Cannot explain how it feels when such huge topics of life and thought are epitomized into a speech and scientifically verified. I love you neuroscience.
Just watched this again, and I'm not bored. I think the reason is that Jud is obviously enjoying his talk as he gives it. I can feel the fun of the bike. I can feel the fun and excitement about his finding flow. I can feel his excitement about his work. That's the trick of a good TEDx talk. It makes us FEEL on top of making us THINK. Great job!
The part about resistance to a behavior being the reason we have a hard time stopping said behavior makes so much sense. I realized that after relapsing from the longest I've been sober that all I was focused on was staying sober and trying to resist my urges that they eventually caught up to me. I learned I need to be involved in other things so I won't have to resist, it just comes naturally.
Thank You Dr. Brewer, I loved your clear explanation of getting in our own way. I wrote, "SHOULDS! DON'T COUNT". Showing how we get in our own way when we are forget that nature will do what nature is supposed to do. Man has a choice. If man can get out of his way by eliminating most Shoulds we can grow, learn and find the flow in our connected, yet individual Spirit. Shoulds, stop the flow. Must, Do and Did are all predisposed to Flow. Aloha Works
A HUGE thank-you to you Mr. Judson Brewer! I'm grateful to have come across this TedTalk and I found some of your articles published with the Huffington Post as well, and I look forward to seeing, hearing and reading more. Best regards.
Hes right about meditation and flow..ive been doing it for years and you really feel the difference. But part of the effect of flow is NOT wanting to go fir or do everything and anything all the time. You're more focussed in flow, and more chilled out. At the very least, you just cut through the work with minimal strain, cause it mostly feels great doing it. Practice and letting go, are everything.
Since studying positive psychology I have been applying flow and mindful present moments of breathe work and experiencing the state of FLOW can't be described in words to people who have never experienced this before. All I can say to anyone considering this, it will change your life for the awesome. Don't listen to my words as they won't make you a believer, honestly practice this over and over again.. short bursts and within such a short amount of time you will have found the right key to unlock your door and boom, euphoria.. there is no more life changing moment than this experience! This experience will turn you into an addict, doing whatever you can for your next natural high!!! 💥💥💥🙏🏼👌🏼
"Reality is so much more delicious than our concepts of it." Amazing presentation! I experience flow when I belly dance and sometimes it is magical and even ecstatic. But if while dancing I move into my head doing ego-thinking I may even fall
Yes I've also worked in cessation for years and those smokers taught me so much about how to quit every behavior I've ever wanted to stop and some I didn't even know I had ❤️ great talk from a year of meditation I feel like I changed my whole life!
Yes. Meditators can go into flow while meditating. Writers while writing, artists while arting. I think it may be generally easier to get to while doing something physical because you're focusing on your body and what it's doing, but the actual flow state is achieved through the mind.
The flow state is essentially daoism in Chinese Philosophy. Daoism's core is purposeless, which is the core of all living beings. If we drop our stubbornly scheduled mind and forget the purpose, our body, our imagination and our will power will entangle by themselves. In such, we become free and flow like water. Naturally, beautifully, like water, like all life forms.
What Brewer is saying is Zen Buddhism, that's it! The moment of now is what matters the most. When "IT" comes up don't act on it, instead LIVE IN IT, TASTE IT, CHEW IT AND ENJOY IT, until the next moment comes.eckhart tolle and wayne dyer were the once who made Zen comprehensible for me. The Book of Tao Te Chingf is a good start ( free pdf ) on line.
Love the story about the participant who discovered the difference between thinking about the breath verses feeling it. Reminds me of the JKZ quote: "Mindfulness. It's not what you think!" So when can the average consumer have the opportunity of "being with" this neurofeedback tool to wake him/her up when not being with actual experience through the senses?
I just found out yesterday there is going to be a talk and a movie series on the notion of mindfulness in one of the schools of psychology in my city... Is it a coincidence that I stumbled upon this video today or is it a sign? Now I really think I should go.
Accidentally discovered something like this. I was very very very upset & left the house to cool down, went to a nearby lake & walked along the shore on big rocks, walking very fast. Best way to describe it, one wrong step; fall on hard rocks, no time to think just a lot of reacting. (Not the smartest idea) However, after that my anger was absolutely & totally gone, which would have normally taken awhile to go away. Made a mental note to do something like this, maybe a bit safer when my emotions get the best of me.
I experience this from time to time in my design job, and sometimes I have felt it as well doing chemistry or math problems way back in college...that is when I got my best grades.
Since I live alone I tend to over think 80% of the times and since that became a routeen its been interrupting my studies . its like I will be studying my work and all of a sudden I am in my mind years in the future in my own reality thinking about how much I have accomplished and within that time I am soo happy ... but the reality is I havent even done like 20% of my task .... its kinda frustrating I keep getting in my own way .....
God I wish I knew how to turn off my thoughts, I've experienced flow plenty of times but the problem is trying to get it stops you from getting it, and if you do get it, as soon as you realize your in it, you're back out.
It just takes practice. If you quickly bring your attention back to what you’re doing, fearlessly, you can keep it for longer and longer. Also, it’s more of an allowing than a trying, you’re definitely right about that. I’ve rewired my brain to heal a number of physical, mental, emotional m and psychological issues and being in flow is the most healthy, healing state there is - I’ve had lots of practice 😊
Ahs Ahs don’t fish in the wrong waters. Surely try to keep your waters that you swim in closed off because people will react impulsively to have you believe what they believe of you to be.
If you do any sort of meditation such as a meditation retreat this is one of the things you'll learn and come across. The second you focus on "it"... "it" goes away
Coming back to the actual topic, new challenges may excite you. But after a little while, you get exhausted. At the same time, your learning slows down. Everything appears to be the same as yesterday. You meet the same person and do the same work. Nothing is as exciting as it was in the beginning. All the efforts you have been pouring in seem to be worthless. Some people give up saying, "this doesn't suit me." You start searching for new areas and new topics. Something ‘new’ is what motivates you. However, people with perseverance continuously track their progress in a single field. They make actual progress, and this is what motivates them. They do not mind how many documentaries they’ve watched, or how ahead they are compared to other people.
As an experienced "practicer" yes practicer... "doing it", doing it again, and "I" want to do it again are oxymoron's. You (I) can observe it or not. Every time "I" have said, "Wow... this is great"...and "how am "I" doing this... the moment/flow is shattered. "perfect practice or high level practice " allowing -myself/one's self- to just be (there) is the challenge and the reward. (humbly ... being in my own head/anxious is a huge issue, in-spite of knowing better, & regularly experiencing flow (being in the moment). PS "it" is not an "it"(it = some "thing" that is perceived (miss-perceived ) as having a begining middle and end , an inner and outer a prior or posterior (after) .(Part of a Sanskrit shruti to remind oneself to wake-up- "no inner, no outer, no prior no posterior...That Is...! (thatness)"
+Gore Blaster - pain cannot be avoided - we cannot conquer it. The best we can do is acknowledge it like any other sensation and move on. I speak from experience.
Hey, so I went to Gabor Maté's video. I loved it. It seems to me that he's largely saying the same thing that Judson is saying. I think they are both encouraging us to find and love ourselves... and that our compassion for ourselves will likely open us to compassion to others as well.
Noticed this when I play a tennis game on my Android phone. When I focus and try to think 1 or 2 steps ahead of my opponent or when I try to hit the perfect shot I end up not playing my best. When I let my mind wonder and daydream while playing my performance is much, much better. I've noticed this with some other games I play as well. When I'm at my best at these games is when I'm not too focused on playing the game itself.
Through the entire audio, I could not get to understand much but just two things. 1. Don't try to over consciously do any of the activities but just do them with usual mindfulness n you will end up doing them better. I suppose this is what he was trying to explain through that athelete example. 2. Meditation: Meditation is a gradual process which brings change in our thoughts n focus over the time though we would face resistance in the beginning. Any comments on what I understood?
This happens when I play video games and it gets really critical. I'm not playing the person on the screen I'm in the screen trying to prevent the terrorists from planting. As crazy as that might sound it actually happens a fair amount. I know it happened, I can look back and reflect on what happened but I can't fully understand why I felt so "in" the moment. Of course immersion plays a key part in this equation and having 7.1 surround sound doesn't hurt but being so in a moment you feel at one with it is an awesome feeling.
Here's the thumbnail version: You will mess up a project or your performance in a sport by over thinking what you are doing. Researchers call this analysis paralysis. On Public Radio I've heard time and again that a person can mentally juggle 5 to 7 things in a short span of time, at the most. The more things you have to focus on, the less attention you give to each thing. Humans are really bad at multi-tasking. So to do your best, DON'T MULTITASK! The bane of Americans is overwork--and the ruin of any work is a divided interest. Concentrate-concentrate. One thing at a time. -- Mark Twain, Letter to Orion Clemens, May 12, 1880
I have the volume all the up (on most of these ted videos) and still have a hard time understanding them. Please when you upload a video, just increase the general volume. Thank you
start feeling your breath more an more often, just feel it,how you breath in and out, your lungs, the little pause between breathing in and out, expecialy when you are stressed, make a habbit from it, it will help you to be more present in what you do, more productive, and much much more, put the simple act of being aware of your breath in front of everything else, and see the results :)
It's mainly just a Buddhist philosophy I still don't understand what they mean by the now how are you not in the now we can only be in the now and I was the only things I have no clue what they mean
I agree with this somewhat, I use mindfulness in combating extreme OCD with Patients and it definitely is a powerful tool for sitting with but not submitting to the urge to compulse. I meditate as well, I have experienced flow states in a variety of ways: I play improvised music where I lose myself, downhill skiing, meditation, psychedelics etc. I love doing these things, however I also like getting caught up in my own abstract bullshit thinking too honestly, it's interesting. I can sit there and just think my ass off, and really get wrapped up in it, totally fused with the thoughts, with no awareness of them as thoughts, very little awareness of my surroundings, and even very judgmental- but a lot of the times what kicks out of this intense default mode activity is an idea for something I want to create- or an interesting question. Mindfulness and metacognition is valuable as a toolbox, but sometimes getting lost in mental review, with all kinds of thinking going on automatically connects dots and most of my creativity comes out of that thought-cacophony.
Mindfulness does not prevent creativity because mindfulness is not about suppressing thoughts. It is about allowing anything to come up in your mind, but being aware of whatever comes up. Therefore, when one is practicing mindfulness, there is more ‘space’ for a creative thought to come up than when one is lost in distressing, fantasizing or repetitive thoughts.
that's a nice theory but for me that's not the case. When I am mindful of my thoughts or feelings I have a certain distance from them, and have likely slightly disengaged my default mode network, my amygdalic activity is feeding into my prefrontal cortex, etc, which for me in practice has led to a reduction of my personal type of creativity, which probably kicks out from heavy non-distanced ruminating, perhaps from the default mode neurological framework.
I don't do it with patients, I doubt it would be helpful with the population I work with. however if you look up the good friday experiment through dr. timothy leary, through Oliver Sacks through the numerous experiments done in the last few years with psilocybin (look up The Trip Treatment, in the new yorker) not only do therapists use the drugs recreationally, as people do, they are in fact administering the drug to patients in the most hallowed halls of modern medicine, like at Johns Hopkins, using it to help trauma cases and the terminally ill. So what you are saying is wrong in every possible way it could be. www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/02/09/trip-treatment
I watched the race with LOLO...she lost that race because instead of focusing on finishing the race, she started looking at her self on the tv screen and fell over the hurdles....she had it and she screwed herself up.
Funny how we need modern science to rediscover this. Our crazy world with hyper-emphasis on speed and quantity and hyper exposure to stimuli and distraction is preventing us from reaching flow state. Look at the open-office non-sense. Hyper openness, hyper availability, hyper sharing, hyper cooperation culture is becoming counter-productive. All this is going overboard and prevents individual from doing focused learning and practicing. Notice most of these speakers' memorable flow experience happened when they were doing the activity by themselves and often with absolutely no one around them. Flow will become more and more elusive because there will be more and more distractions in our world.
"Reality is so much more delicious than our concept of it" Absolutely brilliant talk!
Was just about to repeat that. Your comment was the first i saw
You can stop thinking by thinking to yourself "I wonder what my next thought is going to be!" and then listening for an answer.
Smoked a pack a day for 35 years haven't had one in four days. Powerful information.
Cannot explain how it feels when such huge topics of life and thought are epitomized into a speech and scientifically verified.
I love you neuroscience.
Neuroscience is the best!
Just watched this again, and I'm not bored. I think the reason is that Jud is obviously enjoying his talk as he gives it. I can feel the fun of the bike. I can feel the fun and excitement about his finding flow. I can feel his excitement about his work. That's the trick of a good TEDx talk. It makes us FEEL on top of making us THINK. Great job!
This feels so true to how I got off my 15 year addiction to cigarettes. Great speech!
The part about resistance to a behavior being the reason we have a hard time stopping said behavior makes so much sense. I realized that after relapsing from the longest I've been sober that all I was focused on was staying sober and trying to resist my urges that they eventually caught up to me. I learned I need to be involved in other things so I won't have to resist, it just comes naturally.
It's brilliant. This person saved my life. Several times. Thank you Judson!
Thank You Dr. Brewer, I loved your clear explanation of getting in our own way. I wrote, "SHOULDS! DON'T COUNT". Showing how we get in our own way when we are forget that nature will do what nature is supposed to do. Man has a choice. If man can get out of his way by eliminating most Shoulds we can grow, learn and find the flow in our connected, yet individual Spirit. Shoulds, stop the flow. Must, Do and Did are all predisposed to Flow. Aloha Works
I feel like in the flow when I'm drawing, totally feels like nothing exists, don't even see what Im drawing . Great speech!
A HUGE thank-you to you Mr. Judson Brewer! I'm grateful to have come across this TedTalk and I found some of your articles published with the Huffington Post as well, and I look forward to seeing, hearing and reading more. Best regards.
Hes right about meditation and flow..ive been doing it for years and you really feel the difference. But part of the effect of flow is NOT wanting to go fir or do everything and anything all the time. You're more focussed in flow, and more chilled out. At the very least, you just cut through the work with minimal strain, cause it mostly feels great doing it. Practice and letting go, are everything.
Since studying positive psychology I have been applying flow and mindful present moments of breathe work and experiencing the state of FLOW can't be described in words to people who have never experienced this before. All I can say to anyone considering this, it will change your life for the awesome. Don't listen to my words as they won't make you a believer, honestly practice this over and over again.. short bursts and within such a short amount of time you will have found the right key to unlock your door and boom, euphoria.. there is no more life changing moment than this experience! This experience will turn you into an addict, doing whatever you can for your next natural high!!! 💥💥💥🙏🏼👌🏼
"Reality is so much more delicious than our concepts of it." Amazing presentation! I experience flow when I belly dance and sometimes it is magical and even ecstatic. But if while dancing I move into my head doing ego-thinking I may even fall
Get out of my way, self!!
**punches self in the face**
No! YOU get out of MY way!!
Drama queen;)
Yes I've also worked in cessation for years and those smokers taught me so much about how to quit every behavior I've ever wanted to stop and some I didn't even know I had ❤️ great talk from a year of meditation I feel like I changed my whole life!
totally agreed!
You are a gifted teacher - thank you!
Best Ted Talk I have ever seen. Wonderful.
Trust your body to do what it's supposed to
Yes. Meditators can go into flow while meditating. Writers while writing, artists while arting. I think it may be generally easier to get to while doing something physical because you're focusing on your body and what it's doing, but the actual flow state is achieved through the mind.
His book, Unwinding Your Anxiety, saved me from a lot of suffering.
WOW, just WOW !
BRILLIANT !
i have no words .... this guy and his work is OUT OF THIS WORLD !
I paused this then went and accomplished so much in one day. Now I'm watching the other half.
This guy is the first who thinks I'm awesome.
and im the second, you're awesome man !!☺☺
And they won't be the last
Guess that makes 5, you should make it number 6 :) FYI your the most important one, you got this! No you really do :)
Of course you are awesome
You are awesome
The flow state is essentially daoism in Chinese Philosophy.
Daoism's core is purposeless, which is the core of all living beings. If we drop our stubbornly scheduled mind and forget the purpose, our body, our imagination and our will power will entangle by themselves. In such, we become free and flow like water.
Naturally, beautifully, like water, like all life forms.
Totally so. Thanks for sharing, and reminding that life is breathing through us as well as living us.
What Brewer is saying is Zen Buddhism, that's it! The moment of now is what matters the most. When "IT" comes up don't act on it, instead LIVE IN IT, TASTE IT, CHEW IT AND ENJOY IT, until the next moment comes.eckhart tolle and wayne dyer were the once who made Zen comprehensible for me. The Book of Tao Te Chingf is a good start ( free pdf ) on line.
Love the story about the participant who discovered the difference between thinking about the breath verses feeling it. Reminds me of the JKZ quote: "Mindfulness. It's not what you think!" So when can the average consumer have the opportunity of "being with" this neurofeedback tool to wake him/her up when not being with actual experience through the senses?
I just found out yesterday there is going to be a talk and a movie series on the notion of mindfulness in one of the schools of psychology in my city... Is it a coincidence that I stumbled upon this video today or is it a sign? Now I really think I should go.
I feel AWESOME.. thank you.. man i cant get enough of these TEDx videos
Finally, a TED-talk worth watching!
This describes me me completely. When i was young i was so sharp, now i overthink and get caught up in my own thinking.
that flow state is how i got hooked on skate boarding
Outstanding! To feel the breath works so well
Accidentally discovered something like this. I was very very very upset & left the house to cool down, went to a nearby lake & walked along the shore on big rocks, walking very fast. Best way to describe it, one wrong step; fall on hard rocks, no time to think just a lot of reacting. (Not the smartest idea) However, after that my anger was absolutely & totally gone, which would have normally taken awhile to go away. Made a mental note to do something like this, maybe a bit safer when my emotions get the best of me.
I experience this from time to time in my design job, and sometimes I have felt it as well doing chemistry or math problems way back in college...that is when I got my best grades.
Since I live alone I tend to over think 80% of the times and since that became a routeen its been interrupting my studies . its like I will be studying my work and all of a sudden I am in my mind years in the future in my own reality thinking about how much I have accomplished and within that time I am soo happy ... but the reality is I havent even done like 20% of my task .... its kinda frustrating I keep getting in my own way .....
Well done in summarizing a lot of solid science in ten minutes and making it accessible. Keep on rolling!
Thank you, vexento.
God I wish I knew how to turn off my thoughts, I've experienced flow plenty of times but the problem is trying to get it stops you from getting it, and if you do get it, as soon as you realize your in it, you're back out.
It just takes practice. If you quickly bring your attention back to what you’re doing, fearlessly, you can keep it for longer and longer. Also, it’s more of an allowing than a trying, you’re definitely right about that.
I’ve rewired my brain to heal a number of physical, mental, emotional m and psychological issues and being in flow is the most healthy, healing state there is - I’ve had lots of practice 😊
Ahs Ahs don’t fish in the wrong waters. Surely try to keep your waters that you swim in closed off because people will react impulsively to have you believe what they believe of you to be.
If you do any sort of meditation such as a meditation retreat this is one of the things you'll learn and come across. The second you focus on "it"... "it" goes away
Coming back to the actual topic, new challenges may excite you.
But after a little while, you get exhausted. At the same time, your learning slows down.
Everything appears to be the same as yesterday.
You meet the same person and do the same work.
Nothing is as exciting as it was in the beginning.
All the efforts you have been pouring in seem to be worthless.
Some people give up saying, "this doesn't suit me."
You start searching for new areas and new topics.
Something ‘new’ is what motivates you.
However, people with perseverance continuously track their progress in a single field. They make actual progress, and this is what motivates them.
They do not mind how many documentaries they’ve watched, or how ahead they are compared to other people.
Absorbing and to the point. Good use of imaging, content and delivery.
I love "flow" connected with neurology. First exposed to "flow" in theological seminary in 1980.
As an experienced "practicer" yes practicer... "doing it", doing it again, and "I" want to do it again are oxymoron's. You (I) can observe it or not. Every time "I" have said,
"Wow... this is great"...and "how am "I" doing this... the moment/flow is shattered.
"perfect practice or high level practice " allowing -myself/one's self- to just be (there) is the challenge and the reward. (humbly ... being in my own head/anxious is a huge issue, in-spite of knowing better, & regularly experiencing flow (being in the moment).
PS "it" is not an "it"(it = some "thing" that is perceived (miss-perceived ) as having a begining middle and end , an inner and outer a prior or posterior (after) .(Part of a Sanskrit shruti to remind oneself to wake-up- "no inner, no outer, no prior no posterior...That Is...! (thatness)"
Nice job, Judson! Thanks for framing meditation in an accessible way. Nice jacket.
+Gore Blaster - pain cannot be avoided - we cannot conquer it. The best we can do is acknowledge it like any other sensation and move on. I speak from experience.
this guy's attire, is getting in his way.
Hey, so I went to Gabor Maté's video. I loved it. It seems to me that he's largely saying the same thing that Judson is saying. I think they are both encouraging us to find and love ourselves... and that our compassion for ourselves will likely open us to compassion to others as well.
Noticed this when I play a tennis game on my Android phone. When I focus and try to think 1 or 2 steps ahead of my opponent or when I try to hit the perfect shot I end up not playing my best. When I let my mind wonder and daydream while playing my performance is much, much better. I've noticed this with some other games I play as well. When I'm at my best at these games is when I'm not too focused on playing the game itself.
Groud Frank I noticed this too
Well said
Makes sense .. this is precisely The Power of Now - Eckhart tolle
Through the entire audio, I could not get to understand much but just two things.
1. Don't try to over consciously do any of the activities but just do them with usual mindfulness n you will end up doing them better. I suppose this is what he was trying to explain through that athelete example.
2. Meditation: Meditation is a gradual process which brings change in our thoughts n focus over the time though we would face resistance in the beginning.
Any comments on what I understood?
Enjoyed & THANK U FOR SHARING. Nj-usa
this was really interesting, i meditate alot and had no idea it would benefit my brain so much! cool graphs and results.
I like this doctor! Thanks for this helpful information 🌟
This dude's the new breed. Great stuff!
Brilliant! Thanks.
Getting cought up in your own thoughts is like a deer in headlights go with the flow brooo
But you cannot not think. Trying to think of not thinking is still thinking so makes no sense
The judge needs a judge
Thank you so much, one of the best talks
🙏💜🙏 thank you
Excellent. Wondering about a practical neuro feedback mechanism for helping to train individuals in this skill... 9 minutes later - Wow!
Awesome! This is just what I needed to hear. Just flow :)
Yep. spot on. i needed to hear that, thankyou.
'The reason you want to be better is the reason why you aren't.'
Alan Watts
This happens when I play video games and it gets really critical. I'm not playing the person on the screen I'm in the screen trying to prevent the terrorists from planting. As crazy as that might sound it actually happens a fair amount. I know it happened, I can look back and reflect on what happened but I can't fully understand why I felt so "in" the moment. Of course immersion plays a key part in this equation and having 7.1 surround sound doesn't hurt but being so in a moment you feel at one with it is an awesome feeling.
Love This
Its great to see that modern science is catching up with what Buddhism has known for over 2,500 years.
Here's the thumbnail version: You will mess up a project or your performance in a sport by over thinking what you are doing.
Researchers call this analysis paralysis.
On Public Radio I've heard time and again that a person can mentally juggle 5 to 7 things in a short span of time, at the most. The more things you have to focus on, the less attention you give to each thing. Humans are really bad at multi-tasking. So to do your best, DON'T MULTITASK!
The bane of Americans is overwork--and the ruin of any work is a divided interest. Concentrate-concentrate. One thing at a time.
-- Mark Twain, Letter to Orion Clemens, May 12, 1880
This is great!
accessible, useful, accurate- nice job. thank you
This gettle man does Ted Talk 2 Times! what an amazing person
Is flow another way for being "in the zone"?
***** Yes.
Wouldbang
Wouldbang
indys m like
Yes you knew this
Great talk 🙂
So cool! Thank you for doing this research!
Thank you.
Loved this talk!
wow, this is so true
Brooo this is so good
I have the volume all the up (on most of these ted videos) and still have a hard time understanding them. Please when you upload a video, just increase the general volume. Thank you
doubt it but thanks for your insight
It's not your speakers. I had to increase it way higher than usual as well.
i had no issues
start feeling your breath more an more often, just feel it,how you breath in and out, your lungs, the little pause between breathing in and out, expecialy when you are stressed, make a habbit from it, it will help you to be more present in what you do, more productive, and much much more, put the simple act of being aware of your breath in front of everything else, and see the results :)
Great job, Jud!
The problem is when painful body sensations come up, people are not going to stay with such feelings if they can avoid them.
Sometimes painful body feelings are somatic symptoms of a deeper unease.
Good job Jud!
Whoop whoop when I heard salida.
Very nice thanks for sharing.
really awesome talks!
this is amazing.
Yep. Allan Watts and Eckhart Tolle's Power of Now plus the magnetic resonance.
It's mainly just a Buddhist philosophy I still don't understand what they mean by the now how are you not in the now we can only be in the now and I was the only things I have no clue what they mean
I agree with this somewhat, I use mindfulness in combating extreme OCD with Patients and it definitely is a powerful tool for sitting with but not submitting to the urge to compulse. I meditate as well, I have experienced flow states in a variety of ways: I play improvised music where I lose myself, downhill skiing, meditation, psychedelics etc. I love doing these things, however I also like getting caught up in my own abstract bullshit thinking too honestly, it's interesting. I can sit there and just think my ass off, and really get wrapped up in it, totally fused with the thoughts, with no awareness of them as thoughts, very little awareness of my surroundings, and even very judgmental- but a lot of the times what kicks out of this intense default mode activity is an idea for something I want to create- or an interesting question. Mindfulness and metacognition is valuable as a toolbox, but sometimes getting lost in mental review, with all kinds of thinking going on automatically connects dots and most of my creativity comes out of that thought-cacophony.
Mindfulness does not prevent creativity because mindfulness is not about suppressing thoughts. It is about allowing anything to come up in your mind, but being aware of whatever comes up. Therefore, when one is practicing mindfulness, there is more ‘space’ for a creative thought to come up than when one is lost in distressing, fantasizing or repetitive thoughts.
that's a nice theory but for me that's not the case. When I am mindful of my thoughts or feelings I have a certain distance from them, and have likely slightly disengaged my default mode network, my amygdalic activity is feeding into my prefrontal cortex, etc, which for me in practice has led to a reduction of my personal type of creativity, which probably kicks out from heavy non-distanced ruminating, perhaps from the default mode neurological framework.
I don't do it with patients, I doubt it would be helpful with the population I work with. however if you look up the good friday experiment through dr. timothy leary, through Oliver Sacks through the numerous experiments done in the last few years with psilocybin (look up The Trip Treatment, in the new yorker) not only do therapists use the drugs recreationally, as people do, they are in fact administering the drug to patients in the most hallowed halls of modern medicine, like at Johns Hopkins, using it to help trauma cases and the terminally ill. So what you are saying is wrong in every possible way it could be.
www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/02/09/trip-treatment
Fav Ted speech yo
How do you even consider "thumbs-downing" this?!... Apparently 49 people really enjoy getting in their own way still and remaining stuck there.
Thats powerful
Thank you for sharing. Is it possible to flow and learn at the same time? Or can you learn how to flow? Hum?
I was inside flow just last night.
+Gabriel Gagne does she sell insurance : ) !
I like how it said my name before the video started
I loved the video
Awsome ......
True-true!
just go with the flow ;D
Nice speech
I watched the race with LOLO...she lost that race because instead of focusing on finishing the race, she started looking at her self on the tv screen and fell over the hurdles....she had it and she screwed herself up.
Funny how we need modern science to rediscover this. Our crazy world with hyper-emphasis on speed and quantity and hyper exposure to stimuli and distraction is preventing us from reaching flow state. Look at the open-office non-sense. Hyper openness, hyper availability, hyper sharing, hyper cooperation culture is becoming counter-productive. All this is going overboard and prevents individual from doing focused learning and practicing. Notice most of these speakers' memorable flow experience happened when they were doing the activity by themselves and often with absolutely no one around them. Flow will become more and more elusive because there will be more and more distractions in our world.