks and they can either stuff each other's chances of winning or they can
cooperate and everyone goes home happier. And people are far more likely to cooperate with each
other when they've moved together first. So there's something about being a human, caring about other
humans, feeling connected,
that moving together just makes happen naturally.
So yeah, it can be embarrassing to dance with other people, but it doesn't have to be dance.
It could be yoga, it could be Tai Chi, it could be an aerobics class, you know, it could
be all kinds of ways moving in synchrony with other people.
But it's something I think we're missing out on, definitely.
And you can actually get the same effect on your own.
So I spoke to this neuroscientist called Peter Janata who he works on the psychology of the groove which is you know
Getting into the groove of music and feeling that you can't help but move your body to it
And he says that when you're listening to music that's made by other humans moving their bodies
That's how the sound is getting creative. You're moving along with that
It's kind of like an invitation to join in with the band. And so you're moving to the movements
of other people and you can still get this sort of sense that you're part of something bigger than
yourself. So even dancing alone in your kitchen, which I do quite a lot of, can help you feel
connected to other people in society. So that to me is the most important reason to sort of get over ourselves and dance a little bit more.
In this science of the groove, he surveyed a wide number of people about the grooviest song.
And regardless of their musical interest, one song kind of came out head and shoulders above the rest. What was it?
Let's give the listeners a second to guess. You guess, listeners.
Yeah, to guess. You guess, listeners. What do you think is the most grooviest song? I'll tell you it is not,
Groove is in the Heart by Delight. So you can take that one off your list even though
it's pretty groovy. It's probably up there though. It might be. All right, now you can tell us.
Okay. Okay. I think everyone who ever heard this will get it immediately. It's Superstition by
Stevie Wonder. And the reason why maybe is because it's
got this syncopated beat, so you're not just stomping along to the beat, which does do
something amazing to us. We feel connected to the beat. We feel empowered that we're
going along to it and we get this boost of dopamine. We feel good. But the syncopated
beat, it's like a secret rhythm. We can decode it and then we can sort of roll our hips and move the arms around and then you kind of feel groovy. I mean, it's an outdated word, but we're bringing it back for neuroscience.
And one idea about why this makes us feel good is that the balance organs of our inner ear are
connected to the limbic system, which is the brain's sort of emotional control senses. So
when we're sort of dancing, we're sort
of almost falling and catching ourselves. And the syncopated beat gives us this, it's a bit like,
in the same way a joke makes us laugh because it sets up expectations and it violates it,
pulls out the rug from under our feet and we laugh because it's funny. The same sort of thing
happens when we're trying to follow a syncopated beat, we're almost falling over and we catch
ourselves and we feel good. And so we have this kind of lovely feeling that we just feel amazing and that's why
we can't help but move our bodies to it. So I love that. I can't resist superstition.
That was played a lot in my university years and gets me grooving every time.
So, yeah, dancing is good. I've taken up the occasional just putting on a song and you
might call what I'm doing jumping around more than dancing perhaps, my old punk
rock days, but hey, you know, it does work.
Well, that works. The sensitivity of the kind of gravity detectors in our ears, they're
very sensitive to up and down movement. So that's why, you know, especially when it's
loud, there's this thing called the rock and roll threshold where when the music is above
this threshold, I think it's 120 decibels, I could be remembering it wrong. But anyway,
when it's loud enough, people start moving, they can't help but bob. And even if it's just
a stomp of the feet and a bounce of the head, you can't help it. And so, you know, sort
of pogoing along, it's a sort of dancing that you could do anywhere in the world if someone
was drumming and you wouldn't look dark. It's a kind of, you know, that toddlers do when
they first start moving with the beat before they realize they're supposed to be embarrassed
and they're supposed to not do that. you know, stomping around and bashing
the air with your fists, it makes you feel good. So yeah, you can do it by yourself.
It's okay. And it still works. I actually had the most embarrassing experience joining
in with a free-form dance group that I went to sort of as part of my research. And it
was pretty embarrassing,
the whole thing when we were wafting around, you know, just move as your body wants to
and I was like, my body doesn't want to move, my body wants to go home, this is awful. But
when the beats got going and you know, the whole room was just stomping along, it was
amazing. And by the end of it, I had this sense that I wasn't moving my legs and arms,
they were moving me, I was just along for the ride. And it was just this amazing feeling.
I was on a total high for days afterwards. And this was how we got out of our minds and
just enjoyed being rather than thinking before we invented other ways of getting out of our
minds. And it works and it's free and you can do it and you can still drive home afterwards.
So yeah, it was a bit of an eye-opener for me, I have to say.
I did a conscious movement freeform movement class virtually and...
Did you keep your camera on?
Yeah, yeah we did and my partner was here with me and yeah, that's a strange experience.
You know, like just move in the way your body wants to move.
Like you, I was like, my body wants to hide in a chair in the corner
the minute you've suggested this.
Yes, exactly. Don't ask my body, it has no idea.
Yeah, but yeah, over time I began to unwind a little bit and enjoy it.
Yeah, I mean, I sort of had a work with myself because I was hanging on to the radiator in
the corner of this sort of drafty village hall. And I thought, you know, seriously,
the only way you're going to look ridiculous in this situation is to stand there and not
do anything. These people don't know you. I mean, I had, seriously, the only way you're going to look ridiculous in this situation is to stand there and not do anything.
These people don't know you. I mean, I had a few friends that said, I'll come with you. That sounds funny.
I'm like, no, that's exactly why I was on my own.
So I was saying, having my partner here in the house with me almost made it worse.
You know, it would have been easier with a group of strangers.
You did another of the things that I suspect would be really great.
But watching it from the outside,
it looks painful to even be a part of,
which is laughter yoga.
Yeah.
Yeah, it even gives me a nervous laugh
just even thinking about it.
But, yeah.
But I mean, the reason for doing laughter yoga
is that studies suggest that laughing, a proper belly
laugh is a better workout for your abs, for your core than crunches.
So ideally you would have friends that make you absolutely crack up a lot and make your
belly sore at the end of it.
But if not, then laughter yoga is another way of going about it. But yeah.
You still look skeptical.
Yeah.
I don't get the sense you're going back.
No, no.
I don't really think that is my thing.
Luckily, I have very funny friends and a funny husband
and a funny child and a dog that I could either laugh or cry
at most of the time because he's such a ridiculous animal.
What kind of dog?
And now I got to ask.
We've talked about him twice now.
Yeah.
He is a collie crossed with a New Zealand hunter way, which is basically they took Welsh collies to New Zealand and thought,
we need a bigger dog that can be more demanding. It can run up mountains and it can bark at the top of its lungs for 14 hours straight.
So he's quite demanding.
Wow. Yeah.
I don't know what I, I do know what I was thinking. I was thinking I want a dog and I like collies and I didn't really read up enough about hunter ways. I don't recommend
it unless you really want to run up and down hills. But he's great.
Hey, well, he gets you moving.
He's a great character. He gets me moving and you know, there's really no option. If
you've got someone, he doesn't do what my previous dog did, which is just come and stare
at you until you take him out for a walk. You can ignore a stare. He will come and literally
bark in your face and you go, fine, fine, I'll take you out. So yeah,
it's not negotiable for him at all. And seeing him, you know, I was saying before about,
you know, if other animals dance, maybe we just can't tune into it. When he cuts together
with other herding breeds, it's like they click into each other. Right, okay, you go
on the inside, I'll go on the outside. They just run in circles. And it's like their
form of dance. And you can see that they just feel amazing when they're doing it. So maybe
we just can't tune in.
I've had mutts in the past that have a significant amount of collie in them. The herding instinct
is fascinating to watch in them.
Yeah, it's very strange, isn't it?
I have a Boston Terrier. She's old, but she's still active and she does, I call it her ball
or her bone dance. She loves her ball and
sometimes she loves a bone and basically she just gets on her back and rolls. Like, I mean,
she doesn't roll, she gets on her back and wiggles on top of this thing she loves just
over and over and over and over again. I mean, it looks to all the world like she is dancing.
Yeah, we call it doggy break dancing. Yeah, Django does that too.
My dog does that too.
He likes the bit of break dancing.
He usually teams it with a, ha, ha, ha.
It's just like he's singing and dancing when he's doing it.
You have to be a mad dog person to understand.
I know.
I know.
We're going to have to pivot here so that we don't turn
this entire show into dogs.
Stretching is another part of the book, another type of
movement, so I want to make sure people get all of them. We've got walking, strength training,
dance, the core, stretching. But where we're gonna end is breath control. I've
been very interested in breath work over the last year. We had James Nestor on who
wrote a great book about the breath. But you brought up some really great
things there also. And I wanted to start with meditation.
And the most common style of meditation probably is to sit and just follow your breath.
Don't control it.
Just follow it and observe it.
But you talk about how a scientist or two got interested in, Hey, what's happening in
the benefits of meditation? Is it something to do with
what's being done with the mind or is it something to do with what's being done with the breath? Can
you share a little bit more about that? Yes, this was sort of trying to tease apart whether it's the
act of mentally focusing on the breath that gives you these sort of changes in brain function and
the way that you feel or whether it's something to do with the breathing and it's really interesting that the actual
Act of breathing through your nose in and out through your nose
What you're basically doing is harnessing your brain waves and sort of taking their rhythm under control which sounds
Completely out there, but it kind of makes sense when you think about the way that the brain works and again
But it kind of makes sense when you think about the way that the brain works. And again, it's all about getting information from your environment and then using that
sensibly to improve your chances of survival.
So when you're taking in breath through your nose, there's a lot of information about
the environment, how safe and rewarding it is in that.
And so this information goes to the olfactory cortex, which is sort of the top of the nose.
And then to make use of that information, what you then need to do is to get other brain areas, so the bits that are to do with memory,
to make sense of what this information means, and then emotional responses, you know, does
this make me scared, does this make me happy, whatever.
And for all those different brain regions to talk to each other, they need to be on
the same brainwave frequency.
And so as a result of that working
of the brain, when we breathe in and out through our nose, the whole brain starts to synchronise
and beat to the same rhythm. When we slow down our breathing, that has effects of slowing
down brainwaves as they propagate through the brain. Even as I'm saying this, it sounds
so far-fetched, but this is what studies are showing with EEG, which is looking at the frequency of brain waves across the brain.
And so when you really, really slow it down, so this particular experiment was looking
at when you slow your breath down to three breaths per minute.
So that's really quite difficult to keep up.
In fact, in the study, a few of the volunteers actually fell asleep during the study because
they were so relaxed,
they just drifted off. But that can sort of take you into this altered state of consciousness
where you are more in a sense of being rather than thinking. You know, I'm not big on sitting
around. This explains why all these expert meditators commit to all this sitting around
and breathing slowly and can actually do this for this
long because it takes you to this amazing state of just being and being at one with the universe.
I haven't managed it myself, but it seems worth aiming for to me. I would definitely fall asleep.
Sleeping is like my thing. I can definitely fall asleep anywhere. But at different rates,
six breaths per minute is a lot easier to do. If you get people to breathe at different rates, the one that they tend to say that
was the most comfortable and relaxing is six breaths per minute.
Interestingly in studies of things like chanting, reciting the rosary in Latin, these prayer-based
practices, studies of those have found that it tends to naturally make people's breath
go to six breaths per minute.
So it's almost like humanity's worked out
that this is how you feel good,
this is how you feel calm and held and looked after.
So breathing at six breaths per minute
has all kinds of benefits.
It fills your lungs more effectively,
it activates the vagus nerve,
which calms the whole nervous system down.
And so it's just this very easy, I mean, it doesn't even feature when you think about
movement, but this is a voluntary movement that our species can do and not many others
can to sort of override just the in and out of oxygen into our bodies and to take control
and that can change the way that we feel.
And it's such a simple thing.
You don't have to be fit, you don't have to be strong, you don't have to be able.
Anyone can do it. It's really, really important thing to do. And
we don't know yet how important it is or whether it makes any difference if you do that breathing
whilst moving. So I find that when I'm breathing and moving, that's how I get myself into that
kind of calm state is by doing yoga and focusing on breathing. But it seems that there is a small amount of evidence
that it might be even more effective
if you're moving and breathing at calm rate at the same time.
So you maybe hit more of these buttons,
you get the core exercise, you get the strength,
you get the breathing, you get the stretching,
all of these things in one.
Yeah, it's one of the things about yoga
that when I take it in a class that I wish is that it would slow down,
you know, because you're moving on the in and the out breath, you know,
is that the movement would span a longer breath.
More to that, you know, five in, five out count, which is,
that's what six breaths per minute works out to, right?
Five on the inhale, five on the exhale.
So the kind of yoga that I really fell in love with about 10 years ago, more than that
now, is Ashtanga. And you don't follow the instructor. You do your own pace, right?
You do your own pace. And that's when it really clicked for me that I wasn't breathe in now,
breathe out now. It's like, well, how do you know when my lungs are full? You know, but
if you're doing it at your own pace, you can really feel it when you get going.
I have got into that state of being and just calm and awareness of my body and it's an amazing
feeling and you don't necessarily get that if somebody's dictating your breath.
That's right. That's right. Yeah. Yeah, I always find that. I'm like, the speed is off for me.
I found the six breaths per minute, I think certain people call it coherent breathing.
Fascinating that that is the rate that ties to a lot of ancient prayer type practices.
And then three breaths per minute does take a little bit of effort, but it's interesting.
I'm practicing a little bit differently now, but for a while I was a very focused Zen Buddhist,
so I was really doing that type of meditation.
But if you go back further into the Zen tradition, there is talk about controlling your breath in a way that doesn't typically show up in what we think about with meditation.
And it was about this very light. So you're not moving a lot of air, but you're doing it, you know, closer to what you're describing, which is that, you know,
three breaths per minute.
That's really interesting.
So yeah, you don't have to be sort of huffing and puffing and making a real effort.
But what you're doing is sort of taking control and sort of controlling the rate.
The research would suggest that what you're doing is really sort of slowing down the activity
of the brain and then that can get you into this state of zen, I guess.
You know, the state of being and being at one with the universe.
Yeah.
And I think that's what makes slow breathing hard for a lot of people is we tend to equate
slow breathing with deep breathing, which we then sort of naturally equate with moving
a lot of air.
So there's this like, you know, this strong, you can't inhale that forcefully for 10 seconds.
Like, it doesn't work that way.
It's a much lighter, moving less air over a longer period of time.
So listeners, what resonated for you while listening to that?
What came up for you when thinking about how you could be feeding your Good Wolf?
This month, when I think about feeding my Good Wolf, I've been thinking a lot about
relationships.
Relationships really shape the quality of our lives in profound ways.
When they're healthy, they bring joy and fulfillment, but when they're struggling,
the impact can be deeply unsettling.
It's a common struggle, but one that often goes unaddressed.
The good news?
There are concrete skills we can learn to improve our relationships.
Relationships are this month's theme and our weekly bite of wisdom for a wiser, happier
you newsletter, and I'd love to send them your way.
Every week we send a menu of a few small exercises you can put into practice to feed your Good
Wolf along with a reflection and a related podcast episode on the topic if you want to
go deeper.
Just head to GoodWolf.me
slash relationships. If you think you benefit from these useful reminders and small bite size
exercises to help you feed your GoodWolf, I'd love to send them to you for free. Just head over to
GoodWolf.me slash relationships and I'll send them your way. Thank you so much, Caroline,
for coming on the show. Thank you so much for this wonderful book
that teaches us so much about how to move.
And you've just got a line, which is basically,
the message is, move more and your brain will thank you
in the long run and in the short run.
Absolutely. Yeah. Yeah.
Your life will be better. Yeah.
I mean, what's the worst that can happen?
You've moved. You get healthier. You've had a good time. Yeah, I mean, what's the worst that can happen? You've moved. You get healthier.
You've had a good time. Yeah, you can always sit down afterwards. And, you know, at the
end of the book, I talk about rest and the importance of rest. It's not about necessarily
getting more exercise in. It's about moving your body around more. And it doesn't have
to hurt. You don't even have to change your clothes and shoes. You just have to remember
that you're an animal that needs to move and stretch and breathe and make sure you do that.
Well, thank you so much.
Thank you very much for having me.
It's been lovely to talk to you.
I think I've learned a lot too.
Thank you so much for listening to the show.
If you found this conversation helpful, inspiring or thought provoking, I'd love for you to
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Your support means the world and together we can spread wisdom one episode at a time.
Thank you for being part of the One You Feed community.
This week on Dear Chelsea with me, Chelsea Handler,
Ed Helms is here.
I, of course, was drawn to the LSD story.
This was all under official government activity.
They built a apartment that had a glass mirror
where he could sit there and watch.
And then they would drug these customers.
And he was just sort of taking notes
and God knows what else behind this double mirror. And this was all in the name of science.
This just sounds like a guy off behind a wall.
It does.
Listen to Dear Chelsea on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
I want you to ask yourself right now, how am I actually doing? Because it's a question
that we rarely ask ourselves. All of May is actually Mental Health Awareness Month and
on the psychology of your 20s, we are taking a vulnerable look at why mental health is
so hard to talk about. Prepare for our conversations to go deep.
I spent the majority of my teenage years and my 20s just feeling absolutely terrified.
I had a panic attack on a conference call.
Knowing that she had six months to live, I was no longer pretending that this was my best friend.
So this Mental Health Awareness Month, take that extra bit of care of your wellbeing.
Listen to the psychology of your twenties on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
I found out I was related to the guy that I was dating.
I don't feel emotions correctly.
I collect my roommates' toenails and fingernails.
Those were some callers from my call-in podcast, Therapy Gecko.
It's a show where I take phone calls from anonymous strangers as a fake gecko therapist
and try to learn a little bit about their lives.
I know that's a weird concept, but I promise it's very interesting. Check it out for yourself by searching for Therapy Gecko on the iHeart Radio app, Apple
Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.