The Positive Pod: Your Weekly Fifteen Minutes of Positivity

Mike Walsh

This incompetently hosted and badly edited (Hey, it's the same guy...and good help is hard to find!) weekly show will explore the positive in our world.   We'll look at new science-based tips on improving our lived experience and we'll have interviews with inspiring and positive folks.  Learn about the science behind positivity and some of the "why's" behind the "what's".  The positive side of life with a scientific spin!  Join us each week for the Positive Pod and Get Some Good in Your Life! Written, Hosted and Produced by: Michael J. Walsh, Ph.D, LPC, CRC Art Direction: Maxie Walsh Final Approvals: Lacey and Sully Walsh

Episodes

  1. 08/21/2020

    Learn More - Work Less: Using Neuroscience to Learn More Efficiently

    Ever been in a spot where you have to learn new information, but ya just can't seem to retain it?  Do you learn new things all of the time, but you're looking for ways to more efficiently and effectively recall that info?  Maybe you teach and you want to pick up some tips to give to students.  The good news is that, by using a little Adult Learning Theory and a dash of the latest neuroscience, you can build a way of learning that maximizes what you understand and what you remember.  Tune into this episode of the Positive Pod as we explore how to boost your learning when you just gotta get it done! This week's episode's References: Garthe, A., Roeder, I., & Kempermann, G. (2016). Mice in an enriched environment learn more flexibly because of adult hippocampal neurogenesis. Hippocampus, 26(2) 261-171. Knowles, M. (1988). The modern practice of adult education: From pedagogy to andragogy. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Cambridge. Taylor, K. & Marienau, C. (2016). Facilitating learning with the adult brain in mind. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass. Yuan, Z., Wang, M., Yan, B., Gu, P., Jiang, X., Yang, X. & Cui, D. (2012). An enriched environment improves cognitive performance in mice from the senescence-accelerated prone mouse 8 strain: Role of upregulated neurotrophic factor expression in the hippocampus. Neural Regeneration Research, 7(23), 1797-1804. Check out Allison Friderichs's excellent article on these ideas here:  https://unbound.upcea.edu/innovation/contemporary-learners/how-the-adult-brain-learns-the-importance-of-creating-enriched-environments-when-teaching/

    12 min
  2. 05/08/2020

    What Does Positive Thinking Really Look Like?...In about Ten Minutes a Day

    Have you ever heard about Positive Thinking or Positive Psychology and thought "Sure, but what does that really look like?"  Or "How could I even use that in a way that makes sense for me?"  If you have, or if you've ever wondered if there is an evidence-based way to make positive thinking work for you, this is the episode for you.  In this episode we explore one way, taking just ten minutes per day, that you can employ the principles of Positive Psychology outlined by Martin Seligmann in his latest book, Flourish.  We'll look at the structure of a Randomized, Placebo-Controlled study that found significant evidence that folks who intentionally paid attention to, and wrote about, the principles of Pleasure, Engagement, Positive Relationships, Meaning and Accomplishment (PERMA) for just ten minutes each night reported higher happiness scores and much lower rates of depression.  Best of all, we can do this ourselves with a pen, a notebook and just ten minutes each night.  Want to learn more?  Tune in! Want to read more about the theory and science?  See below: Original research article: Gander, F., Proyer, R., & Ruch, W. (2016) Positive Psychology Interventions Addressing Pleasure, Engagement, Meaning, Positive Relationships, and Accomplishment Increase Well-Being and Ameliorate Depressive Symptoms: A Randomized, Placebo-Controlled Online Study. Frontiers in Psychology, 7, 2016, Article: 686  Retrieved from:  https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00686 More on Seligman's Positive Psychology: Seligman, M. (2011).  Flourish: A visionary new understanding of Happiness and Well-being.  New York, Atria Paperback.

    11 min
  3. 04/24/2020

    Encouragement Vs. Praise: Using Encouragement to Build Better Relationships

    We hear a good deal about the importance of building good relationships.  We also hear about the importance of identity development.  What if there were a way to encourage those around you while helping them to build their own esteem without using praise all of the time?  What if you could strengthen your own social and support network by learning to use the skills of encouragement?  Years worth of research into child development, human motivation and human behavior might have some hidden gems for us!  Tune in this week as we look at the ways we can use what we know about identity development and encouragement to strengthen and reinforce the world around us. In this episode, we'll look at three different sources.  The first piece is an interview with Carol Dweck, a phenomenal author and researcher perhaps best known for her work into the Growth Mindset.  Two are academic articles; both from the Child Development literature.   Here are the pieces that we're pulling from today: Anderson, J. (2016, January 12). Interview with Carol Dweck-Stanford Professor Who Pioneered Praising Kids for Effort Says We've Totally Missed The Point.  Retrieved from: https://qz.com/587811/stanford-professor-who-pioneered-praising-effort-sees-false-praise-everywhere/ Bryan, C. J., Master, A., & Walton, G. M. (2014). “Helping” Versus “Being a Helper”: Invoking the Self to Increase Helping in Young Children. Child Development, 85(5), 1836–1842. https://doi-org.pallas2.tcl.sc.edu/10.1111/cdev.12244 Gunderson, E. A., Gripshover, S. J., Romero, C., Dweck, C. S., Goldin, M. S., & Levine, S. C. (2013). Parent Praise to 1- to 3-Year-Olds Predicts Children’s Motivational Frameworks 5 Years Later. Child Development, 84(5), 1526–1541. https://doi-org.pallas2.tcl.sc.edu/10.1111/cdev.12064

    17 min
  4. 04/16/2020

    What Positive Thinking Can Do for our Brain

    In this debut episode, we take a look at the ways in which Trait Optimism (thinking positively and having positive expectations about your world and your future) can actually enhance the areas of our brains known to help us deal with anxiety and, ultimately, become more resilient.  Turns out, that in as little as one session of learning to think positively, we can begin to have structural brain effects.  This has huge implications for our long term happiness!  It would appear that if we develop the habit of thinking positively, there is very good evidence that our brains will respond by developing in ways that will further reinforce our happiness and resilience.  How about that?!  By the way, this is our very first episode and it is hosted and edited by yours truly, so you'll know what I mean by: Good Help is hard to find!  So, please forgive any editing or atmosphere errors.  I am learning as I go and I am thinking positively that we'll get better and better as we go along:).  As an old boss of mine once said in response to my nervous questioning on whether he thought his restaurant was truly ready to open:  "Mike, sometimes, you just gotta (language edited for all audiences--you're welcome:) open."  In that spirit, here is our very first episode:  What Positive Thinking Can Do for our Brain. This article is based on original research done by: Dolcos, S., Hu, Y., Iordan, A. D., Moore, M., & Dolcos, F. (2016). Optimism and the brain: trait optimism mediates the protective role of the orbitofrontal cortex gray matter volume against anxiety. Social cognitive and affective neuroscience, 11(2), 263–271. https://doi.org/10.1093/scan/nsv106 Special Thanks to Maxie Walsh for the original artwork!!!

    10 min
4.9
out of 5
7 Ratings

About

This incompetently hosted and badly edited (Hey, it's the same guy...and good help is hard to find!) weekly show will explore the positive in our world.   We'll look at new science-based tips on improving our lived experience and we'll have interviews with inspiring and positive folks.  Learn about the science behind positivity and some of the "why's" behind the "what's".  The positive side of life with a scientific spin!  Join us each week for the Positive Pod and Get Some Good in Your Life! Written, Hosted and Produced by: Michael J. Walsh, Ph.D, LPC, CRC Art Direction: Maxie Walsh Final Approvals: Lacey and Sully Walsh

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