yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Slow Down Your Brain to Get More Done, with Steven Kotler | Big Think


3m read
·Nov 4, 2024

Processing might take a few minutes. Refresh later.

Flow is technically defined as an optimal state of consciousness. A state of consciousness where we feel our best and we perform our best. It refers to those moments of total absorption when we get so focused on the task at hand that everything else disappears. So our sense of self, our sense of self-consciousness, they vanish. Time dilates which means sometimes it slows down. You get that freeze frame effect familiar to any of you who have seen the Matrix or been in a car crash. Sometimes it speeds up and five hours will pass by in like five minutes. And throughout all aspects of performance, mental and physical, go through the roof.

Underneath the flow state is a complicated mass of neurobiology. There are fundamental changes in neuroanatomy – which is where in the brain something’s taking place, neurochemistry and neuroelectricity which is the two ways the brain communicates with itself. The most prominent of this is the neuroanatomical changes. So the old idea about ultimate performance flow is what’s known as the ten percent brain myth. The idea that we’re only using ten percent of our brain at any one time so ultimate performance must obviously be the full brain firing on all cylinders. And it turns out we had it exactly backwards.

In flow, parts of the brain aren’t becoming more hyperactive, they’re actually slowing down, shutting down. The technical term for this is transient, meaning temporary, hypo frontality. Hypo – H – Y – P – O – it’s the opposite of hyper means to slow down, to shut down, to deactivate. And frontality is the prefrontal cortex, the part of your brain that houses your higher cognitive functions, your sense of morality, your sense of will, your sense of self. All that shuts down so, for example, why does time pass so strangely in flow? Because David Eagleman discovered that time is calculated all over the prefrontal cortex. When parts of it start to wink out we can no longer separate past from present from future and we’re plunged into what researchers call the deep now.

Transient hypofrontality is interesting. It was discovered back in the nineties and it had very negative connotations; it was found in schizophrenics and drug addicts. And then in the early two thousands Aaron Dietrich who was then at Georgia Tech discovered or hypothesized that transient hypofrontality actually underpins every altered state – dreaming, meditation, flow, drug addiction – it doesn’t really matter. And then in 2007, 2008 Charles Limb at Johns Hopkins working with first jazz musicians and second with rappers was looking at flow in those contexts and found that the prefrontal cortex was shutting down as well.

Though depending on the altered state you get different parts are shut down. Like in flow, one of the most prominent examples is the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. It shuts down. This is the part of the brain that houses your inner critic, that nagging defeatist always on voice in your head turns off in flow. And as a result we feel this is liberation right. We are finally getting out of our own way. We’re free of ourselves. Creativity goes up. Risk taking goes up and we feel amazing.

My mission for the past 15 years has been sort of to reclaim flow research from the hippie community, from the new age community and put it back on a really hard science footing. And really what that took was flow research has been going on continuously at kind of both here and in the United States and Europe all over. And it really just took synthesizing all the information and bringing it together and putting it on a hard and neurobiological footing.

That said there’s a bunch left to do, right. We have 150 years of flow psychology and flow science goes back all the way to the 1870s. In fact some of the earliest experiments ever run in kind of early neuroscience and early kind of experimental psychology were run on flow. In the past 25 years as our brain imaging technology has gotten better and better and better we can look farther into the brain and see what’s going on. We’ve got about 2...

More Articles

View All
Place value tables
So I have this number here, and what I would like you to do is pause this video and tell me for this number how many hundreds do we have, how many tens, and how many ones? Pause this video and try to think about it. All right, well, we can just look at e…
Interwoven | Vocabulary | Khan Academy
I’ve got a twisted tale to tell you in this video, wordsmiths, because the word I want to talk about is interwoven. Interwoven, it’s an adjective, and it means twisted or joined together. It has a literal meaning, like two fibers woven into the same carpe…
How To Get Rich According To Grant Cardone
There are a million ways to make $1,000,000, and this is how Grant Cardone did it. Let’s just jump straight into it. Welcome to ALUX. First up, you never spend more than you earn. The principle of never spend more than you earn with a spending limit—idea…
Safari Live - Day 206 | National Geographic
This program features live coverage of an African safari and may include animal kills and caucuses. Viewer discretion is advised. Good afternoon and welcome to a stripey start to our sunset Safari on a rather windy afternoon. It is a little bit breezy, Ar…
Life's Biggest Paradoxes
In life, anything is possible because we can never fully understand how the world works, and the laws of physics prevent us from being able to tell the future. Everything we predict is a probability; some are a lot more probable, others are less probable,…
Gas mixtures and partial pressures | AP Chemistry | Khan Academy
In this video, we’re going to introduce ourselves to the idea of partial pressure due to ideal gases. The way to think about it is to imagine some type of a container, and you don’t just have one type of gas in that container; you have more than one type …