-
Bored out of your mind at work? Your brain is trying to tell you something. | Dan Cable | Big Think
Bored out of your mind at work? Your brain is trying to tell you something.
New videos DAILY: https://bigth.ink
Join Big Think Edge for exclusive video lessons from top thinkers and doers: https://bigth.ink/Edge
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We've all been bored on the job at least once in our lives, but that boredom is actually very old human wiring. We constantly seek out new information to keep our minds sharp, and when tasks get repetitive we get bored and move on. But what if you can't move on? What if the tasks are your job and you have to repeat them day after day to keep a roof over your head? That, says London Business School professor Dan Cable, is why boredom has become an epidemic. Our brains aren't used to staying in their ...
published: 03 Apr 2018
-
Sun Damage Is Terrifying
Source: https://www.tiktok.com/@austinskinphysicians/video/7218775545843141931
Song:
Bisiesto by Hiracutch https://soundcloud.com/hiracutch
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0
Free Download / Stream: https://bit.ly/bisiesto-hiracutch
Music promoted by Audio Library • Bisiesto – Hiracu...
#shorts
published: 28 Apr 2023
-
What Does This Life Really Mean? - Jim Carrey
"Desperation is a necessary ingredient to learning anything or creating anything. Period. If you ain't desperate at some point, you ain't interesting."
- Jim Carrey
This is one of the most powerful videos I've edited on Absolute Motivation. It is such an incredibly motivational yet inspirational video but at the same time, the speech Jim Carrey goes into leaves you thinking deeply.
Music licenced from Musicvine.
If you enjoyed the video please share it with someone who needs to hear it, as always, thank you for your support and if the found value in this please subscriber and keep posted on our latest uploads.
Social Media For More Inspiring Content:
https://www.facebook.com/AbsoluteMotivation
https://soundcloud.com/absolutemotivation
https://www.instagram.com/absolutemotivationmed...
published: 05 Nov 2017
-
stamped.
HOW TO LOOP ON DESKTOP: RIGHT CLICK, CLICK LOOP!
"It's a dog stamp dog world out there."
Music: Earthbound - The Jolly Flying Man
published: 11 Sep 2020
-
Jordan Peterson - What Makes Overcoming Addiction So Difficult?
original source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Us979jCjHu8
Psychology Professor Dr. Jordan B. Peterson explains how drug addictions build subpersonalities in your brain.This is directly related to yesterday's clip: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fmnqnCi0j_8
Dr. Peterson's new book is available for pre-order:
12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos: http://amzn.to/2yvJf9L
If you want to support Dr. Peterson, here is his Patreon:
https://www.patreon.com/jordanbpeterson
Check out Jordan Peterson's Self Authoring Program, a powerful tool to sort yourself out:
http://bit.ly/selfAuth (Official affiliate link for Bite-sized Philosophy)
published: 12 Apr 2017
-
How to Get Out of a Despairing Mood
In moments of despair, we may be suffering not from a failure of spirit, but a failure of imagination. The way out lies in exercising our creative capacities.
Enjoying our Youtube videos? Get full access to all our audio content, videos, and thousands of thought-provoking articles, conversation cards and more with The School of Life Subscription: https://t.ly/cfnni
Be more mindful, present and inspired. Get the best of The School of Life delivered straight to your inbox: https://t.ly/w8uJR
FURTHER READING
You can read more on this and other subjects here: https://bit.ly/2IvSflV
“It may sound strange to locate the problem here, but some of our most despairing moods are caused by failures of the imagination. We are not merely ‘sad’; we cannot picture any better life than the agonised on...
published: 18 Nov 2020
-
BIBH Webinar 2: Neuropsychiatric Consequences of Traumatic Brain Injury
David Arciniegas, MD, Director of Research at the Marcus Institute for Brain Health and Clinical Professor of Neurology and Psychiatry at University of Colorado School of Medicine, presents "Neuropsychiatric Consequences of Traumatic Brain Injury."
This is the second in a series of six 'Brain Injury & Behavioral Health (BIBH): Informing Best Practice' webinars presented by Craig Hospital with funding from MINDSOURCE Brain Injury Network. The BIBH webinar series is an opportunity for community behavioral health professionals to increase their knowledge and skills in serving this unique population.
***
Craig Hospital in Denver, Colorado, is a world-renowned rehabilitation hospital that specializes exclusively in the neurorehabilitation and research of patients with spinal cord injury (SCI)...
published: 04 Dec 2020
-
Joe Rogan - Depression Isn't a Chemical Imbalance?
Joe Rogan and Johann Hari discuss whether depression is due to a chemical imbalance.
published: 12 Feb 2018
-
Neurological Programming and Other Fighting Words!
A pleasure to chat about human movement, neurology, biology and other aspects of martial artistry with Dr. Stu McGill.
Dr. Stu is one of the foremost experts on performance biomechanics.
Thanks Dr. Stu!
published: 22 Jul 2020
-
The Neurology of Stress
Dr. Jenkins outlines how our brain is reprogrammed from chronic stress and what you can do to generate a peace response in your neurology. If we continue to allow stress to rule in our bodies it will frustrate our health choices and erode our health. This is another in our ongoing 100+Living Talks to educate and inspire our community. To check Dr. Jenkins' speaking schedule and availibility go to www.100plusliving.com/dr-j-speaking
published: 13 Nov 2015
5:36
Bored out of your mind at work? Your brain is trying to tell you something. | Dan Cable | Big Think
Bored out of your mind at work? Your brain is trying to tell you something.
New videos DAILY: https://bigth.ink
Join Big Think Edge for exclusive video lessons...
Bored out of your mind at work? Your brain is trying to tell you something.
New videos DAILY: https://bigth.ink
Join Big Think Edge for exclusive video lessons from top thinkers and doers: https://bigth.ink/Edge
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We've all been bored on the job at least once in our lives, but that boredom is actually very old human wiring. We constantly seek out new information to keep our minds sharp, and when tasks get repetitive we get bored and move on. But what if you can't move on? What if the tasks are your job and you have to repeat them day after day to keep a roof over your head? That, says London Business School professor Dan Cable, is why boredom has become an epidemic. Our brains aren't used to staying in their lanes, so perhaps that boredom is not a bug after all, but a feature.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DAN CABLE:
Dan Cable is Professor of Organisational Behaviour at London Business School. Dan's research and teaching focus on employee engagement, change, organizational culture, leadership mindset, and the linkage between brands and employee behaviors. Dan was selected for the 2018 Thinkers50 Radar List, The Academy of Management has twice honored Dan with Best Article awards, and The Academy of Management Perspectives ranked Dan in the 'Top 25 most influential management scholars'.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
DAN CABLE: Well about two years ago I stumbled on a piece of neuroscience that just stunned me. As a psychologist, I wish somebody had told me more about this but what I learned is that there appears to be a part of our brain called the ventral striatum, that's the technical term, or you also could call it the seeking system. And this system is urging us to explore the boundaries of what we know. It's urging us to be curious. And, by the way, I mean innately. I mean children six months old, three months old. If you give them some toy they love it for a little while. As they get used to it, your car keys become more interesting. It's the new and it's the desire to learn. And evolutionarily this system was developed to help us, to keep us learning. When I learned about this seeking system it really turned me on because it started to give me an insight into why disengagement from boring work, that may not be a bug. That might be a feature.
In the 2015-2016 Gallup polls, the evidence is that about 70 percent of people are not engaged in what they do all day long and about 18 percent of people are repulsed, they're actively disengaged from what they do. And I think that the reason why I say this is a problem, and it could even be called an epidemic is because work is mostly what we do. We spend so much more time at work than with our families or with those things called hobbies. And so I think that the pervasiveness of people feeling like work is a thing that we have to shut off from, a thing that we can't be our best selves, a thing that we have to get through on the way to the weekend. I think that is a sort of humanistic sickness and while it is bad for people, that's the humanistic bit, it also is really bad for organizations who get lackluster performance.
I think that it's interesting to think about when this all started happening and I didn't live back in the 1850s, but all the records suggest that you could buy shoes and those shoes would be sold by some store, some cobbler. And maybe there would be three people that worked there. Rarely would there be five people that worked there. And while that probably wasn't the best work in the world, each of the people in the store would watch the customer walk in and then they'd make a shoe for that customer. And they'd take leather and they'd sew it and then they'd give it. And around 1890 we got this different idea as a species where we should not sell two pairs of shoes each day, but two million. And this idea of scaling up had certain implications for how work felt. And part of that was because it was decided that the way to do this would have extreme efficiency by breaking the work into really small tasks where most of the people don't meet the customer. Most of the people don't invent the shoe. Most of the people don't actually see the shoe made from beginning to end. And this idea of removing the meaning from the work was intentional. And the idea of removing the curiosity from the job was intentional. For Henry Ford curiosity was a bug, it was a problem and he needed to stamp it out in the name of reliability and quality. Now I'm not saying we're still acting just like the 1900s, but I am saying that's when we cut our teeth on management practices and the way we use control systems and punishments and extrinsic reward...
For the full transcript, check out https://bigthink.com/videos/top-10-why-am-i-bored-at-work
https://wn.com/Bored_Out_Of_Your_Mind_At_Work_Your_Brain_Is_Trying_To_Tell_You_Something._|_Dan_Cable_|_Big_Think
Bored out of your mind at work? Your brain is trying to tell you something.
New videos DAILY: https://bigth.ink
Join Big Think Edge for exclusive video lessons from top thinkers and doers: https://bigth.ink/Edge
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We've all been bored on the job at least once in our lives, but that boredom is actually very old human wiring. We constantly seek out new information to keep our minds sharp, and when tasks get repetitive we get bored and move on. But what if you can't move on? What if the tasks are your job and you have to repeat them day after day to keep a roof over your head? That, says London Business School professor Dan Cable, is why boredom has become an epidemic. Our brains aren't used to staying in their lanes, so perhaps that boredom is not a bug after all, but a feature.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DAN CABLE:
Dan Cable is Professor of Organisational Behaviour at London Business School. Dan's research and teaching focus on employee engagement, change, organizational culture, leadership mindset, and the linkage between brands and employee behaviors. Dan was selected for the 2018 Thinkers50 Radar List, The Academy of Management has twice honored Dan with Best Article awards, and The Academy of Management Perspectives ranked Dan in the 'Top 25 most influential management scholars'.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
DAN CABLE: Well about two years ago I stumbled on a piece of neuroscience that just stunned me. As a psychologist, I wish somebody had told me more about this but what I learned is that there appears to be a part of our brain called the ventral striatum, that's the technical term, or you also could call it the seeking system. And this system is urging us to explore the boundaries of what we know. It's urging us to be curious. And, by the way, I mean innately. I mean children six months old, three months old. If you give them some toy they love it for a little while. As they get used to it, your car keys become more interesting. It's the new and it's the desire to learn. And evolutionarily this system was developed to help us, to keep us learning. When I learned about this seeking system it really turned me on because it started to give me an insight into why disengagement from boring work, that may not be a bug. That might be a feature.
In the 2015-2016 Gallup polls, the evidence is that about 70 percent of people are not engaged in what they do all day long and about 18 percent of people are repulsed, they're actively disengaged from what they do. And I think that the reason why I say this is a problem, and it could even be called an epidemic is because work is mostly what we do. We spend so much more time at work than with our families or with those things called hobbies. And so I think that the pervasiveness of people feeling like work is a thing that we have to shut off from, a thing that we can't be our best selves, a thing that we have to get through on the way to the weekend. I think that is a sort of humanistic sickness and while it is bad for people, that's the humanistic bit, it also is really bad for organizations who get lackluster performance.
I think that it's interesting to think about when this all started happening and I didn't live back in the 1850s, but all the records suggest that you could buy shoes and those shoes would be sold by some store, some cobbler. And maybe there would be three people that worked there. Rarely would there be five people that worked there. And while that probably wasn't the best work in the world, each of the people in the store would watch the customer walk in and then they'd make a shoe for that customer. And they'd take leather and they'd sew it and then they'd give it. And around 1890 we got this different idea as a species where we should not sell two pairs of shoes each day, but two million. And this idea of scaling up had certain implications for how work felt. And part of that was because it was decided that the way to do this would have extreme efficiency by breaking the work into really small tasks where most of the people don't meet the customer. Most of the people don't invent the shoe. Most of the people don't actually see the shoe made from beginning to end. And this idea of removing the meaning from the work was intentional. And the idea of removing the curiosity from the job was intentional. For Henry Ford curiosity was a bug, it was a problem and he needed to stamp it out in the name of reliability and quality. Now I'm not saying we're still acting just like the 1900s, but I am saying that's when we cut our teeth on management practices and the way we use control systems and punishments and extrinsic reward...
For the full transcript, check out https://bigthink.com/videos/top-10-why-am-i-bored-at-work
- published: 03 Apr 2018
- views: 1718376
0:13
Sun Damage Is Terrifying
Source: https://www.tiktok.com/@austinskinphysicians/video/7218775545843141931
Song:
Bisiesto by Hiracutch https://soundcloud.com/hiracutch
Creative Commons ...
Source: https://www.tiktok.com/@austinskinphysicians/video/7218775545843141931
Song:
Bisiesto by Hiracutch https://soundcloud.com/hiracutch
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0
Free Download / Stream: https://bit.ly/bisiesto-hiracutch
Music promoted by Audio Library • Bisiesto – Hiracu...
#shorts
https://wn.com/Sun_Damage_Is_Terrifying
Source: https://www.tiktok.com/@austinskinphysicians/video/7218775545843141931
Song:
Bisiesto by Hiracutch https://soundcloud.com/hiracutch
Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY 3.0
Free Download / Stream: https://bit.ly/bisiesto-hiracutch
Music promoted by Audio Library • Bisiesto – Hiracu...
#shorts
- published: 28 Apr 2023
- views: 20783300
5:45
What Does This Life Really Mean? - Jim Carrey
"Desperation is a necessary ingredient to learning anything or creating anything. Period. If you ain't desperate at some point, you ain't interesting."
- Jim ...
"Desperation is a necessary ingredient to learning anything or creating anything. Period. If you ain't desperate at some point, you ain't interesting."
- Jim Carrey
This is one of the most powerful videos I've edited on Absolute Motivation. It is such an incredibly motivational yet inspirational video but at the same time, the speech Jim Carrey goes into leaves you thinking deeply.
Music licenced from Musicvine.
If you enjoyed the video please share it with someone who needs to hear it, as always, thank you for your support and if the found value in this please subscriber and keep posted on our latest uploads.
Social Media For More Inspiring Content:
https://www.facebook.com/AbsoluteMotivation
https://soundcloud.com/absolutemotivation
https://www.instagram.com/absolutemotivationmedia
Sources:
https://wn.com/What_Does_This_Life_Really_Mean_Jim_Carrey
"Desperation is a necessary ingredient to learning anything or creating anything. Period. If you ain't desperate at some point, you ain't interesting."
- Jim Carrey
This is one of the most powerful videos I've edited on Absolute Motivation. It is such an incredibly motivational yet inspirational video but at the same time, the speech Jim Carrey goes into leaves you thinking deeply.
Music licenced from Musicvine.
If you enjoyed the video please share it with someone who needs to hear it, as always, thank you for your support and if the found value in this please subscriber and keep posted on our latest uploads.
Social Media For More Inspiring Content:
https://www.facebook.com/AbsoluteMotivation
https://soundcloud.com/absolutemotivation
https://www.instagram.com/absolutemotivationmedia
Sources:
- published: 05 Nov 2017
- views: 10566374
0:11
stamped.
HOW TO LOOP ON DESKTOP: RIGHT CLICK, CLICK LOOP!
"It's a dog stamp dog world out there."
Music: Earthbound - The Jolly Flying Man
HOW TO LOOP ON DESKTOP: RIGHT CLICK, CLICK LOOP!
"It's a dog stamp dog world out there."
Music: Earthbound - The Jolly Flying Man
https://wn.com/Stamped.
HOW TO LOOP ON DESKTOP: RIGHT CLICK, CLICK LOOP!
"It's a dog stamp dog world out there."
Music: Earthbound - The Jolly Flying Man
- published: 11 Sep 2020
- views: 65071632
5:27
Jordan Peterson - What Makes Overcoming Addiction So Difficult?
original source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Us979jCjHu8
Psychology Professor Dr. Jordan B. Peterson explains how drug addictions build subpersonalities in ...
original source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Us979jCjHu8
Psychology Professor Dr. Jordan B. Peterson explains how drug addictions build subpersonalities in your brain.This is directly related to yesterday's clip: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fmnqnCi0j_8
Dr. Peterson's new book is available for pre-order:
12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos: http://amzn.to/2yvJf9L
If you want to support Dr. Peterson, here is his Patreon:
https://www.patreon.com/jordanbpeterson
Check out Jordan Peterson's Self Authoring Program, a powerful tool to sort yourself out:
http://bit.ly/selfAuth (Official affiliate link for Bite-sized Philosophy)
https://wn.com/Jordan_Peterson_What_Makes_Overcoming_Addiction_So_Difficult
original source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Us979jCjHu8
Psychology Professor Dr. Jordan B. Peterson explains how drug addictions build subpersonalities in your brain.This is directly related to yesterday's clip: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fmnqnCi0j_8
Dr. Peterson's new book is available for pre-order:
12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos: http://amzn.to/2yvJf9L
If you want to support Dr. Peterson, here is his Patreon:
https://www.patreon.com/jordanbpeterson
Check out Jordan Peterson's Self Authoring Program, a powerful tool to sort yourself out:
http://bit.ly/selfAuth (Official affiliate link for Bite-sized Philosophy)
- published: 12 Apr 2017
- views: 461829
4:46
How to Get Out of a Despairing Mood
In moments of despair, we may be suffering not from a failure of spirit, but a failure of imagination. The way out lies in exercising our creative capacities.
...
In moments of despair, we may be suffering not from a failure of spirit, but a failure of imagination. The way out lies in exercising our creative capacities.
Enjoying our Youtube videos? Get full access to all our audio content, videos, and thousands of thought-provoking articles, conversation cards and more with The School of Life Subscription: https://t.ly/cfnni
Be more mindful, present and inspired. Get the best of The School of Life delivered straight to your inbox: https://t.ly/w8uJR
FURTHER READING
You can read more on this and other subjects here: https://bit.ly/2IvSflV
“It may sound strange to locate the problem here, but some of our most despairing moods are caused by failures of the imagination. We are not merely ‘sad’; we cannot picture any better life than the agonised one we currently have. What we really mean by imagination is the power to summon up alternatives. When we are sad, we can’t imagine finding another job; we can’t imagine retraining or shifting profession. We can’t imagine not minding what the gossip says about us. We can’t imagine finding another partner and letting ourselves trust someone again. We can’t imagine getting by in a wheelchair. We can’t imagine living on a very modest budget or relocating to another country. We can’t imagine having to make a completely new set of friends…”
MORE SCHOOL OF LIFE
Watch more films on SELF in our playlist:
http://bit.ly/TSOLself
SOCIAL MEDIA
Feel free to follow us at the links below:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/theschooloflifelondon/
X: https://twitter.com/TheSchoolOfLife
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theschooloflifelondon/
CREDITS
Produced in collaboration with:
Gabriella Marsh
https://gabriellamarsh.com/
Title animation produced in collaboration with
Vale Productions
https://www.valeproductions.co.uk/
https://wn.com/How_To_Get_Out_Of_A_Despairing_Mood
In moments of despair, we may be suffering not from a failure of spirit, but a failure of imagination. The way out lies in exercising our creative capacities.
Enjoying our Youtube videos? Get full access to all our audio content, videos, and thousands of thought-provoking articles, conversation cards and more with The School of Life Subscription: https://t.ly/cfnni
Be more mindful, present and inspired. Get the best of The School of Life delivered straight to your inbox: https://t.ly/w8uJR
FURTHER READING
You can read more on this and other subjects here: https://bit.ly/2IvSflV
“It may sound strange to locate the problem here, but some of our most despairing moods are caused by failures of the imagination. We are not merely ‘sad’; we cannot picture any better life than the agonised one we currently have. What we really mean by imagination is the power to summon up alternatives. When we are sad, we can’t imagine finding another job; we can’t imagine retraining or shifting profession. We can’t imagine not minding what the gossip says about us. We can’t imagine finding another partner and letting ourselves trust someone again. We can’t imagine getting by in a wheelchair. We can’t imagine living on a very modest budget or relocating to another country. We can’t imagine having to make a completely new set of friends…”
MORE SCHOOL OF LIFE
Watch more films on SELF in our playlist:
http://bit.ly/TSOLself
SOCIAL MEDIA
Feel free to follow us at the links below:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/theschooloflifelondon/
X: https://twitter.com/TheSchoolOfLife
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theschooloflifelondon/
CREDITS
Produced in collaboration with:
Gabriella Marsh
https://gabriellamarsh.com/
Title animation produced in collaboration with
Vale Productions
https://www.valeproductions.co.uk/
- published: 18 Nov 2020
- views: 672079
1:01:36
BIBH Webinar 2: Neuropsychiatric Consequences of Traumatic Brain Injury
David Arciniegas, MD, Director of Research at the Marcus Institute for Brain Health and Clinical Professor of Neurology and Psychiatry at University of Colorado...
David Arciniegas, MD, Director of Research at the Marcus Institute for Brain Health and Clinical Professor of Neurology and Psychiatry at University of Colorado School of Medicine, presents "Neuropsychiatric Consequences of Traumatic Brain Injury."
This is the second in a series of six 'Brain Injury & Behavioral Health (BIBH): Informing Best Practice' webinars presented by Craig Hospital with funding from MINDSOURCE Brain Injury Network. The BIBH webinar series is an opportunity for community behavioral health professionals to increase their knowledge and skills in serving this unique population.
***
Craig Hospital in Denver, Colorado, is a world-renowned rehabilitation hospital that specializes exclusively in the neurorehabilitation and research of patients with spinal cord injury (SCI) and brain injury (BI). Craig is a not-for-profit, free-standing, national center of excellence that has treated more than 34,500 patients with SCI and BI since 1956. https://craighospital.org
—
Disclaimer: The content in this video is intended for general informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. No professional relationship is implied or otherwise established by reading this document. You should not use this information to diagnose or treat a health problem or disease without consulting with a qualified healthcare provider. Craig Hospital is not affiliated with resources that may be referenced in this video. Craig Hospital assumes no liability for any third-party material or for any action or inaction taken as a result of any content or any suggestions made in this video and should not be relied upon without independent investigation. The information on this page is a public service provided by Craig Hospital and in no way represents a recommendation or endorsement by Craig Hospital. This video is provided for the private use of disabled individuals. Any use of this content by a corporation or other revenue-seeking or -generating organization is prohibited unless first approved by Craig Hospital.
https://wn.com/Bibh_Webinar_2_Neuropsychiatric_Consequences_Of_Traumatic_Brain_Injury
David Arciniegas, MD, Director of Research at the Marcus Institute for Brain Health and Clinical Professor of Neurology and Psychiatry at University of Colorado School of Medicine, presents "Neuropsychiatric Consequences of Traumatic Brain Injury."
This is the second in a series of six 'Brain Injury & Behavioral Health (BIBH): Informing Best Practice' webinars presented by Craig Hospital with funding from MINDSOURCE Brain Injury Network. The BIBH webinar series is an opportunity for community behavioral health professionals to increase their knowledge and skills in serving this unique population.
***
Craig Hospital in Denver, Colorado, is a world-renowned rehabilitation hospital that specializes exclusively in the neurorehabilitation and research of patients with spinal cord injury (SCI) and brain injury (BI). Craig is a not-for-profit, free-standing, national center of excellence that has treated more than 34,500 patients with SCI and BI since 1956. https://craighospital.org
—
Disclaimer: The content in this video is intended for general informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice or treatment for specific medical conditions. No professional relationship is implied or otherwise established by reading this document. You should not use this information to diagnose or treat a health problem or disease without consulting with a qualified healthcare provider. Craig Hospital is not affiliated with resources that may be referenced in this video. Craig Hospital assumes no liability for any third-party material or for any action or inaction taken as a result of any content or any suggestions made in this video and should not be relied upon without independent investigation. The information on this page is a public service provided by Craig Hospital and in no way represents a recommendation or endorsement by Craig Hospital. This video is provided for the private use of disabled individuals. Any use of this content by a corporation or other revenue-seeking or -generating organization is prohibited unless first approved by Craig Hospital.
- published: 04 Dec 2020
- views: 4701
13:20
Joe Rogan - Depression Isn't a Chemical Imbalance?
Joe Rogan and Johann Hari discuss whether depression is due to a chemical imbalance.
Joe Rogan and Johann Hari discuss whether depression is due to a chemical imbalance.
https://wn.com/Joe_Rogan_Depression_Isn't_A_Chemical_Imbalance
Joe Rogan and Johann Hari discuss whether depression is due to a chemical imbalance.
- published: 12 Feb 2018
- views: 6091950
30:01
Neurological Programming and Other Fighting Words!
A pleasure to chat about human movement, neurology, biology and other aspects of martial artistry with Dr. Stu McGill.
Dr. Stu is one of the foremost experts o...
A pleasure to chat about human movement, neurology, biology and other aspects of martial artistry with Dr. Stu McGill.
Dr. Stu is one of the foremost experts on performance biomechanics.
Thanks Dr. Stu!
https://wn.com/Neurological_Programming_And_Other_Fighting_Words
A pleasure to chat about human movement, neurology, biology and other aspects of martial artistry with Dr. Stu McGill.
Dr. Stu is one of the foremost experts on performance biomechanics.
Thanks Dr. Stu!
- published: 22 Jul 2020
- views: 1653
48:40
The Neurology of Stress
Dr. Jenkins outlines how our brain is reprogrammed from chronic stress and what you can do to generate a peace response in your neurology. If we continue to all...
Dr. Jenkins outlines how our brain is reprogrammed from chronic stress and what you can do to generate a peace response in your neurology. If we continue to allow stress to rule in our bodies it will frustrate our health choices and erode our health. This is another in our ongoing 100+Living Talks to educate and inspire our community. To check Dr. Jenkins' speaking schedule and availibility go to www.100plusliving.com/dr-j-speaking
https://wn.com/The_Neurology_Of_Stress
Dr. Jenkins outlines how our brain is reprogrammed from chronic stress and what you can do to generate a peace response in your neurology. If we continue to allow stress to rule in our bodies it will frustrate our health choices and erode our health. This is another in our ongoing 100+Living Talks to educate and inspire our community. To check Dr. Jenkins' speaking schedule and availibility go to www.100plusliving.com/dr-j-speaking
- published: 13 Nov 2015
- views: 57