The Neuroscience of Mindfulness - Dr. Rick Hanson
Browse Our Full Collection
•
2h 5m
Rick Hanson, PhD, is a psychologist, senior fellow of the Greater Good Science Center at UC Berkeley, and New York Times bestselling author. His books are available in twenty-eight languages and include Resilient, Hardwiring Happiness, Just One Thing, Buddha’s Brain, and Mother Nurture.
To date, his books have sold more than 750,000 copies in English.
He edits the Wise Brain Bulletin and has numerous audio programs. A summa cum laude graduate of UCLA and founder of the Wellspring Institute for Neuroscience and Contemplative Wisdom, he has been an invited speaker at NASA, Oxford, Stanford, Harvard, and other major universities, and has taught in meditation centers worldwide. He and his wife live in San Rafael, California, and have two adult children.
Learn more about Dr. Rick Hanson: https://www.rickhanson.net/
Discover Dr. Rick Hanson's books: https://www.rickhanson.net/writings/
00:01:29 – Sean Fargo introduces Dr. Rick Hanson
00:04:51 – Introduction from Rick Hanson
00:06:22 – Rick’s outline for the session
00:09:22 – Guided meditation practice
00:32:56 – Rick’s definition of mindfulness
00:35:55 – The importance of offering alternatives to the body to ground awareness
00:36:49 – Brain activity when we are engaged in task-oriented activity, daydreaming, or ruminating
00:40:09 – Activating networks on the sides of the brain
00:42:16 – Breathing with the chest or the body as a whole
00:45:09 – Evoking particular states of being and cultivating particular traits
00:47:12 – How can we increase the conversion from state to trait?
00:51:25 – Weaving together the subjective and the objective
00:54:11 – Member question: What parts of the brain are active during the feeling of embodiment?
00:58:34 – As we tune into our physical body, we increase our capacity to tune into the experience of others
01:00:04 – Four different ways mindfulness meditation changes your brain
01:03:14 – Three psychological qualities that feed the conventional presumption that there is a self entity within
01:10:06 – Reducing verbal activity and mental time travel
01:16:04 – Member question: How long does it take people to move from state to trait?
01:20:12 – Getting people interested in their own learning
01:23:06 – First paragraph of Neurodharma
01:24:29 – Seven qualities of all those beings we deeply admire and respect
01:28:49 – Cultivating all seven qualities through different routes
01:31:50 – Guided practice/walk-through of the seven qualities
01:49:07 – Member question: Is there science behind the observed effects of practices like qi gong?
01:55:05 – Two framing devices: “Deal with the bad, turn to the good, take in the good” and “Let be, let go, let in”
01:57:21 – The importance of lifting your gaze to the horizon
02:01:29 – Closing remarks from Sean
02:03:42 – Three closing proverbs from Rick
Up Next in Browse Our Full Collection
-
Teaching Mindfulness to Kids - Susan ...
Susan is an internationally recognized leader in teaching mindfulness and meditation to children, teens, parents, and professionals. She played a foundational role in making mindfulness practices developmentally appropriate for young people and helped to pioneer activity-based mindfulness with he...
-
Mindfulness for High Performance - Ge...
George Mumford’s deeply moving personal story is unforgettable. An aspiring basketball player at the University of Massachusetts (where he roomed with Dr. J, Julius Erving), injuries forced Mumford out of the game he loved. The medications that relieved the pain of his injuries also numbed him to...
-
Race, Culture, and Color - Bonnie Duran
Bonnie Duran is a Professor in the Schools of Social Work and Public Health at the University of Washington, in Seattle and is on the leadership team at the Indigenous Wellness Research Institute (http://health.iwri.org ). She received her Dr.PH from UC Berkeley School of Public Health in 1997. B...