Nervous System Revolution For Artists

Ruby Rose Fox

 🎧 Tune into "MuscleMusic: Nervous System Revolution For Artists," a groundbreaking podcast where art meets science in an unprecedented way! Are you an artist looking to revolutionize your creative process? Do you want to explore the fascinating interplay between your nervous system and artistic expression? Then this is the podcast for you! Each episode of "MuscleMusic" delves deep into the untapped potential of the human body and mind, exploring how the nervous system can dramatically influence and enhance artistic creativity. We bring in experts from various fields - neuroscientists, seasoned artists, physiologists, and even psychologists - to offer insights and practical tips on harnessing this power. Whether you're a painter, musician, writer, or any form of artist, "MuscleMusic: Nervous System Revolution For Artists" offers you a unique opportunity to transform your artistic abilities and approach your craft from an entirely new perspective. Don't miss out on the chance to be part of this exciting journey where art and science converge! Subscribe now, and let's embark on this extraordinary journey together! #MuscleMusicPodcast #ArtMeetsScience #CreativeRevolution 🎨🧬🎶

  1. Jun 1

    The Dopamine Game

    In this episode, Ruby Rose Fox explores one of the most misunderstood forces in the artistic life: dopamine. Most people think dopamine is the pleasure molecule. It isn't. Dopamine is the seeking molecule. It is the neurochemical that gets us out of bed, drives us toward goals, fuels creativity, and convinces us to chase squirrels, songs, stages, lovers, audiences, and dreams.  For artists, this distinction changes everything. The same chemical that helps us write an album, audition for a role, launch a business, or prepare for a performance is also responsible for the crushing disappointment that often follows success. The post-show blues. The post-release crash. The strange emptiness after achieving something we've wanted for years. These experiences are not evidence that we failed. They are often evidence that dopamine is doing exactly what it evolved to do.  Ruby explores how dopamine intersects with nervous system regulation and why dopamine lows can often be mistaken for freeze states. Artists frequently assume that exhaustion, brain fog, self-doubt, and lack of motivation are signs of trauma activation when they may actually be experiencing a dopamine dip after intense excitement, novelty, or achievement. Understanding the difference is crucial because the solutions are entirely different.  Drawing on the work of Anna Lembke, the episode examines how modern life overwhelms the dopamine system through technology, sugar, social media, constant stimulation, and the endless pursuit of novelty. Artists are particularly vulnerable because their careers naturally expose them to extreme highs and lows. A standing ovation, a successful show, a viral post, or a major opportunity can create dramatic shifts in brain chemistry that require intentional recovery.  The conversation also explores addiction through the lens of the famous Rat Park experiments conducted by Bruce Alexander, suggesting that healthy environments, meaningful relationships, and social connection are among the strongest protections against dopamine-driven compulsions. Addiction is framed not simply as exposure to substances, but as a narrowing of life's sources of pleasure and meaning.  A central theme of the episode is the relationship between pleasure and pain. Ruby explains the "dopamine seesaw," where every significant pleasure creates a corresponding pain response designed to maintain equilibrium. The more intensely we pursue stimulation, the stronger the rebound effect can become. Understanding this process allows artists to stop interpreting normal post-performance crashes as personal failures and instead recognize them as biological realities.  The episode then introduces practical tools for working with dopamine rather than fighting it. These include:  Blue Resting and "Shmoo Days"  Dopamine fasting and self-binding  Embracing boredom  Walking without stimulation  Meditation  Limiting social media after performances  Strategic recovery periods following major artistic events Ruby also explores hormesis, the science of beneficial stress. Practices such as cold exposure, sauna use, exercise, and fasting are discussed as ways of intentionally engaging the pain side of the dopamine seesaw to restore balance, resilience, and motivation. Rather than chasing more pleasure, artists may often need healthy doses of challenge and discomfort.  Finally, the episode concludes with an unexpected tool: radical honesty. Truth-telling is presented not merely as an ethical choice but as a nervous system intervention. Honest relationships, honest performances, and honest self-reflection may be among the most powerful ways to stabilize the brain and reconnect with what matters. For performers especially, authenticity becomes both an artistic principle and a biological strategy.  Core Takeaway: Artists are not broken when they crash after success. They are often experiencing the natural consequences of a dopamine system doing exactly what it evolved to do. Mastery comes not from eliminating dopamine highs and lows, but from understanding them, recovering from them skillfully, and building a life where creativity is supported by regulation rather than driven by addiction.  Support the show https://www.muscle-music.com/

    24 min
  2. May 29

    Can We Talk About Power (Free Course Lecture)

    Podcast Episode Summary: Power, Artistry, and Nervous System Leadership In this episode, Ruby explores one of the most emotionally charged and misunderstood topics in the arts: power. Drawing from psychology, nervous system science, sociology, and the realities of creative life, she challenges the common belief that power is inherently corrupt or somehow incompatible with artistry.  Instead, power is revealed as something relational, fluid, and unavoidable. It exists in every rehearsal, collaboration, friendship, contract negotiation, audience interaction, and even in the conversations we have with ourselves. Artists often reject power out of fear of becoming selfish, controlling, or "selling out," but avoiding power doesn't eliminate it. It simply hands it to someone else.  The episode explores research showing that power doesn't automatically make people better or worse. Like adrenaline, it amplifies what is already present. This raises an important question for artists: if power eventually comes your way, what values and nervous system habits will guide how you use it?  Ruby distinguishes power from status, authority, confidence, and fame. Power is not something you possess permanently. It exists between people and changes according to context, relationships, trust, and mutual need. Through examples from performance, leadership, biology, and even a flock of ducks crossing a river, she illustrates how healthy hierarchies and benevolent leadership can help groups thrive.  Most importantly, the episode introduces the concept of nervous system leadership: the ability to regulate, connect, adapt, and help others find stability without domination or force. True power is not about controlling people. It is about creating trust, meaning, resonance, and movement toward a shared goal. For artists, this means using their voice, presence, and creativity not merely to gain influence, but to help others feel seen, connected, and more fully alive.  Ultimately, this episode argues that power is neither a crown nor a possession. It is a living relationship. When artists learn to engage with it consciously, they stop shrinking from leadership and begin shaping culture with integrity, courage, and connection Support the show https://www.muscle-music.com/

    32 min
  3. May 26

    Your Superplay State Is an Oculus (Free Audiobook Chapter)

    Podcast Summary: Superplay Free Chapter “Your Instrument Is You” In this free chapter of , introduces one of the core ideas behind the Fox Method: Your nervous system is not separate from your art.  It is the instrument through which all art moves. Using the evolution of phones as a metaphor, Ruby explains how human nervous system states evolved over time, from ancient survival responses to the uniquely human ability to imagine, roleplay, and create through what she calls “Superplay.”  A rotary phone becomes a metaphor for freeze and preservation mode: slow, ancient biological technology designed for survival, not complex modern creative demands. Mobile phones represent fight and flight responses, while smartphones symbolize connection, play, collaboration, and social engagement. Finally, Superplay is introduced as the newest “technology” of the human nervous system: the ability to imaginatively become other selves through art, storytelling, theater, music, and performance.  The chapter explores why artists often shame themselves for struggling creatively when, biologically, they may simply be operating from older survival states. Rather than seeing dysregulation as failure, Ruby reframes it as outdated nervous system technology attempting to solve modern problems.  A major insight of the episode is that healing and artistic freedom cannot happen through shame or bypassing. Humans regulate and dysregulate in predictable evolutionary sequences, like nesting dolls. Someone coming out of freeze cannot jump immediately into full safety and creativity. They must move through activation first. This becomes essential knowledge for performers, teachers, and anyone working with artists.  At its heart, this chapter is both compassionate and radical:  Artists are not broken.  They are often trying to create with nervous systems stuck in survival technology that was never designed for modern visibility, performance, or creative risk. And the goal is not to destroy the older parts of ourselves, but to understand them, respect them, and learn how to guide ourselves toward greater flexibility, connection, imagination, and freedom. Support the show https://www.muscle-music.com/

    12 min
5
out of 5
8 Ratings

About

 🎧 Tune into "MuscleMusic: Nervous System Revolution For Artists," a groundbreaking podcast where art meets science in an unprecedented way! Are you an artist looking to revolutionize your creative process? Do you want to explore the fascinating interplay between your nervous system and artistic expression? Then this is the podcast for you! Each episode of "MuscleMusic" delves deep into the untapped potential of the human body and mind, exploring how the nervous system can dramatically influence and enhance artistic creativity. We bring in experts from various fields - neuroscientists, seasoned artists, physiologists, and even psychologists - to offer insights and practical tips on harnessing this power. Whether you're a painter, musician, writer, or any form of artist, "MuscleMusic: Nervous System Revolution For Artists" offers you a unique opportunity to transform your artistic abilities and approach your craft from an entirely new perspective. Don't miss out on the chance to be part of this exciting journey where art and science converge! Subscribe now, and let's embark on this extraordinary journey together! #MuscleMusicPodcast #ArtMeetsScience #CreativeRevolution 🎨🧬🎶

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