Dharma Lab

Dharma Lab

Modern neuroscience meets ancient contemplative wisdom, with Dr. Richard Davidson and Dr. Cortland Dahl dharmalabco.substack.com

  1. DL Ep. 18: The Neuroscience of Giving

    HACE 3 DÍAS

    DL Ep. 18: The Neuroscience of Giving

    In this episode of Dharma Lab, we explore the neuroscience and contemplative practice of what it means to truly give. Recorded in the middle of the holiday season, our conversation begins with a familiar arc many of us recognize: the childhood excitement of receiving, and the gradual (and sometimes surprising) shift toward the deeper satisfaction of giving. Together, we explore what’s really happening beneath that shift, psychologically, biologically, and experientially. Drawing on neuroscience, Buddhist contemplative traditions, and lived experience, we discuss: * Why giving leads to more sustained well-being than receiving * How generosity cultivates an inner sense of abundance rather than scarcity * What the brain reveals about extraordinary altruists, and their ability to detect suffering * How generosity is a trainable capacity * How small, everyday acts — including giving your full attention — can become powerful micro-practices Discussion Highlights From Getting to Giving As we grow older, the thrill of receiving often fades, while the joy of giving deepens. Neuroscience helps explain why: the brain rapidly adapts to getting what we want, returning us to baseline, while the “warm glow” of giving tends to linger. Giving and the Brain Across many studies, people instructed to spend money on others consistently report greater and longer-lasting increases in happiness than those who spend the same amount on themselves. We also discuss how our brains are prediction machines, and receiving tends to meet expectations and quickly normalizes; whereas giving often involves situations with a higher discrepancy between what you predict and what actually happens. Extraordinary Altruists and the Detection of Suffering We explore research on “extraordinary altruists” — people who donate a kidney to a stranger — who show heightened sensitivity in brain systems involved in detecting suffering. Compassion, it turns out, may begin less with moral reasoning and more with perception. In contrast, psychopathy appears to involve reduced sensitivity to others’ suffering — not necessarily cruelty, but a kind of blindness. This comparison reframes generosity not as virtue versus vice, but as a capacity that exists along a spectrum and can be cultivated. Generosity as an Inner State In Buddhist psychology, generosity is defined less by outward action than by an inner sense of abundance. Fixation on getting reinforces scarcity; giving evokes the feeling that there is enough to share. That inner shift may be one reason generosity is so nourishing. The Gift of Attention One of the simplest and most powerful forms of giving is attention. Putting the phone away. Listening without planning a response. Being fully present, even briefly. Attention communicates care — and people feel it as a gift. Micro-Practices of Giving Generosity doesn’t require dramatic acts. We explore small, repeatable practices: doing routine tasks as acts of service, offering presence in everyday interactions, reframing ordinary moments as opportunities to give. Over time, these micro-practices can turn generosity from a fleeting state into a stable trait. Counterintuitive Practices: Tonglen We also discuss tonglen, the Tibetan practice of breathing in others’ suffering and breathing out care. Though counterintuitive, practitioners often report feeling stronger, less fearful, and more abundant. Rather than depleting us, generosity appears to dissolve deep fears of inner poverty. Flourishing Is Contagious When we cultivate generosity — even briefly — it changes how we show up. Those changes ripple outward, influencing relationships, families, and communities. As we like to say: flourishing is infectious. A Simple Invitation Rather than asking how much you can give, we invite a quieter question: Where can generosity enter your day — through attention, presence, or small acts of care? Warmly,Cort & Richie Podcast Chapter List 00:00 – Opening reflections: from receiving to giving01:45 – Childhood memories and the holiday shift toward generosity03:15 – Why giving feels more nourishing than getting05:10 – Abundance vs. scarcity as inner states07:00 – Giving as a contemplative practice09:10 – Flourishing is contagious11:00 – Micro-practices and everyday generosity12:40 – Attention as a gift14:20 – Research on giving and sustained well-being17:00 – A personal story of generosity and the “warm glow”20:00 – Prediction, expectation, and why pleasure fades22:15 – Tonglen: the counterintuitive power of giving25:30 – Detecting suffering and compassion27:00 – Extraordinary altruists and amygdala sensitivity29:30 – Psychopathy, blindness to suffering, and compassion32:00 – Plasticity: generosity as a trainable capacity34:30 – Compassion without overwhelm37:00 – Rituals of giving in daily life39:30 – Imagination and generosity practices 41:30 – Dedication and carrying generosity into the world42:30 – Closing reflections This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit dharmalabco.substack.com/subscribe

    43 min
  2. DL Ep. 17: Trauma, Memory, and the Brain's Capacity to Change

    16 DIC

    DL Ep. 17: Trauma, Memory, and the Brain's Capacity to Change

    REMINDER: Live Q&A with Richie and Cort TODAY at 7pm ET on Substack. Why do certain memories feel like they still live in our bodies years after they happened? And why do some difficult experiences become turning points for growth while others leave us feeling stuck? In this episode, we explore the neuroscience of trauma and the contemplative tools that help us reshape old emotional patterns. A central part of our discussion is the role of plasticity in both trauma and healing: “Trauma wouldn’t happen if there wasn’t plasticity. The same quality that allows experience to wound us also allows us to heal.” We look at how emotional memories are encoded in the brain, why they can resurface with such force, and how memory reconsolidation creates a natural opening for change each time a memory returns. We also share a powerful experience from a recent meditation retreat, where a long buried emotional imprint surfaced and released through simple, spacious awareness. Again and again, we come back to one insight:Our emotional past is not fixed.Each time we remember an experience, the mind updates it. The state of our mind and body in that moment influences how it is stored again. Meditation helps create the conditions for this shift. A calm and open nervous system changes how old patterns settle in the body. Presence and care make the difference between a memory that stays tight and one that begins to loosen. In this episode we explore: * Why trauma exists on a spectrum and why we are more resilient than we often believe * How emotional memories form and how sensation, context, and meaning become linked * The science of reconsolidation and why remembering a memory makes it editable * How meditation supports emotional release and re-patterning * What happens in the hippocampus and amygdala during emotional release * Simple practices that help us reset between activities or at the end of a day * How offering ourselves the same caring presence we offer others can shift deep patterns A final takeaway: Reconsolidation shows that nothing in our emotional history is final. Each encounter with the past becomes a chance to update it. When a memory returns in a calmer mind, it settles differently. Warmly, Cort + Richie Podcast Chapter List 00:00 Why memories change every time we recall them 01:21 Opening greetings & Center for Healthy Minds 02:34 Introducing today’s topic: trauma & old baggage 03:00 How neuroscience defines trauma 04:03 Trauma, neuroplasticity, and brain change 05:40 Trauma as a spectrum, not a binary 07:44 Innate resilience and basic goodness 09:11 When difficult experiences become patterns 10:55 PTSD vs. post-traumatic growth 11:52 Personal stories of challenge and insight 12:58 Why some adversity overwhelms us — and some transforms us 13:32 Growth mindset & the belief that change is possible 15:33 Why we get “stuck” with old emotional residue 16:07 Cort’s retreat experience: when old pain resurfaces 17:20 Open awareness and effortless presence 18:00 Memories, emotion, and bodily release 19:08 What’s happening in the brain during emotional release 20:06 Consolidation vs. reconsolidation 22:03 The hippocampus and encoding emotional experience 23:53 Retrieval, reconsolidation, and the chance to reshape memory 25:36 Why memory is always an interpretation 27:08 Re-encoding old memories in a calm body 28:40 How meditation creates a new emotional context 29:38 Care + presence: the healing alchemy 30:52 Can reconsolidation be disrupted entirely? 32:22 What animal research shows about memory deletion 33:00 Emotional memory without emotional charge 34:06 How meditation alters hippocampus–amygdala pathways 36:00 Updating anxiety and old narratives through practice 37:05 Practical tools: daily resets 38:30 Micro-pauses between activities 39:33 Mealtime gratitude as nervous system reset 40:53 Finding small spaces for awareness in busy lives 41:33 Shifting from “doing” to “being” 42:00 Final reflections & gratitude This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit dharmalabco.substack.com/subscribe

    43 min
  3. DL Ep. 16: Mingyur Rinpoche - Meditation is Easier Than You Think

    12 DIC

    DL Ep. 16: Mingyur Rinpoche - Meditation is Easier Than You Think

    Mingyur Rinpoche has spent his life immersed in meditation practice — beginning a three-year retreat at 13, and eventually logging more than 50,000 hours of formal training. He was also a central participant in some of the earliest research Richie conducted on advanced meditators, work that helped open the door to much of the scientific exploration of meditation that followed. Yet despite this extraordinary background, the way he teaches is remarkably simple and down-to-earth. In this week’s Dharma Lab conversation, we look at one of the biggest misconceptions people bring to meditation: that it should feel calm or peaceful, and that difficulty means something is going wrong. Episode Highlights * Why early meditation often feels harder — and why that’s actually progress * The monsoon river: a powerful metaphor for understanding the mind * The “road to Lhasa”: how ups and downs both deepen practice * What science shows about the first four weeks of meditation * Why even 4–5 minutes a day meaningfully changes the brain and body * How to stop fighting distractions and use them as support * Mingyur Rinpoche’s “anywhere, anytime” approach to awareness * How difficult emotions become some of the most transformative moments * A gentler, lighter, more playful way to practice A conversation filled with warmth Sitting with Mingyur Rinpoche always leaves us lighter. There is a quality of ease in the way he teaches — a reminder that meditation isn’t about achieving particular states, but about recognizing the awareness that’s present in every one of them. We’re grateful to share this conversation and hope it offers a moment of spaciousness in your week. Warmly, Cort + Richie REMINDER: Join us for our next Ask Me Anything live with Cort and Richie on Tuesday, December 16 @7pm Eastern Time. Please send us your questions in advance! Chapter List 00:00 – Learning from difficulty: Why “down moments” matter01:22 – Introducing Mingyur Rinpoche: A lifetime of meditation03:26 – Why Rinpoche inspires Dharma Lab04:15 – Setting intention: A short compassion micro-practice06:42 – “I’m bad at meditating”: The common misconception07:33 – Rinpoche: Meditation is easier than you think08:40 – The myth of “empty mind”09:34 – When practice feels worse before it feels better10:31 – The “waterfall experience” explained11:03 – Scientific data: Why anxiety rises in week one12:03 – How Richie measures this in studies13:00 – Even 4–5 minutes a day changes the brain14:09 – Biological markers & inflammation15:07 – Cort’s early struggles with practice15:31 – The monsoon river metaphor: clarity reveals the mind17:05 – Using everything as support for awareness18:25 – The road to Lhasa: Ups and downs in meditation20:01 – Why down periods help us grow21:20 – Two categories of meditation experience22:25 – How emotional difficulty becomes insight23:59 – Awareness shifts, not experience24:58 – States vs. traits in meditation26:03 – How awareness becomes more spontaneous over time26:18 – Practical tips for everyday practice27:06 – Rinpoche: How we learn from obstacles28:08 – Connecting with the “background of mind”29:10 – Richie: Bringing compassion into busy daily life30:59 – Cort: Using transitions as practice cues33:02 – Anytime, anywhere meditation34:23 – Final thoughts from Rinpoche34:44 – Closing gratitude This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit dharmalabco.substack.com/subscribe

    35 min
  4. DL Ep. 15: The False Promise of Desire - Our Addiction to a More Ideal Future

    2 DIC

    DL Ep. 15: The False Promise of Desire - Our Addiction to a More Ideal Future

    We spend so much of life chasing the next moment… and missing the one we’re in. This week on Dharma Lab, we dig into the neuroscience of wanting vs. liking, explore how to shift from chasing the next thing to savoring what’s here, and discuss how awe can show up in the smallest, most ordinary moments. Episode Highlights: A big part of the conversation centers on two quiet assumptions that shape so much of how we live. The first is the belief that chasing what we want will finally make us happy—that fulfilling our cravings will give us the contentment we’re seeking. But both research and experience show something different: craving mostly fuels more craving, not more enjoyment. The second is a more subtle fear—that if we stop chasing, we’ll miss out on something essential. We worry we’ll lose momentum, fall behind, or miss our chance at a better, safer, more successful future. That fear keeps us leaning toward the next moment instead of inhabiting the one we’re actually in. From there, we explore what does work: orienting toward liking, savoring, and appreciation. And we talk about how awe doesn’t require redwoods or mountaintops—it’s available in the smallest, most ordinary moments when we shift our attention. A slow email sync on a plane becomes a moment of wonder. Leaves on the ground become a doorway to gratitude. Even difficult interactions reveal something unexpectedly human when viewed with fresh eyes. We’d love to hear from you. What’s one small moment of everyday awe you noticed recently—something ordinary that felt extraordinary when you paid attention? Share your reflections in the comments. Warmly, Cort + Richie Recent Posts: From the Archives: Podcast Chapter List 00:00 – Intro and The Addiction to the FutureWhy we chase the next moment and miss the one we’re in. 00:42 – Wanting vs. LikingA coffee moment sparks a discussion on craving, satisfaction, and the brain. 03:24 – The Neuroscience of RewardHow wanting and liking diverge—and why more craving often means less joy. 05:54 – Craving, Dissatisfaction, and the Buddhist LensTeachings on why craving leads away from happiness, not toward it. 10:11 – Living for the Next VacationHow expectations shape dissatisfaction and reset our baseline. 11:28 – Savoring What’s HereOrienting the mind toward what nourishes us in the present moment. 12:48 – Awe in Everyday LifeHow awe isn’t limited to nature—it’s available in ordinary moments. 13:56 – Awe on an AirplaneA slow Wi-Fi connection turns into a moment of wonder. 16:08 – The Dalai Lama’s “Happiest Moment”A story about presence, abundance, and contentment. 17:21 – When Slowing Down Feels RiskyExploring the instinctive fear that if we stop chasing, we’ll miss out or lose what we need. 18:35 – Introducing These Skills EarlyWhy learning to savor early in life can reshape development. 19:02 – Daily Rituals of AppreciationRichie shares the practices that ground his sense of abundance. 21:00 – Finding Wholesomeness in DifficultyHow perspective can shift even in moments of stress or conflict. 22:14 – Expressing Appreciation Out LoudA simple practice that spreads connection and belonging. 23:29 – Flourishing Is ContagiousHow small acts of appreciation ripple outward. 23:40 – Closing ReflectionsSavoring, contentment, and breaking the cycle of craving. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit dharmalabco.substack.com/subscribe

    25 min
  5. DL Ep. 14: The Neuroscience of Service

    25 NOV

    DL Ep. 14: The Neuroscience of Service

    In this week’s Dharma Lab conversation, we’ll dive into the science and contemplative wisdom behind generosity, purpose, and everyday altruism. How Serving Others Nourishes Us There are moments in life that quietly change everything. For both of us, one of those moments was realizing that meditation was never just about us. At first, practice was personal, a way to calm the mind, relieve stress, and find clarity. But over time, something shifted. We began to see practice less as self-improvement and more as a path of service, a way of showing up for others, not only ourselves. As it turns out, both ancient contemplative traditions and modern science point toward the same insight: service does not just help the world, it nourishes us too. The more we orient our lives toward helping others, the more energizing, meaningful, and joyful our own lives become. What the Research Shows There is now a rich scientific literature on volunteering and altruism. One influential series of studies from Johns Hopkins followed older adults in Baltimore who volunteered in local public schools. They helped children read, served lunch, and supervised the playground. They climbed stairs in buildings with no elevators. What began as a community program became a scientific window into the effects of service. After months of volunteering, participants showed improvements in cognitive functions that usually decline with age. Brain scans revealed positive changes in the prefrontal cortex, the brain’s executive network responsible for planning, focus, and emotional regulation. Other research on purpose shows similar patterns. People with a strong sense of purpose tend to report greater well-being and live longer. Purpose may be one of the most well-established predictors of longevity we have. Why Helping Others Feels Good From a neuroscience perspective, generosity and compassion activate the brain’s reward circuitry. When people behave generously in laboratory studies, the neural reward network lights up more strongly than when they receive something for themselves. This matches our own lived experience. When we help someone, whether through mentoring, supporting a friend, or recording this podcast, it feels deeply energizing. At the end of the day, we often feel more alive rather than depleted. It challenges the common assumption that happiness comes from getting more for ourselves. The evidence suggests something different: when we turn toward the well-being of others, happiness tends to arise naturally. The Inner Practice of Service In the contemplative traditions, this motivation is called bodhicitta, the heart of awakening. It begins with intention rather than action. Even a brief pause to remember our motivation can change the emotional tone of an entire day. You can practice it in a few seconds with a simple thought: “May this be of benefit to others.” This inner shift recruits networks related to focus and intentionality while activating reward circuits that leave us feeling open and uplifted. We both use this practice constantly: * Before recording. * Before meditation. * Before meetings. * Even before exercise. A short moment of remembering can reshape the entire experience. Service as an Everyday Practice We often think service requires ideal conditions, free time, or a perfectly designed opportunity. But the science and the contemplative traditions both show that service can happen in ordinary life. You can bring this mindset into washing dishes, walking through an airport, or talking to a child. It is the orientation of the mind that matters more than the setting. Research shows that when people reflect regularly on altruistic intentions, they are more likely to offer spontaneous acts of kindness in daily situations, such as giving up a seat to someone who needs it. A Shift the World Needs We’re all carrying a lot these days, and it’s easy to pull inward. But when we turn even slightly toward someone else’s wellbeing, something softens and the day feels a little lighter. Service doesn’t have to be dramatic. Most of the time it’s a small gesture, a quiet intention, or a moment of paying attention. Yet these moments accumulate. They change how we move through the world and how we feel inside. We would love to hear from you.What’s one small act of service or generosity that shaped your life this year? With gratitude, Cort & Richie Podcast Chapter List: 00:00 – Why Generosity Activates the Reward Network 00:48 – Cort Shares Two Turning Points in His Practice 02:31 – Realizing Meditation Is About Serving Others 03:59 – Richie on the Dalai Lama and the Shift Toward Service 05:37 – Ego, Career, and the Gradual Move to Altruism 07:06 – How Being Helpful Feeds Our Sense of Meaning 09:14 – The Buddhist View: Self-Focus vs. Service 10:04 – What Volunteering Research Shows About Well-Being 11:12 – Purpose, Aging, and Longevity 12:44 – The Baltimore “Experience Corps” Study 14:15 – Unexpected Benefits: Purpose, Movement, Structure 15:19 – Changes in Cognition and the Brain (Executive Network) 17:07 – Why These Findings Matter 17:38 – The Buddhist Perspective: Motivation Comes First 18:52 – Micro-Practices: Bringing Altruism Into Daily Life 20:07 – Bodhicitta: Vast Aspiration + Practical Action 22:02 – Why This Inner Shift Feels So Nourishing 24:36 – Does Altruism Activate the Reward Network? 25:57 – Generosity vs. Personal Gain: What the Brain Shows 27:17 – Cort’s Personal Aspiration Practice 29:47 – How Altruistic Mindsets Change Your Day 30:53 – Richie’s Morning Calendar Practice 31:24 – “Contemplative Aerobics”: Service While Exercising 33:03 – How Altruistic Mindsets Change Social Behavior 34:13 – The Science of Small Everyday Acts of Service 35:05 – Volunteering as a State of Mind, Not Just an Activity 35:50 – Final Reflections: A Shift in View That Changes Everything 36:31 – Why the World Needs More Altruism Right No This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit dharmalabco.substack.com/subscribe

    37 min
  6. DL Ep. 13: The Neuroscience of Being - Turning Anxiety into Insight

    18 NOV

    DL Ep. 13: The Neuroscience of Being - Turning Anxiety into Insight

    What does it mean to simply be? In this episode of Dharma Lab, we explore the neuroscience and contemplative practice of being — that effortless, natural presence that can transform anxiety into insight and turn ordinary moments into gateways of creativity. Fresh from Richie’s trip to India and a meeting with His Holiness the Dalai Lama, we sit down for a free-flowing, unrehearsed conversation that bridges ancient meditation wisdom and cutting-edge brain science. Together, we explore: * The difference between doing and being — and why it’s not either/or * How effortlessness, presence, and naturalness create inner freedom * What happens in the brain when the prefrontal cortex “goes offline” * Why even short daily meditations can change brain structure * How releasing control and predictive loops unlocks creativity * Practical ways to drop into being throughout your day Discussion Highlights The continuum of being and doing:Being and doing aren’t opposites. We move along a spectrum — moments of effort give way to moments of openness. Meditation helps us recognize and expand those natural gaps. Effortlessness and the brain:When the mind lets go of control, the prefrontal cortex — the “executive” part of the brain — briefly goes offline. Advanced meditators show this pattern: they shift attention effortlessly, without strain or mental effort. Creativity through presence:True creativity arises not from trying harder, but from relaxing the constraints of thought. As Richie notes, “When we stop directing our thoughts, the mind becomes more flexible — and novel insights can emerge.” The modern predicament of too much information:We look at how our minds are flooded with information from the moment we wake up. Just as too much food overwhelms the body, too much information overwhelms the mind. True rest requires more than physical stillness. It asks for mental space, time without constant input from phones, news, or endless tasks. Finding that space to simply be gives our minds room to digest and renew. Three Ingredients of Being: Effortlessness, Presence, and Naturalness * Effortlessness: releasing mental control so the mind can rest naturally. * Presence: staying aware without suppressing thoughts. * Naturalness: allowing experience to unfold without interference. When these come together, they create the conditions for insight, creativity, and emotional healing. New research on structural brain changes from meditation:Even a few minutes of daily meditation can change the brain. Richie shares unpublished findings showing increased structural connectivity — literally new wiring — after just one month of brief practice. Practical wisdom:We share ways to weave being into everyday life: in the gaps between meetings, while waiting in line, or simply resting for a few seconds with eyes open.What we call micro-doses of being: simple, effortless pauses that reconnect us to awareness. We’d love to hear from you: * When do you find yourself shifting from doing to being? * How can you create small pauses in your day to let the mind rest? * What do you notice when you stop trying to manage your experience and simply let awareness be as it is? Share your reflections in the comments. Warmly, Cort & Richie Chapter List: 00:00 – Opening reflections: The art of effortless presence01:01 – Richie returns from India & meeting His Holiness the Dalai Lama01:50 – Introducing “the neuroscience of being”03:25 – What happens in the brain when we shift from doing to being?04:00 – Being vs. doing: a continuum, not opposites05:30 – Creativity and releasing mental constraints08:00 – Physical stillness vs. mental stillness10:00 – The modern predicament: information overload13:00 – The “information diet” and its effects on the mind14:10 – Three ingredients of being: effortlessness, presence, and naturalness15:20 – Effortlessness: letting go of control16:10 – What happens when the prefrontal cortex goes offline17:05 – Meditation expertise and the U-shaped curve20:00 – Novices, intermediates, and Olympians of meditation22:00 – Effortless attention and stable awareness23:20 – Training the quality of effortlessness24:50 – Presence: awareness without distraction26:00 – Thoughts are allowed – not suppressed27:00 – Creativity and novelty emerging from open awareness29:00 – The candle flame of insight metaphor30:00 – Brain network connectivity and meditation research33:00 – New Healthy Minds data: structural brain changes in one month35:00 – “It’s easier than you think” – why short practice still matters36:20 – The third element: naturalness or non-fabrication38:00 – Healing through allowing and non-interference39:00 – The brain as a prediction machine41:00 – Breaking predictive loops & spontaneous flexibility43:00 – Why research on “being” is still new43:20 – Practical ways to integrate being into daily life44:00 – Cort’s unplugging rituals and micro-pauses45:00 – Richie’s interstitial moments of awareness46:00 – The self-illuminating mind47:00 – The “bardo” or gap between activities49:00 – Don’t fill the gaps – the practice of pausing49:30 – Micro-doses of being throughout your day49:50 – Closing reflections and gratitude Ref notes: Explore the Healthy Minds program This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit dharmalabco.substack.com/subscribe

    50 min
  7. DL Ep.12: Dosage of Meditation

    5 NOV

    DL Ep.12: Dosage of Meditation

    Episode Highlights: 1. Small doses make a difference. Even a few mindful minutes a day can reshape the brain. Recent MRI research shows that short, consistent practice can lead to measurable structural changes in the brain in just four weeks. 2. Consistency matters more than duration. Across studies from 2003 to today, longer sessions didn’t necessarily lead to better outcomes. What really counts is showing up — the rhythm of practice, not the clock. 3. “Short times, many times.” Ancient manuals never mention minutes or hours. They emphasize moments of awareness scattered through daily life: a breath before speaking, a feeling of compassion, a few conscious steps. 4. End on a good note. Don’t push through fatigue. When your practice feels alive or clear, stop there. Ending while it feels good builds a natural desire to return. 5. Begin and end with aspiration. A simple intention — “May this be of benefit to others” — frames the mind in a positive way. Ending with that same wish creates a lasting imprint, consistent with psychologist Daniel Kahneman’s “peak-end rule.” 6. Friendship over force. Meditation isn’t about grinding it out. As Richie puts it, “Make friends with your mind. Don’t treat it as something to struggle against.” 7. The most important practice is the one you’ll actually do. It doesn’t require perfect silence or long retreats — just the willingness to pause and come home to awareness, again and again. We’d love to hear from you:How much meditation feels “enough” for you?What helps you stay consistent, and what does friendship with your own mind look like in daily life? Share your reflections in the comments. Warmly, Cort & Richie Chapter List: 0:00 – Intro: What is the “dosage” of meditation?1:00 – The myth of ideal conditions for practice3:00 – Richie on early research: the 2003 immune system study6:00 – What the science shows about minutes vs. outcomes9:00 – App-based meditation and real-world data11:00 – Does practicing longer make a difference? Not necessarily13:00 – “Momentary assessments” — why timing of measurement matters14:00 – New research: brain changes after short daily practice16:00 – How meditation reshapes the prefrontal cortex and default mode network19:00 – Classical wisdom: no mention of minutes, only “short times, many times”21:00 – The importance of ending on a good note23:00 – Making friends with your mind instead of forcing it25:00 – Beginning and ending with aspiration28:00 – Danny Kahneman’s peak-end rule and meditation30:00 – Why intention and inspiration matter more than duration32:00 – Richie on how his personal practice evolved35:00 – Meditation in everyday life — airports, flights, and love meditations36:30 – What really matters: motivation, kindness, and consistency37:30 – Closing reflections and takeaways Reference notes: * Explore the Healthy Minds Program app referenced in the discussion Recent Posts: In case you missed it, check out recent posts on the topic of Meditation Dosage and use of Meditation Apps here: From the Archives: Do you have topics you would like to see in future posts, suggestions for features, or areas of improvement? We would love to hear from you HERE! This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit dharmalabco.substack.com/subscribe

    38 min

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Modern neuroscience meets ancient contemplative wisdom, with Dr. Richard Davidson and Dr. Cortland Dahl dharmalabco.substack.com

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