Next Door Neuro

Dr. Jamey Maniscalco

Everything you care about - how you show up at work, at home, and for yourself - depends on brain health. Next Door Neuro makes brain science approachable and actionable, helping you build small, sustainable habits that fuel your brain and fuel your life.

  1. Why Our Best Ideas Don't Happen at Our Desks | Lab Notes

    há 4 dias

    Why Our Best Ideas Don't Happen at Our Desks | Lab Notes

    Why do some of our best ideas happen in the shower?Or on a walk?Or during a drive?Or while we're doing something completely unrelated to the problem we're trying to solve? In this episode of Next Door Neuro - Lab Notes, I explore a fascinating creativity study from researchers at UC Santa Barbara that challenged a common assumption: When we're stuck, most of us instinctively try to work harder.We stay at our desks longer.Think more.Push harder. But what if that's exactly the wrong approach? In this study, participants worked on a creative problem-solving task and were then assigned to different groups.1. Some kept working.2. Some rested.3. Some completed a mentally demanding task.4. And one group completed a simple, low-demand task that allowed their minds to wander. Then all the groups went back to the creative problems they had been working on to start. The result? The mind-wandering group improved their creativity scores by roughly 40%. Not because they were consciously thinking harder about the problem. But because stepping away appeared to give the brain room to continue processing information in the background. In this episode, I explore:• The surprising findings from the study  • Why mind wandering may support creativity and insight  • What happens when we continuously fill every empty moment with stimulation  • How modern life may be reducing opportunities for our brains to do some of their best thinking  • A simple strategy for approaching difficult problems more effectively Importantly: This isn't an argument against podcasts, music, technology, entertainment, or any other kind of stimulation. It's a reminder that the brain may benefit from occasional periods of quiet. Because sometimes the most productive thing you can do isn't to keep pushing. It's to create enough space for your mind to wander. —Check out the full study here: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22941876/ Baird B, Smallwood J, Mrazek MD, Kam JW, Franklin MS, Schooler JW. Inspired by distraction: mind wandering facilitates creative incubation. Psychol Sci. 2012 Oct 1;23(10):1117-22. doi: 10.1177/0956797612446024. Epub 2012 Aug 31. PMID: 22941876.— Timestamps: 00:00 – We try harder when we're stuck01:00 – The creativity study02:52 – Mind wandering wins06:12 – We've lost the empty moments07:27 – The brain needs space08:04 – Step away

    9 min
  2. We Are Not Machines | Lab Notes

    29 de mai.

    We Are Not Machines | Lab Notes

    Why do so many of us feel like we're constantly falling behind?Why does slowing down feel uncomfortable?And why do we often judge ourselves for needing rest, recovery, or space? In this episode of Next Door Neuro - Lab Notes, I explore an idea that has been sticking with me since my conversation with productivity coach Emily Guerra: Many of us are treating ourselves like machines. And increasingly, modern life is training us to do exactly that. More hours.More output.More optimization.More efficiency.More productivity. But humans aren't factories, and brains don't work like industrial machines. Our attention fluctuates, our motivation shifts, our energy changes, our creativity ebbs and flows... and recovery following a period of output matters. In this episode, I explore:• Why modern culture increasingly equates productivity with value  • How hustle culture shapes our expectations of ourselves  • Why humans evolved in rhythms of effort and recovery  • How productivity slowly becomes identity  • Why many of us expect things from ourselves we'd never expect from another person  • And why thriving may require reconnecting with our biological rhythms Importantly, this isn't about lowering your standards... It's about recognizing that sustainable performance requires recovery. Because we are biological organisms, not industrial machines. — Timestamps: 01:30 – Modern life rewards output02:00 – Brains aren't factories02:35 – Humans function in rhythms03:23 – Productivity becomes identity03:48 – Expectations we'd never place on others04:20 – We are biological organisms

    5 min
  3. Why Rest Feels Wrong | Lab Notes

    27 de mai.

    Why Rest Feels Wrong | Lab Notes

    Why does slowing down sometimes feel uncomfortable… even when we know we need it?  Why do so many of us feel guilty resting? And why do moments that should feel restorative feel like we’re falling behind? In this episode of Next Door Neuro - Lab Notes, I explore something I’m still actively working on myself: I don’t rest well. Despite spending years studying neuroscience, stress, recovery, burnout, sleep, and performance… there is still a part of me that feels like slowing down means losing opportunities. And I know I’m not alone. Many of us grew up watching people we admired constantly work. We celebrate busyness, exhaustion, grinding... we say: “Hustle harder.”“I’ll sleep when I’m dead.” But increasingly, I wonder: what if many of us have been trained to associate rest with falling behind? In this episode, I explore:• Why guilt around rest is often social conditioning• How hustle culture shapes our beliefs about productivity and worth• Why humans evolved in natural cycles of effort and recovery• How recovery supports learning, creativity, emotional regulation, and sustainable performance• Why slowing down can feel uncomfortable, and why noticing that matters Importantly: this isn’t about doing less, it’s about learning how to recover better. Because recovery isn’t falling behind! Recovery supports thriving. — Timestamps: 01:51 – Rest guilt is conditioned02:06 – We celebrate exhaustion03:46 – Humans evolved in rhythms04:13 – Recovery supports performance05:27 – Recovery isn’t falling behind06:36 – Notice the guilt

    8 min
  4. Productivity Is Broken | Emily Guerra

    19 de mai.

    Productivity Is Broken | Emily Guerra

    What if the problem isn’t that we’re lazy, distracted, or undisciplined… …but that many of the ways we’ve been taught to work are fundamentally misaligned with how the brain actually functions? For a long time, productivity has meant:- Doing more.- Working longer.- Checking more boxes.- Pushing harder. And honestly, for much of college and graduate school, I wore overworking like a badge of honor. Minimal sleep.16-hour days.Constant stimulation.Always feeling like I should be doing more. But looking back at that time, I wasn't truly thriving. I struggled to rest.To think deeply.To feel present.To integrate what I was learning.And eventually, I realized that productivity and fulfillment are not the same thing. In this conversation, I sit down with productivity coach and founder of The Productivity Flow, Emily Guerra. And what I appreciate about Emily’s approach is that she doesn’t just talk about getting more done, she talks about redefining productivity entirely. We explore:• Why modern productivity culture increasingly treats humans like machines• How hustle culture has shaped our relationship with work• Why rest, stillness, movement, and recovery are essential for focus and creativity• How smartphones and constant stimulation impact dopamine, motivation, and attention• Why many of us increasingly outsource emotional regulation to technology• How small environmental changes can dramatically shift behavior• And how to build a more intentional and sustainable relationship with work, technology, and ourselves This conversation isn’t just about productivity. It’s about attention, energy, presence, meaning, and how we live well inside environments that constantly pull at our brains. ------------ About Emily Emily Guerra is a Productivity Life Coach, mindful productivity speaker, and founder of The Productivity Flow. Through coaching, workshops, and speaking, Emily helps people build more sustainable and intentional relationships with work, productivity, focus, and burnout prevention. Her work blends productivity, neuroscience, mindset, and emotional wellbeing - helping individuals move away from constant overwhelm and toward a more balanced, fulfilling, and effective way of living and working. Learn more: https://theproductivityflow.com/ Instagram: @theproductivityflow  LinkedIn: Emily Guerra

    1h 15min
  5. Why the Brain Pushes Back | Lab Notes

    14 de mai.

    Why the Brain Pushes Back | Lab Notes

    Why do the things we use to reduce stress, boredom, discomfort, or exhaustion so often end up creating more of those exact feelings over time? In this episode of Next Door Neuro - Lab Notes, I explore one of the most important principles in neuroscience and addiction: The brain creates the opposite of what you repeatedly use to change your emotional or physiological state. Using caffeine as a personal example, I unpack why the brain “pushes back,” how repeated relief and stimulation can slowly shift our baseline, and why this idea may help explain everything from addiction… to compulsive phone checking… to why boredom suddenly feels so uncomfortable. But importantly, this episode isn’t about fear or eliminating pleasure. It’s about understanding how the brain adapts, and using that knowledge to work with your brain rather than constantly fighting against it. In this episode, I explore: why the brain adapts and pushes backhow repeated behaviors slowly shape what feels normalwhy modern environments make emotional regulation harderpractical tools for interrupting automatic patternsrebuilding earned rewardtraining stillness againand how small repeated actions can create meaningful change over timeIf your brain fuels your life… what fuels your brain? ⸻ Timestamps:  00:00 – The caffeine realization 03:09 – The brain pushes back 03:58 – The brain learns from repetition 04:37 – We’re outsourcing emotional regulation 06:40 – Create moments of interruption 07:34 – Rebuild earned reward 08:58 – Train stillness again 09:46 – Small repeated changes matter

    10 min
  6. Modern Life Is Becoming More Addictive | Lab Notes

    12 de mai.

    Modern Life Is Becoming More Addictive | Lab Notes

    Why does addiction still feel like it’s getting worse… despite decades of neuroscience research, treatment programs, and greater awareness than ever before? In this episode of Next Door Neuro – Lab Notes, I explore one of the most important ideas from my recent conversation with neuroscientist and bestselling author Judy Grisel: Addiction isn’t getting worse because humans suddenly became weak. It's likely getting worse because the environment changed dramatically… while the brain stayed largely the same. And importantly, this conversation isn’t just about drugs anymore. It’s about modern life more broadly: SmartphonesSocial mediaUltra-processed foodGamblingPornographyEndless stimulationAnd constant access to quick relief, reward, and distraction.In this episode, I explore: Why modern life may be becoming increasingly addictive“Supernormal stimuli” and evolutionary mismatchWhy constant access changes behaviorWhy boredom feels increasingly uncomfortableEarlier exposure and adolescent brain developmentAnd the rise of behavioral addictions.If your brain fuels your life… what fuels your brain? ⸻ Timestamps: 00:00 – Why addiction still seems to be getting worse 02:10 – Modern life is becoming increasingly addictive 03:36 – How the brain learns from repetition 04:18 – The environment changed. The brain didn’t. 04:43 – Higher potency and hyper-stimulation 06:04 – Constant access and endless stimulation 07:53 – Earlier exposure and adolescent brains 09:10 – Addiction without substances

    13 min
  7. There's No Free Lunch for Your Brain | Lab Notes

    7 de mai.

    There's No Free Lunch for Your Brain | Lab Notes

    Why do the things we use to feel better so often end up making us feel worse over time? In this episode of Next Door Neuro – Lab Notes, I unpack one of the most powerful ideas from my recent conversation with neuroscientist and bestselling author Judy Grisel: The most important thing we can teach our kids about drugs may not actually be about drugs at all. It’s about understanding how the brain responds to fast-acting, artificial relief. Because increasingly, our modern world is built around instantly changing how we feel:- social media- pornography- gambling- ultra-processed food- endless stimulation- and increasingly potent substances And while legislation and parental oversight matter, I believe we may be underestimating the power of education - especially helping people understand how the brain adapts to repeated artificial relief over time. In this Lab Notes episode, I explore a framework I’ve found personally helpful: “There’s no free lunch for your brain.” The brain isn’t trying to make us happy all the time. It’s trying to keep us balanced. And because of that, the brain adapts to repeated highs, relief, stimulation, and escape - often creating more of the very state we were trying to avoid. If your brain fuels your life… what fuels your brain? Related conversation:Why Addiction Is Getting Worse | Judy Grisel Judy Grisel is a neuroscientist, professor, bestselling author of Never Enough, and a former addict who now studies addiction and the brain. In our full conversation, we explore addiction, dopamine, modern life, and why the brain adapts the way it does.

    9 min
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Sobre

Everything you care about - how you show up at work, at home, and for yourself - depends on brain health. Next Door Neuro makes brain science approachable and actionable, helping you build small, sustainable habits that fuel your brain and fuel your life.