The Science of Self-Help

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Monthly Musings November 2021

In this column I share articles, books, research, and thoughts related to the science of self-help, along with experiments and random rabbit holes I’ve gone down across the previous month.

This month I was happy to be invited as a guest on another podcast with Nate Sleger (linked below) on becoming a morning person. I visited Lydia’s family in New Mexico for a family reunion and Thanksgiving. I also had significant issues with depression. 

One day when I was driving around in a massive depressive pit, I realized how much music was affecting me. I thought about how hard it was to make decisions in this state, and it struck me how similar all of it was to low willpower. Wouldn’t be interesting if depression worked in similar ways?

In a previous article, I talked about how there are things that are actually optimized in low willpower states. Certain psychological primes have a higher uptake and impact, which might explain how music might affect me more when I’m depressed. Does depression improve creativity like tiredness? Is it every OPTIMAL to be depressed? And can we take advantage of it rather than just fight against it?

I’ve also completely switched to a seated desk, and am loving Mark Sisson’s concept of archetypical rest postures (linked below). While normal seated has been recently vilified, Sisson believes that sitting on the ground has even more benefits that standing desks because you naturally switch between a number of hip opening, gravity enhanced, passive stretches for longer times. For him, it might even negate the need to mobilize at all (though I’m not sure if I fully agree with him on this).

Interesting Stuff

Research

Social

Miscellaneous and Esoteric

If you’ve got any interesting links, books, comments, or suggestions, shoot me an email at scienceofselfhelp (at) gmail.com. I’d love to hear from you!