Archivo de la etiqueta: Motivation

No energy to get out of bed?

You wake up one day and are unable to get up. You try to force yourself to work and be productive, but your body is heavy. Something inside drains your energy. Your mind wants to move, but you just can’t force yourself to do it anymore. You have the strange desire to simply lie down and withdraw from the world. This is not laziness. This is not weakness. This is the soul’s way of redirecting you toward a more honest, authentic path.

I admit that this happened to me these holidays. Then, in a serendipituous way, I found this intriguing speech by Alan Watts, and it has opened an interesting journey of introspection and reflection about my own priorities, motivations and goals in life.

If it has also happened to you (or even better before it happens), I invite you to explore the hidden meaning behind that heaviness — why your energy suddenly disappears, why your soul refuses to move in certain directions, and what life is trying to show you when you can no longer push yourself the way you used to. Or if you know someone in this situation, share this post.

This video may help you discover why exhaustion can become the beginning of clarity, how silence reveals truths movement hides, and why stillness is often the moment your soul starts speaking the loudest. If you’ve been feeling lost, overwhelmed, or unable to rise, listen closely. Your tiredness carries meaning. Your stillness is trying to guide you home.

You may also find inspiration in past posts:

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¿Baja energía tras las vacaciones… y el resto del año? Tal vez tengas una «depresión altamente funcional».

Understand and manage your dopamine and motivation

Los 5 motivos principales por los que los empleados solicitan apoyo emocional (y 5 ideas extra para mejorar tu bienestar)

¿Podrías vivir todo el año de vacaciones? 7 estrategias factibles con ejemplos reales

Un poco de humor para una sociedad desganada y desilusionada

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Serotonin vs. Dopamine – 7 Key Differences Between Pleasure and Happiness

We often say that we want happiness, but in fact we pursue pleasure. Dr. Robert Lustig author of «The Hacking of the American Mind: The Science Behind the Corporate Takeover of Our Bodies and Brains» explains pleasure and happiness and discusses the basic brain mechanisms behind various addictive products that are hacking our reward centers.

Expect to learn:

  • What are the 7 differences between pleasure and happiness?
  • Why is it that the more pleasure you seek, the more unhappy you get?
  • How do adictions develop?
  • What do serotonin, cortisol and dopamine have to do with all that?
  • How does it impact our motivation and well-being?
  • What is the difference between depression and burn-out and what can you do to overcome them?

7 differences between dopamine (pleasure) and serotonin (happiness):

  • 1. Pleasure is short term like a meal, happiness is long term like a lifetime.
  • 2. Pleasure is visceral you feel it in your body, Happiness is ethereal you feel it above the neck.
  • 3. Pleasure is taking, like from the casino, happiness is giving like habitat for humanity.
  • 4. Pleasure is achieved alone like eating a chocolate cake, Happiness is achieved in social group like in birthday party.
  • 5. Pleasure is achievable with substances like cocaine, heroine, nicotine, alcohol, sugar, some addictive behaviors. happiness is not achievable with substances.
  • 6. The extremes of pleasure, weather it being substances (cocaine) or behaviors like shopping, gambling, social media, internet, gaming, pornography, foody. In the extreme are addictive. There’s holic after every one of those things shopaholic, alcoholic, sexaholic, chocoholic etc but there’s no such thing as being addictive to too much happiness.
  • 7. Pleasure is dopamine and happiness is serotonins. Two different neurotransmitter, areas of the brain, regulatory pathways, mechanism of actions, drivers. Dopamine is an excitatory neurotransmitter. Neurons like to be excited and tickled but they don’t like to be bludgeoned.
  • Chronic overstimulation of any neuron in the body leads to neuronal cell death. Because neurons are so metabolically active so If you keep it up and keep it up that neurons is basically exhaust and die. Even tho you have lots of dopamine molecules you have fewer receptor which means there’s less chance that any molecules will finds the receptor. What that means in human terms is you need more and more to get less and less. That’s the phenomenon we call it tolerance. Dopamine leads to tolerance. And then when those neurons do starts to die that’s called addiction.
  • Serotonin is other neurotransmitter it’s inhibitory. There’s no such things as overdosing on too much happiness but there’s one thing that downregulates a serotonin that’s dopamine. So the more pleasure you seek the more unhappy you get. So Coca Cola does not give you happiness it gives you pleasure. So don’t chase pleasure (dopamine) it will make you unhappier (less serotonine).

For the full podcast episode, visit: https://www.fitmind.com/podcast.

If you want to know more:

¿Drogas, videojuegos y trabajo? Neurociencia y claves prácticas para la motivación y el desempeño.

Understand and manage your dopamine and motivation

¿Tus pantallas absorben tu atención y tiempo? ¿O los de tus hijos?

The Science of Setting & Achieving Goals

Understand and manage your dopamine and motivation

Andrew Huberman, a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine, gives a masterclass on dopamine and motivation. He discusses dopamine’s role in motivation, desire, craving, satisfaction, and well-being, as well as its connection to addiction. It is a long and detailed lecture, but well explained and very useful for those of us who sometimes struggle with motivation.

A few interesting questions:

  • What if you could control your motivation and focus simply by understanding a single molecule in your brain?
  • Have you ever wondered why some activities feel incredibly rewarding, while others leave you feeling flat, and how this relates to your brain’s reward system?
  • How do sex, chocolate, sport or drugs affect dopamine and motivation?
  • Could the way you pursue goals actually be depleting your future drive, and what can you do to ensure sustained energy and satisfaction?

Key topics covered in the discussion include:

  • Understanding Dopamine Huberman aims to clarify what dopamine is and isn’t, dispelling common myths about «dopamine hits» and explaining how the molecule actually functions [00:55].
  • Dopamine Biology and Psychology The discussion delves into the biology and psychology of dopamine, including neural circuits and «dopamine schedules» [01:12]. He explains how various substances and behaviors, such as food, drugs, caffeine, and even cold water exposure, can alter baseline dopamine levels and impact future experiences [01:26, 02:13:17].
  • Tonic and Phasic Dopamine Release Huberman explains the concepts of tonic (baseline) and phasic (peak) dopamine release, emphasizing that baseline dopamine levels are crucial for overall mood and motivation [10:06].
  • Dopamine Pathways He details two main dopamine pathways:
    • Mesocorticolimbic Pathway This pathway, involving the ventral tegmentum, ventral striatum, and prefrontal cortex, is central to motivation, drive, and craving, and is often disrupted in addictions [16:09].
    • Nigrostriatal Pathway Originating in the substantia nigra and connecting to the dorsal striatum, this pathway is involved in movement and habit formation [17:02].
  • Synaptic Transmission Huberman provides a basic explanation of how neurons communicate via synapses, where nerve cells release «packets» of neurotransmitters like dopamine to activate or inhibit other nerve cells [18:23].
  • Leveraging Dopamine The video aims to provide tools and understanding to help viewers leverage their dopamine system to sustain energy, drive, and motivation over long periods [01:54]. Huberman stresses that dopamine pathways are largely under individual control, with current dopamine levels influencing future ones [02:13:40].

You may also like past posts:

¿Drogas, videojuegos y trabajo? Neurociencia y claves prácticas para la motivación y el desempeño.

Do you want to have a happy life? Learn from the most expert happiness scientist.

The science of peak human performance and motivation – Interview with Andrew Huberman

Los secretos de la motivación en el trabajo por fin revelados

Cómo recuperar la motivación cuando las cosas van mal

La importancia de los incentivos, y cómo el 99% de la gente (incluidos los directivos) no los entiende

¿Cómo salir de la depresión?

¿Baja energía tras las vacaciones… y el resto del año? Tal vez tengas una «depresión altamente funcional».

Un poco de humor para una sociedad desganada y desilusionada

Europa lidera la renuncia silenciosa: los trabajadores están desencantados con su empresa y trabajan lo mínimo en vez de dejarla