Buddha’s Brain The Practical Neuroscience of Happiness, Love and Wisdom from Rick Hanson
Faculty:Rick Hanson
Duration:6 Hours 09 Minutes | Format:Audio and Video
Archive : Buddha’s Brain from Rick Hanson
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Outline:
- Describe major mechanisms of neuroplasticity.
- Explain how to build self-compassion into the brain.
- Describe the evolutionary basis of the brain’s negativity bias.
- Summarize the three basic steps of “taking in the good” (TIG).
- Integrate the fourth step of TIG to heal painful experiences.
- Explain how to activate contentment, belonging and peace.
The Promise of Self-Directed Neuroplasticity
- How the mind changes the brain
- Lessons from 2,500 years of meditative practice
- Neural circuits of self-compassion
- Getting on your own side
- Virtue, mindfulness and wisdom—resting on the neural functions of regulating, learning and selecting
The Challenge of Evolution
- Chasing carrots and dodging sticks
- The negativity bias of the brain
- How that bias undermines psychotherapy
The Power of Implicit Memory
- Memory systems, explicit and implicit
- The importance of inner resources
- Factors of neuroplasticity
Taking in the Good
- Turning good facts into good experiences
- Savoring positive emotions and perspectives
- Priming implicit memory systems
- Working with children
- Why it’s good to feel good
- Living gratefully
Clearing Old Pain
- Exploiting the “weak link” in memory consolidation
- Pairing positive experiences with old pain
- Special considerations for trauma
Natural Happiness
- The resting state of the brain: Calm, contented, caring
- The brain’s three motivational systems: Approach, Attach, Avoid
- The reactive mode of greed, heartache and hatred (broadly defined)
- How to build up the neural circuits of the responsive mode of gladness, love and peace
Get Buddha’s Brain from Rick Hanson on Salaedu.com
Description:
Featuring Rick Hanson, Ph.D.
Neuropsychologist & author of the best-selling book Buddha’s Brain: The Practical Neuroscience of Happiness, Love and Wisdom
- 4 steps to internalize positive experiences and heal pain and dysfunction
- Learn from the “Olympic athletes” of brain training (lessons from 2,500 years of contemplative practice)
- Understand the brain’s negativity bias, the greatest challenge in psychotherapy
- Work with the brain’s 3 motivational systems (Approach, Attach, Avoid)
- Strengthen the neural circuits of contentment, belonging and peace
- Teach clients self-directed neuroplasticity
Today’s unprecedented meeting of modern brain science and ancient contemplative wisdom offers you powerful new tools for changing the neural wiring and neurochemistry of the brain.
In this seminar, learn how to use contemplative neuroscience in down-to-earth ways to…
- Weave positive experiences into the fabric of the brain and self
- Stimulate and strengthen the neural circuits of empathy
- Help clients become more mindful
king –
“Excellent presentation!”