Finding Peaks

Modern Day Depression Causes & Remedies


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Episode 55
Modern Day Depression Causes & Remedies
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Description

In this exciting episode, we are joined by acclaimed Dr. Ilardi, to discuss his knowledge on how modern-day depression is caused and remedies to help.

Talking Points
  1. Going over how modern brains are different from brains of the past
  2. The toxicity of rumination
  3. Remedies to help with modern depression
  4. Quotes
    “Depression is following a pattern, that we see with other diseases, called diseases of civilization. Where these diseases are really really endemic and highly prevalent in the west and not very prevalent at all among aboriginal groups. … Our ancestors didn’t get depressed very often. Why? Because presumably, they had protective measures woven into their day-to-day lives.”
    -Dr. Stephen Ilardi, Ph.D. Professor, Clinical Neuroscientist 
    Episode Resources:

    ‘The Depression Cure’ by Stephen S. Ilardi, PhD

    Therapeutic Lifestyle Change (TLC)

    Episode Transcripts
    Episode 55 Transcripts

    empathy is knowing your own darkness

    don’t have power without that connection

    you don’t have any what’s the opposite

    of addiction just freedom

    all right

    team

    fans of finding peaks welcome back to

    another special episode

    uh with a special guest today

    part two of this journey as you’ll

    notice i’m wearing the same clothes

    because i was asked by the production

    crew to keep it simple keep it straight

    come back look the same so it doesn’t

    look like you did this on the same day

    which we would never do here at finding

    peaks ever uh in that regard time is of

    the essence brandon burns chief

    executive officer for peaks recovery

    centers joined today apparently we’re

    co-hosting jason freeze exciting lpclac

    chief clinical officer we are also

    joined by chief operating officer clint

    nicholson lpclic

    chief of all things as we learned in the

    last episode

    and again our special guest dr stephen

    elardy clinical psychologist researcher

    professor university of kansas also

    author of the depression cure join us

    again here to do

    another deep dive into the book and

    welcome back uh you know what i’m so

    excited except for the part that i’m

    just now realizing i’m wearing the same

    exact clothes and now everybody’s gonna

    be like oh that dude has like one outfit

    yeah um it it is actually the same yeah

    yeah it’s understandable or traveling

    yeah

    yeah yeah it’s it’s it’s the humble

    midwesterner in you it is a

    good refrain yeah

    i i’m i’m delighted to be here

    yeah always a pleasure um haven’t seen

    you in four years the viewers might not

    know this but that was our initial time

    together in uh washington where we where

    we originally met but without going down

    that rabbit hole

    of how we became good friends

    in the process

    i feel like there should be some special

    music for this little monster to be a

    little montage clayton and i can leave

    yeah like we can step out yeah

    we’ll ignite the candle yeah that’s what

    i’m talking about right yeah ritualistic

    important aspect

    of the depression cure

    i think anyways on the last step is so

    we didn’t get an opportunity to explore

    we’re calling it the schtick the the

    thing that’s important the the narrative

    for why the tlc model makes sense the

    thing that we can

    um gravitate towards and appreciate

    about why we’re exploring these things

    in the first place and so

    um

    without giving the whole introduction of

    your book away because we want the

    readers out there amazon.com uh order

    the book local library all those things

    find it read it it’s excellent but

    without giving it all away what is this

    for the setup well so there really is a

    story behind it so

    i i’ve been a clinical researcher for 32

    years now

    and

    about 15 years ago

    i was getting so frustrated

    with the fact that

    yeah we know a lot about clinical

    depression but we’ve barely moved the

    needle in terms of patient outcomes this

    is 15 years ago i was like okay you know

    we’ve got

    a whole armamentarium of medications and

    psychotherapies and evidence-based

    practice and all the things

    more things actually now than we had

    then but

    um

    we weren’t getting great outcomes and

    particularly what was vexing for me

    is the societal burden of depressive

    illness was growing so depressive

    illness went from 30 years ago it was

    like the seventh cause of work-related

    disability in the u.s

    now it’s number one it is the single

    leading cause of work-related disability

    it’s a major cause of death

    through depression-related suicide it’s

    a major cause of

    relationship dissolving

    unemployment it’s i mean it’s it’s

    exacting this huge toll

    and i stumbled on the work of an

    anthropologist somebody in a completely

    different field this anthropologist

    named edward schieffelin

    who was studying aboriginal groups and

    he spent 10 years with a group in

    the highlands of papua new guinea

    they’re called the kaluli people

    and one of his questions was

    okay well

    how like when the kaluli gets sick what

    does that look like and how does it

    compare to when we get sick and then he

    was like

    what about mental illness so we got

    himself a dsm for viewers who may not

    know that’s like our diagnostic

    psychiatric bible our bible of diagnosis

    takes a dsm

    people and he’s like okay well like what

    kinds of mental illness did they get

    and one of his findings when i saw it it

    smacked me in the face it was like

    somebody like splash cold water on me

    and it was like oh out of 2000 members

    of the columbia people he’s found one

    case of marginal depression

    i’m like

    wait that’s like

    one percent of what we have

    and their lives are arguably harder than

    ours they don’t have any modern medicine

    they don’t have any of our technology

    they have a high rate of infant

    mortality they have a high rate of

    parasitic infection like all kinds of

    really tough things and yet they don’t

    get clinically depressed

    what the hell’s going on

    and then i started thinking wait a

    minute

    depression is following a pattern that

    we see with other diseases called

    diseases of civilization

    where these diseases are really really

    endemic and highly prevalent in the west

    not very prevalent among aboriginal

    groups like what like atherosclerosis

    heart disease like many forms of cancer

    like oh here’s one hemorrhoids did you

    know aboriginal groups do not get

    hemorrhoids why because they don’t spend

    their day sitting down

    they’re active they’re up they’re moving

    tooth decay i mean they have it but not

    the way we do why because they’re eating

    not processed foods right they’re eating

    whole foods

    it’s like oh depression fits that

    pattern wait a minute that sparks

    another

    association

    the human species lived primarily we our

    ancestors until 10 000 years ago

    everybody lived as hunter-gatherers so

    all of our ancestors spent their entire

    lives in this group of 30 50 people

    on a lifelong camping trip with their

    closest friends and relatives

    and that’s the way the kaluli are living

    today so

    oh okay so our ancestors

    didn’t get depressed very often probably

    just like the kaluli don’t why because

    presumably they had all kinds of

    protective things woven into the fabric

    of their day-to-day lives

    likewise

    they probably did not have to fend with

    lots of the things in our lives that are

    toxic

    so even though we love in many i think

    we do love lots of the things that we

    um take advantage of in 21st century

    american life i mean i love my laptop i

    love mocha lattes i love i mean there

    are all kinds of things that like i am

    not

    i’m not a luddite i don’t want to get

    rid of technology i love technology

    but many of the things like social media

    which we’ll talk about later many of the

    things

    that we experience day-to-day traffic

    and you know fast food and i mean i

    could go on

    are psychologically toxic so

    here’s the sound i’m finally now at a

    moment of sound bite here we go

    everybody brace yourselves

    our ancestors were protected

    by several things that were woven into

    the fabric of their day-to-day lives and

    we can reclaim them

    bring them into the present

    and

    have the best of both possible worlds

    have the best of modernity

    jettison the toxic things that are

    present to modernity and embrace or

    reconnect with the healing habits of the

    past

    it may sound like a tall order

    but

    i don’t think we have any choice because

    the societal burden of depressive

    illness now

    it’s one out of three americans are

    going to be cut down by this massively

    disabling painful illness at some point

    and

    that rate of depression is going up with

    every generation so gen z

    kids that are college age or below

    they’re already at like 20 25

    their lifetime burden if we don’t do

    something to turn this around it’s

    probably going to be 50

    and um

    so that was the genesis of this idea of

    oh

    what are the things that the kaluli are

    doing that are protecting them what are

    the things that our ancestors benefited

    from by the way quick side point of the

    shtick you ready for this

    here’s the shtick

    if our hunter-gatherer ancestors were as

    depression prone as we are if they were

    as vulnerable as we are given how much

    harder their life objectively harder

    their lives we

    we would have been obliterated as a

    species yeah

    tens of thousands of years ago we never

    would have made it we never would have

    lasted this long so we know

    given how debilitating depressive

    illnesses we know that our ancestors had

    to be way less vulnerable than we are

    why why do we not have

    genetic protection there should have

    been massive selection pressure

    to give us antidepressant circuitry

    to mimic the antidepressant effect of

    all of our best meds and other best

    practices

    why don’t we have it we didn’t need it

    why because the antidepressant was woven

    into the fabric of our lifestyle

    just like by the way interesting maybe

    maybe interesting side note

    did you know

    that

    primates that subsist on fruit

    you’re injured going this is really

    random steve i hope you’ve got a pointer

    there are primates

    relatives of ours who only live on fruit

    they’re called frugivores

    the genetic machinery

    that they would normally use to make

    vitamin c did you know that most

    primates

    have genetic machinery that their bodies

    can make their own vitamin c awesome

    but when they became frugivores

    now they were getting so much vitamin c

    in their lifestyle

    that there was genetic drift and all the

    the genetic machinery to make vitamin c

    was allowed to basically drift and turn

    off there are all these mutations that

    accrued and it doesn’t work anymore but

    it’s still there

    it’s a genetic fossil

    it’s in our dna right now every one of

    us sitting around the circle have

    basically vestigial vitamin c machinery

    in our dna

    doesn’t work anymore

    even though our ancestors long since

    went away from being frugivores

    they don’t have the genetic machinery

    anymore so now we have to get the

    vitamin c from our diet right

    it’s kind of like that with us with

    depression

    our ancestors had they were like frugals

    they had all the protection everything

    built in

    and now our environment has radically

    changed why because technology because

    we learned to become agrarians and then

    finally we had the industrial revolution

    and the life that our kids lead today

    would have been unrecognizable to our

    ancestors they would look at it and they

    would be like this might as well be on

    mars it’s so different

    so what do you take as the most taxing

    feature in the in the change right i i i

    you’ve talked at least in and while i’m

    present with you’ve talked a lot about

    uh the fight or flight response yeah as

    the most taxing feature and we have it

    in the tribal culture certainly there

    they have it we also have it as a

    genetic code set right and then we are

    living in the industrial world

    and what is the

    what is the tension there what’s

    creating the most

    yeah i love that yeah so i mean it turns

    out we talked about this a little bit

    earlier

    that the single most important driver

    in terms of the neuroscience of

    depression is not

    a deficit of serotonin the single most

    important driver is the brain’s runaway

    fight or flight stress response that

    just will not shut down

    and then all these downstream reactions

    because when the brain is in runaway

    stress response mode for weeks anyone

    who has any genetic vulnerability or any

    other acquired vulnerability their brain

    shuts down and it’s just like okay dude

    you are sick

    like literally physically ill like

    fighting the flu fighting covet you shut

    down you want to crawl into a cave

    and so our ancestors and if we look at

    modern day aboriginal groups if we look

    at modern day hunter-gatherers

    when they go into fight-or-flight mode

    it’s for a few minutes it’s for an hour

    it’s oh i have to escape that predator

    oh i have to uh

    get down below treeline while there’s a

    lightning storm oh i have to run back to

    safety there’s this other hostile group

    over there they sent a scout out i need

    to scurry back to my

    my people right does that make sense so

    in other words

    our fight fight-or-flight reaction is

    designed to get us moving vigorously in

    the face of physical threat in the

    ancestral world that was very

    short-lived in the modern world

    we have that fight-or-flight reaction

    going off all the time we’re sitting in

    traffic and it’s going off well we’re

    not physically endangered hopefully most

    of the time but our brain thinks we are

    right and so we’re all revved up

    um we’re going to brain think we are

    what what’s

    started to activate it what keeps you so

    activated

    because symbolically

    we’re our our

    our apis brain

    is not it’s unprecedented for an ape to

    be traveling in the steel can

    going down the road at 70 miles an hour

    with all these other steel cans and all

    these other people and and people are

    being mean to us and they’re like

    cutting us off and they’re flipping us

    the bird i mean not that they would ever

    do that in colorado but you know

    in kansas they might um

    and

    and

    our our brain is trying to make sense of

    this and it’s like this seems stressful

    it seems threatening this is like

    bad things could happen

    here this is unprecedented it looks

    dangerous it feels dangerous and

    especially the oh no it’s now it’s

    congested oh i’m running late oh i’m

    gonna miss my thing oh i’m gonna you

    know

    and by the way we you know we’re

    constantly plugged in to a news medium

    that’s that’s telling us constantly

    your world is dangerous you know bad is

    stronger than good and and and news

    purveyors know that if they want to grab

    our attention with the news if it bleeds

    it leads right if it’s if it’s bad well

    guess what in a global village of 8

    billion people there’s always something

    horrible happening there’s always

    something scary there’s always something

    outrageous always something dangerous so

    we’re bombarded with all the outrage we

    go on social media and it amplifies it

    and pretty soon you have a group of

    people walking around constantly in

    fight or flight mode

    for a million and one reasons

    and all of the natural braking systems

    the things that would put the brakes on

    that in the ancestral environment

    they’re missing

    so it’s like we have if i can use

    another car analogy it’s like we have

    many things in the modern world pressing

    the accelerator

    of our

    fighter flight system and the brake

    lines have been cut

    and our ancestors had lots of

    woven in braking systems like what like

    time immersed in nature

    like

    time immersed in the tribe where you’re

    surrounded by the people who care about

    you

    like physical activity which is

    profoundly

    it’s like um

    okay you know how thermostat like when

    you when you turn up the heat in the

    thermostat in your house it’s getting

    cold

    and it’s checking constantly for the

    feedback like oh did this work did this

    work did this work and then when it’s

    finally hot enough the thing shuts off

    that’s our fight or flight response

    system what’s it designed to do what’s

    the thermostat it’s get moving get

    moving get moving get moving what’s the

    feedback it needs to shut off oh yeah

    you’ve been moving

    you’ve been really really really active

    why does exercise turn off or turn down

    our stress response circuits in part

    because it’s the negative feedback

    the the the sort of corrective

    sampled experience that says okay yeah

    mission accomplished you can calm down

    now

    um

    so many of the protective things that

    our ancestors benefited from they’re

    just not there anymore so we’re living

    the sedentary indoor socially isolated

    frenzied media addicted sleep deprived

    fast food laden life and we’re just

    bombarded with things that are

    psychologically toxic

    yeah one of the that resonates with me

    so much because

    i’m trying in my personal life to

    not tone it down to get rid of it

    because social media is such a great

    part of our world podcasts and otherwise

    but i find myself

    feeling outraged at so many things could

    be the slightest of sentence you know

    that that ticks me off and that’s the

    part that

    i don’t enjoy about it i want to

    experience it in a more positive way but

    uh in tracking that outrage i find

    myself not present distracted out in the

    future angry at something angry at a

    party a political thing an environmental

    thing you know whatever’s going on

    and

    an hour later you know when we find

    ourselves consumed by it i’m sure it

    happens to a lot of the viewers out

    there on social media you’re just

    tricking through and you’re pissed off

    at the end of it and you feel stuck in

    something and

    fog headed in this and all this sort of

    stuff you know sort of follows at the

    end of it um and i think it’s worth

    talking about worth having a discussion

    about because when we talk about our you

    know poor little eight brains

    we can’t it feels as a real natural

    experience that this is something that

    is very disruptive for us yeah and and

    and so there’s something that goes with

    it that i know you wanted to talk about

    today

    which is

    this really really toxic habit

    that a lot of us probably can resonate

    with that you know technically we call

    it rumination

    dwelling brooding

    just rehashing over and over again

    negative thoughts they could be worry

    thoughts things that you know that we

    fear that might happen in the future

    usually anxiety rumination is future

    oriented like things threats that are

    looming

    and depressive rumination is stuff in in

    the rearview mirror that we regret or

    that we’re grieving because it feels

    like a loss or a setback or an

    embarrassment or you know something

    painful a failure

    and

    when do people ruminate

    we know that rumination is super toxic

    we know that rumination will rev up

    those stress circuits so another thing

    back to your question of what keeps them

    wrapped up we ruminate all the time when

    we study

    aboriginal groups they don’t tend to

    ruminate

    why not well in part because they have

    very little alone time

    and the single biggest risk factor for

    rumination is when we’re alone it

    doesn’t mean that being alone is always

    toxic being alone can be a great a

    beautiful opportunity to meditate or to

    do something that we really love and

    enjoy but for a lot of us especially

    when we’re depleted when we’re

    psychologically not

    at our best when we’re alone we dwell

    and we brood either about things that

    threats on the horizon

    pain in the past

    and when people are clinically depressed

    they spend hours ruminating when do they

    do it when they’re alone

    or when they’re disengaged

    so they can ruminate when they’re binge

    watching yeah they think they’re

    watching or they can ruminate when

    they’re surfing the net when they’re on

    their phone they can ruminate when

    they’ve been on social media they can

    ruminate

    when they are

    um

    talking with somebody and they zone out

    and a lot of my depressed patients i’m

    sure your patients as well

    have you know when we bring this up

    they’re like oh yeah yeah i do that like

    i i can’t stay locked in because as soon

    as we start talking i just i’m off to

    the races

    occasionally people will ruminate

    together out loud co-ruminate and that’s

    also toxic is there a way to like

    narrowly define rumination yeah it’s

    just so the word rumination comes from

    it’s a it’s it’s a farming word believe

    it or not

    cows are ruminant

    animals rumination refers to chewing the

    cud

    they have a ruminant pouch why because

    they get a lot of their nutrition from

    grasses which are very

    nutritious for them but very hard to

    process and so

    they they they eat it and then it goes

    to the ruminant sack and and there it

    gets kind of pre-processed and made into

    this pellet that they then

    regurgitate and they they can’t they

    can’t stomach it so they got a chew on

    it well that’s a great metaphor for what

    happens when stuff happens to us that we

    can’t stomach we chew on it and it’s a

    natural

    adaptive reaction whenever something

    happens that’s upsetting

    it’s natural to ruminate about it for a

    while why well you know we want to

    figure out what happened why did it

    happen what can i do to fix it and if i

    can’t fix it well how can i make sure it

    doesn’t happen again can i at least

    understand it so so i don’t get like a

    learning mechanism yeah

    it’s natural we want to validate for

    people like yeah rumination is totally

    fine until it’s not

    so it’s fine for how long

    until we stop extracting fresh nuggets

    of wisdom and learning and you know and

    how long does that take depends on the

    thing but usually half hour hour

    and i tell my patients like look if

    you’ve been ruminating on this thing for

    days you’re probably way past the point

    of diminishing returns right

    so then you know it’s like well how do

    we stop it lots of different techniques

    but one of them is to say hey let’s lean

    into it

    they never see this coming let’s lean

    into it

    every time you get the urge to ruminate

    get out a pad of paper or get you know

    on your computer set a timer and knock

    yourself out for 10 minutes ruminate as

    much as you can for 10 minutes when the

    buzzer goes off walk away

    you have total permission

    and they’re like

    wait i only get 10 it’s like well do you

    think in 10 minutes if you really knock

    yourself out that you can extract

    anything new that you can actually learn

    from this session room and they’re like

    yeah probably within five or ten minutes

    and there’s something powerful about you

    write something down and then you can

    just walk away

    um so i don’t know did i define

    rumination it’s dwelling at length on

    something either that that we fear in

    the future or that we regret in the past

    or that we’re grieving in the past yeah

    no i think that was

    far better than i could have defined

    absolutely absolutely perfect tonight

    and i know i can’t remember the name of

    your speech and talks you used to give

    in the past conferences but uh you know

    the rumination i want to get into the

    psychotherapy aspect of that and how we

    can approach that and maybe some quick

    interventions that can get us there

    faster while we’re waiting for you know

    per the prior episode for medications to

    ramp up in the background and so forth

    but

    um

    we’ve had a lot of experiences i think

    in our industry in general as well too

    the first thing we do is we take cell

    phones i think the first initial take of

    that is liabilities you know ordering

    drugs onto a campus you know those sort

    of things there’s there’s good reasons

    for its absence

    and then i think we started learning a

    lot more about it in the clinical

    setting and just hopeful that you can

    feel this thing kind of about your

    passion around that which yeah

    well clinically

    hundred years ago when peaks was a new

    company uh and when i started um wasn’t

    quite 100 but seven years ago

    our program was six to nine months in

    length and we would um

    take people’s phone at the beginning

    and then when we decided to give it back

    it was usually about four and a half

    months into a treatment episode and so

    pretty much

    our clients would live in this contained

    environment with people they were

    spending months and months with

    while very disconnected from much of the

    outside world in fact

    sometimes i would start groups with just

    kind of going over current events

    because they were so disconnected from

    the world like hey you may want to know

    that like you know there was a tsunami

    or something you know what i mean but

    like

    um

    there’s that level of disconnection um

    from

    uh

    from current events but also just like

    from

    the scroll of facebook or or twitter or

    tick tock i’m not sure tick tock was

    around seven years ago but um

    there was so much of that and then

    um i i mean i’ll never forget when we

    when when i went to give a client her

    phone back uh our first graduate of our

    women’s program and she’s just like

    i don’t i don’t want that

    um and i think uh

    and then we would watch our clients kind

    of go through a process of beginning to

    kind of

    put their guard up again and kind of

    beginning to escalate and just being

    increasingly anxious and activated even

    in

    anticipation of getting their phone back

    and then oftentimes the first thing they

    would do would be to delete their social

    media apps clinton i know you’ll love

    that but like i think

    um

    it was a pretty fascinating process

    um to watch and be a part of and i know

    even some of those

    uh graduates of peaks have actually

    never gotten back on social media just

    because they were disconnected from it

    and felt such a great relief during that

    time

    and i do

    it’s just mindful for me just thinking

    considering this rumination concept how

    much

    sometimes our regret or rumination isn’t

    even about big things it’s about some

    some of the most mundane

    comparisons that we’re drawing or

    whatever it is it doesn’t have to be

    you know the grieving of a parent like

    it can be just like

    somebody looks like they got a promotion

    that i didn’t get at a job and i feel

    terrible about that yeah i mean some of

    my worst bouts of rumination honestly

    have been

    oh i was just in a faculty meeting

    and one of my colleagues said something

    mean

    you know yeah i might have responded in

    real time or maybe not you know maybe i

    just i’m like no i’m gonna just bite my

    tongue but then i’m driving home and i’m

    sitting at the red light and i’m playing

    it over and i’m playing it over and i’m

    the more i play it over the more upset

    i’m getting

    and it’s it’ll take your breath away

    yeah and and i don’t care

    how

    like

    robust your mental health is i don’t

    care what kind of a place of well-being

    you’re in

    if you have one negative event and you

    start brooding about it within five ten

    minutes you’re not in a good place

    and um

    it’s always an opportunity for me to to

    put into practice what i preach right to

    be like all right

    you know like

    you got to walk a walk right so what are

    you going to do

    what are you going to do

    how are you going to do yeah what do you

    do with the red light then

    so

    this particular example that i’m

    thinking of somebody really really

    pushed my buttons at a meeting and i did

    bite my tongue very wisely because i was

    going to say something that was not

    going to be helpful

    and i’m sitting at the red light

    well i’m by the way i’m brooding all the

    way the walk down to you know i have

    about a 10 minute walk to my car and

    then the drive to that point so it’s

    been like a 20 25 minute bout of

    rumination so i’m good and worked out

    i’m sitting at the red light and i’m

    like

    and i had just let a therapeutic

    lifestyle group the week before we were

    talking about rumination one of the

    techniques

    that we had asked patients to see if

    they could put into practice when

    they’re ruminating that week

    was

    gratitude

    i knew you’re going to see it in the

    moment

    in the moment

    um and this ideally would be something

    if you’re keeping a gratitude journal if

    you’re doing a gratitude practice where

    every day

    ideally three

    like little things like you’re talking

    about we don’t ruminate necessarily

    about the big things

    gratitude is i think best

    practiced with the little things i mean

    obviously the big things we’re grateful

    for as well but

    um

    so i’m sitting at the red light

    and i’m like

    okay gratitude gratitude

    and this is so amazing the the the um i

    think we often fail to appreciate just

    how much our memory access is guided by

    our mood state

    if you are in an angry mood most of the

    easiest memories to pull up are going to

    be other times you are angry

    i kid you not

    especially other times you’re angry at

    that same person

    if you’re in a anxious fearful mood

    state your memories are way easier if

    they’re other worry related sort of does

    that make sense yeah absolutely so i’m

    sitting there and i’m angry

    and i’m i’m like i got nothing

    and i’m embarrassed there’s nobody

    around and i’m just embarrassed i’m like

    i cannot believe i’m freaking

    you know

    teaching preaching this and i’m i got

    nothing

    and i’m like

    steve you have so much to be grateful

    for i’m having a talk with myself

    and and the answer is yeah but i can’t

    think of anything right now

    and and i and i’m like this is i will

    never forget this moment

    because

    i’m getting way deeper insight into what

    my patients are telling me because

    they’re like you know what in the moment

    this is hard it sounds really

    reasonable and easy but in the moment

    it’s hard

    stay with it what do i tell my face stay

    with it stay with it it’ll come

    stay with it what what about earlier

    today

    was and and in a flash puppy

    puppy jumped in my lap while i was

    having my coffee this morning puppy

    licked my face

    puppy cuddled with me and then i just

    melted and the damn broke and now i can

    think of a million things i was grateful

    for

    i don’t know if that makes any sense at

    all but yeah but it it um

    once i was able to connect with anything

    i was grateful for the anger melted the

    rumination spell was broken

    and i was able to just enjoy the rest of

    my drive come home in a much better

    space to greet my wife to greet my puppy

    to you know is your dog’s name puppy

    his name is teddy the wonder dog

    even better yeah

    that’s your question though yeah yeah so

    so we called in puppy yeah this this has

    me uh you know brene brown’s dare to

    lead book is coming up for me in this

    regard because uh and the you the

    viewers are just going to have to excuse

    my language because it’s in the book

    sfds shitty first drafts as she

    describes it in her book that we have

    she actually gets that from the writer

    anne lamotte okay anne lamott and her

    extraordinary

    us for beginning writers or aspiring

    writers called bird by bird

    and she has an entire chapter called

    shitty first drafts okay yes were we

    talking about her on our walk yesterday

    no okay

    that name sounds familiar but

    but in that regard she talks about the

    experience of the shitty first draft is

    the build up the reason we do it one we

    we want to we’re curious we want to

    figure out what took place what the

    problem was what the solution is those

    sort of things

    but whether we arrive at a conclusion

    that’s accurate or not we per the book

    at least if i remember it correctly we

    get a dopamine kick and so there’s an

    advantage to doing it but for the

    depressed patient the trade-off for that

    dopamine kick

    sounds

    uh

    massively

    off where we get stuck in a

    fight-or-flight phase and so maybe i

    guess the question here is

    from your experiences in research and so

    forth is that dopamine kick true

    for the depressed patient as they’re

    ruminating do they get something even if

    the trade-off is significant yeah that’s

    i i really like this question so

    there’s something incredibly

    addictive

    and seductive about rumination

    it’s tantalizing it offers the promise

    and i cannot tell you the number of

    patients that i’ve worked with

    that when they’re just being very real

    and very honest they’re like

    yeah i i know it sounds stupid but i i

    every time i ruminate about this breakup

    i i think like

    this time i’m going to figure out why he

    left me or this time i’m going to figure

    out why he cheated on me or this time

    i’m going to figure out why everything

    went south or this time i’m going to

    figure out why why that job didn’t work

    out or why i didn’t get that offer i

    thought i was going to get or why didn’t

    get into that grad school or

    what i’m saying it’s like

    rationally i know this makes no sense

    because the last 500 times i’ve

    ruminated about i got no further into

    but it feels like this time it’s it’s

    like lucy in the football

    you know charlie brown’s like no this

    time she’s going to hold this time i’m

    really going to kick it

    you know

    and that’s what rumination does it holds

    out this promise of yeah this time it’s

    really going to connect and you’re going

    to figure it out

    so it has this seductive alluring

    addictive quality it is dopaminergic

    but then at this horrible cost

    of ramping up our stress circuits making

    us more depressed more anxious more

    angry

    more disconnected by the way the

    opportunity cost

    i know that’s an economist term right

    but the the like what are we giving up

    when we ruin it you know we’re giving up

    the world of other people and activity

    that we’re designed for we’re not

    designed to be living in our heads but

    when we ruminate we’re stuck in our

    heads

    and most americans spend way too much

    time lost in their head we give up our

    here and now we give up the moment yeah

    we’re sleepwalking we’re you know the

    zen

    meisters throughout history have always

    said

    be here be now you know right now be

    fully awake sure but rumination is so

    deceptive right because it it’s almost

    uh dressed up as a solution right it’s

    like it’s

    it presents itself like oh i’m going to

    come to a solution i’m actually i’m

    coming to resolution at this point but

    it’s not it’s completely usual

    and the reason it’s like a trojan horse

    in a way because it it presents itself

    and it says well no look everybody

    ruminates and and by the way rumination

    not only is it normal and natural but

    it’s it’s helped you before yeah like

    remember that one time when the thing

    didn’t go well and you started thinking

    about and you figured out why and then

    you made a course correction and it’s

    like bro you should be ruminating more

    absolutely right because this is the

    best thing you can yeah yeah yeah don’t

    go to your friend’s house you need to

    stay here and figure this out you need

    to just stay here

    hunker down

    absolutely uh

    yeah it i mean

    it

    what’s that unpredictable reward that is

    actually the most rewarding right would

    people yes receive that but it’s

    unpredictable when they’ll receive it

    that’s the knowledge that pushes the

    lever the most right that’s a condition

    yeah can i use that in mind that’s my

    next version of the depression career

    yeah actually

    jason friesman yeah

    remind me i gotta give him the credit

    for that um seriously that’s that’s

    phenomenal so yeah there is this sense

    of um it’s like the did you guys ever

    study this in in psyc101 whatever you

    know the pigeon on the variable yeah

    the slot machine it’s like

    as long as it’s delivering the reward at

    some point you don’t know when

    then you’re going to keep at it and yes

    rumination even for the addict yeah the

    ruminative

    ruminative addict it will still pay off

    sometimes yeah so they’re going to stay

    at it right yeah that’s that’s so good

    yeah

    genius

    yeah

    who’s mentoring who here just i don’t

    know

    i’m gonna steal my thunder we’re done

    but we should talk a little bit more

    about how to break the rumination habit

    maybe yeah yes

    you know and i

    and i think uh just to kind of set that

    up from the prior episode that we were

    on you know we were talking about before

    our friend friesma arrived here that you

    know there are two general approaches

    that are taken a lot of medication

    pushing for 60 you know 76 percent of

    the population major depression

    population they go into a setting they

    get the medication they walk away

    not a great outcome generally usually

    their primary care doc yeah they’re

    they’re doing all the heavy much of the

    heavy lifting

    not because they should

    they know that

    but because they’re they’re standing in

    the breach they’re they’re filling the

    gap because so many depressed patients

    are getting nothing

    and they show up at their you know

    primary care doctor’s office and they’re

    they’re hurting and the doc is like well

    i don’t have a lot of time or anything

    else but like hey i got some lexapro

    like maybe that’ll help i got some

    effects or maybe you know

    so they’re

    they’re getting minimal care

    but the doc is thinking correctly this

    is better than nothing yeah and maybe

    the public is sold in that moment as

    well too because they just saw the

    commercial like you’re depressed yes i

    am we have this pill perfect perfect

    yeah i’m suffering so right you know and

    then

    it uh then you get into those settings

    stress environments or otherwise with

    the family doc and it matches right it

    tells the story that this is going to

    provide that relief but we know in from

    the prior episode that that

    monotherapeutic approach this is not

    going to have

    the validity that we believe it’s going

    to so insert the next possible thing

    within a setting like peaks is we can do

    psychotherapy well if if the medication

    is going to work

    we need time for it to work at the same

    time the person wants relief right now

    so generally speaking the next thing is

    you know psychotherapy but so much of it

    is group activity as well too but i’m

    not ready for that environment so before

    we get into the psychotherapy and how we

    can get into anti-ruminating you know

    features of this what are some of those

    quick setups that maybe we can do as a

    treatment center or folks can be

    thinking about as home to really you

    know push this forward in a more

    meaningful way so somebody is suffering

    which everyone with clinical depression

    is suffering and by the way depression

    for a lot of patients actually lights up

    not just their emotional pain circuits

    but those are cross-wired with our

    physical pain circuit so a lot of

    depressed patients will if they’re

    severely depressed they’ll be like

    i can’t even describe it but i’m just

    hurting

    and it’s like yeah it’s emotional but

    like it sort of feels physical too

    so they’re in agony they’re in torment

    and they want relief and they deserve

    relief

    and so what do we have in our toolkit

    that’s like well if we just throw meds

    at it

    that helps a lot of people but the

    average

    patient’s gonna take like three four

    weeks before that’s kicking in sometimes

    up to six weeks

    what do we have is faster

    the first thing is surprising

    bright light therapy photo therapy using

    a therapeutic light box or getting

    outside for a half hour

    typically ideally within the first hour

    of the day

    for a half hour

    that dose of light the

    light is measured in units called lux 10

    like this in colorado springs is

    probably a hundred thousand lux out

    there

    abroad indoor space is maybe a

    be outside or use a therapeutic light

    box

    effects kick in five to seven days on

    average

    it’s fast it’s amazing

    and we don’t use it nearly enough why

    it just doesn’t feel like it’s not very

    sexy it’s not very exciting i was going

    to say that

    i’m glad you did it’s not very sexy it’s

    like a light box really a clunky little

    or you know getting outside and it’s

    like no

    light is a drug light hits receptors in

    the retina that have a broadband

    connection to the center of the brain

    and it’s fast okay so there’s number one

    we can start using a therapeutic light

    box

    number two

    there is a nutrient

    called acetyl l carnitine

    that supercharges the mitochondria the

    power plants inside our brain cells

    and we get depleted when we’re depressed

    and as we age we get really depleted so

    older or middle-aged depressed

    individuals

    respond to acetyl-l-carnitine like an

    antidepressant drug

    it can be purchased over the counter

    it’s a nutrient it has minimal side

    effects most people have no side effects

    it has

    therapeutic efficacy on par with

    antidepressant meds typically

    and it kicks in often within a week

    so some listeners viewers might be like

    well wait a minute acetyl carnitine

    first of all what’s the dose 2 000

    milligrams is the best study dose 2000

    milligrams a day divided dose 1000

    milligrams twice a day wait a minute

    acetyl-l-carnitine you can buy it over

    the counter

    by the way i’m not giving medical advice

    talk to your healthcare provider

    but i can buy it over the counter

    it’s pretty cheap

    it’s fast it has minimal side effects it

    seems to be about as effective as

    anti-depressant meds why the hell is

    this stuff not being widely used

    there’s no money to be made

    pushing acetyl l-carnitine

    i have no financial vested interest in

    it i just want people to get better and

    we can leverage that we can use that

    right it’s it’s a really cool little

    hack

    it’s super charging brain cells

    okay number three we talked a little bit

    about

    chronotherapy

    which is a fancy term for basically

    we’re going to do a couple things the

    first thing we’re going to do this

    sounds nuts but it works

    if you keep somebody with depression if

    you keep them up all night and into the

    next day

    then

    bizarrely miraculously their mood will

    brighten after 24 to 36 hours of sleep

    deprivation we don’t understand why i

    know we talked about this earlier like

    doing it we have no idea

    there’s a theory that maybe by keeping

    somebody up for for 36 hours

    we’re basically putting the brain into

    emergency brake glass in case of

    emergency stimulant mode it’s like oh

    this must be life threatening because

    why the hell else would somebody stay up

    for 24 36 hours

    so it seems to recruit stimulant

    circuits dopamine they stimulate

    circuits in the brain that are bypassing

    all the depressive shutdown

    and this sounds great it works until it

    doesn’t when does it stop working as

    soon as a person goes to bed

    but

    what if we layer that

    antidepressant fast rapid acting effect

    of sleep deprivation

    with shifting the person’s body clock

    so instead of keeping them up 24 hours

    what if we keep them up 28 hours so

    we’re gonna phase

    shift their body clock by four hours

    lather rinse repeat do that six times

    so we’re gonna be phase shifting them

    and we’re gonna hit them

    with therapeutic doses of light which we

    already know is rapid acting

    this triple whammy is called

    chronotherapy there’s a protocol that’s

    been developed and it’s very fast acting

    and

    it’s probably the fastest thing that

    that that i know of that’s also

    very physically benign it doesn’t have

    lots of side effects it’s not dangerous

    unlike say ketamine it doesn’t have like

    abuse potential it’s like no we’re just

    keeping you up and we’re shifting your

    body clock and we’re giving you some

    bright light

    and

    it’s extraordinary

    love it so we have to go back to the

    clinical team tomorrow and say yeah

    we’re working 24-hour shifts

    you’re going to feel really good for a

    few hours till you fall asleep yeah yeah

    yeah

    everybody’s experience have you guys

    experienced this though when you’ve been

    up too long you start to get kind of

    punchy oh yeah you know and you get kind

    of giddy and you’re kind of you know

    it’s the only time that i’m actually

    enjoyable

    so yeah um so do you want to circle back

    to the the anti-ruminative thing

    yeah absolutely and that’s going to be

    the that’s going to be the heavy-hitting

    part of this episode and i you know in

    in repeating that though it sounds sort

    of drastic i think i want to make the

    claim too that

    living in the suffering of major

    depressive disorder when you’re feeling

    that way drastic measures can make sense

    and so these are things not to be

    ignored but to be explored and

    be curious about these sort of

    opportunities because if these solutions

    are that swift then why not right as an

    experience versus the denial of the

    effort of it i think that’s common

    at least my felt experience within this

    industry is like we don’t have time for

    that or those sort of things but now

    more than ever because we have more

    antidepressant medications but

    depression anxiety and so forth is

    higher than it’s ever been now more than

    ever it feels like

    we should be thinking about these things

    critically and whether we deploy them we

    should at least be curious about how it

    might work and develop absolutely you

    know there’s one other thing we didn’t

    mention in the other episode that i

    probably should give a shout out

    although you may want to edit this out

    so we’ll see

    there are

    psychedelic agents that are

    non-addictive they do not target the

    addictive reward dopamine-based pathways

    in the brain so we’re talking about

    psilocybin

    um

    we’re talking about mdma we’re talking

    although mdma has a little bit of reward

    activity but

    psilocybin lsd

    ayahuasca there are others

    there is increasing evidence that

    taking on their own not particularly

    helpful can be dangerous

    taken

    under the aegis under the guidance of a

    skilled therapeutic guide

    because the the the psychedelic effect

    lasts for several hours

    under the direction of a skilled

    therapeutic guide the psychedelic has

    antidepressant potential that is very

    rapid

    and so there’s

    massive amounts of research

    ongoing on this topic

    i think there’s been a lot of hype

    but i think there’s a there there i

    think

    i think within five to ten years this

    kind of treatment could possibly be

    quite mainstream

    and even in an addiction center

    once we’re very clear to validate with

    patients like

    this is not an addictive substance

    patients who do

    psilocybin the active ingredient in

    mushrooms

    do not become addicted to it

    they don’t crave it when they’re done

    they don’t want to do it every day for

    the next 50 years

    typically

    i think there’s some real potential

    there

    again because it’s so fast yeah

    we’re in colorado so we can totally talk

    about it yeah yeah totally this is uh we

    just garnered a whole news i think

    denver was the first time

    right yeah denver with the suicide then

    yeah

    it just went up by thousands yeah well

    the thing i love about the the idea i

    again the proof is in the pudding

    i’m like show me you know i’m a

    researcher but the thing i love about

    the idea of it

    is this is a drug that supercharges

    psychotherapy

    this is not a replacement for therapy

    right this is not a replacement

    for gaining insight and gaining

    better connections with the people that

    matter to you gaining a greater sense of

    purpose in your life this is a

    supercharged catalyst for getting to

    that place that we all want to be for

    living our best life

    and

    i’m like hey if this can actually

    deliver the goods

    this could be a game changer yeah and i

    think it’s i like though that i mean the

    cure to depression is not to go use

    mushrooms like that’s exactly yeah

    for sure that’s that’s the opposite

    that’s the that’s the take-home message

    don’t try this at home boys and girls

    right um but it’s a tool it’s a tool

    but it’s it like any tool it has it has

    great potential for good or not sure it

    can be harmful right there are people

    that go on mushroom trips that get very

    disoriented very dissociated they get to

    a very scary place they freak out they

    have pan and it’s that’s the start of

    their panic disorder right now they’re

    freaking out and panicking a lot

    that was the genesis of it

    um so it’s like we gotta we gotta

    respect it it’s powerful

    but in the hands of a skilled guide i

    think maybe

    there’s potential for some real

    breakthrough for some patients it’s not

    going to work for everyone it’s not

    going to be for everyone but maybe for

    some yeah and it’s just one tool right

    just one

    you can’t build a house with just a

    hammer you can’t and um

    you and i are both big advocates of

    let’s do all the things yeah right let’s

    let’s take down the web of depression

    with all kinds of pebbles and stones and

    rocks and

    hammers and you know whatever

    but occasionally we get lucky

    with somebody and it’s like you know

    some people with winter onset depression

    we can cure it with light only

    some patients who are like their

    rumination is just so centered around

    this one painful thing and we can cure

    the rumination we can bring down the

    whole web

    just

    some patients they start exercising

    and that’s curative for them it’s not

    many but it i mean it does happen you

    know what i mean so it’s like we don’t

    want to invalidate like

    some people it’s like we hit that one

    connective thread on the whole web comes

    down

    but the thing that hits it will be it’s

    like 20 different possibilities

    most of us are going to require like

    multiple things we’ve got to do all the

    things to really bring it down yeah and

    that’s what peaks is all about yeah and

    especially for long-term remission

    exactly that’s right too and so

    all right so now we have these beautiful

    potential things like psilocybin that

    can really increase or speed this up uh

    we have some sleep deformation along

    with some other things that might be

    able to really speed up carnitine yeah

    and bright light and now we’re in this

    moment where the individual okay i’m

    starting to experience some relief and

    then we’re back to this ruminating sort

    of feature right and this is where i

    think psychotherapy comes in a big way i

    think cognitive behavioral therapy

    is one of the things that at least i’ve

    read a lot in my googling of the world

    but i’m a very poor googler at times so

    is that the only thing or no what else

    cbt you know that i like it’s a great

    insight cbt the core think about what is

    the core of cognitive behavior therapy

    it’s i’m going to

    change my reaction to things

    by

    basically learning in real time to

    notice how i’m interpreting the flow of

    experience what are my interpretations

    what are my automatic thoughts

    and then how can i challenge them how

    can i gather evidence how can i have a

    different interpretation how can i see

    how i’m biased and maybe very negatively

    biased right so that’s that’s the

    technology of cbt it is anti-ruminative

    for sure

    patients who get really good at that

    cognitive reframing

    they utilize it when they’re ruminating

    and so it becomes functionally an

    anti-ruminative technology

    but there are lots of other things that

    are anti-ruminative

    i think for most patients just learning

    to notice mindfully to be very mindful

    meta attentionally aware like what am i

    aware of right now what am i paying

    attention to

    oh i’m ruminating huh i caught it in

    real time most patients who ruminate

    don’t even notice it’s like when you

    drive a very familiar route and you pull

    into the driveway you know how the hell

    did i just like i don’t even remember

    were there stop signs were there other

    did i were there pedestrians did i hit

    anything did i just it’s not just me

    i do that in very unfamiliar routes

    your mileage may vary but but most of us

    like when was over learned you know

    you tie your shoes and you’re like i

    don’t know what the steps were but when

    you’re learning you do it very you know

    mindfully right

    a lot of our life is lived on autopilot

    unmindfully we ruminate unmindfully on

    autopilot when we when we learn to slow

    it down

    and be mindful

    throughout the day oh god i’m doing it

    again i’m ruminating

    so now i’ve caught it

    and i’m going to decide to stop it

    that’s

    more than half the battle but it’s like

    okay now i’m going to stop it what am i

    going to do

    all it takes is something absorbing to

    redirect your attention to

    it could be good absorbing or bad

    absorbing right it could be

    a behavioral addiction right it could be

    oh i’m gonna play video games for the

    next eight hours well that’s

    anti-ruminative

    not particularly instructive but it

    might be better than depressive

    rumination

    right it might be if we’re in a harm

    harm reduction model yeah right it’s

    like oh

    okay somebody’s depressed because

    they’re ruminating

    well if they go play video games for an

    hour to break the bout of rumination

    it’s not great but it’s probably pretty

    benign right oh i’m gonna binge watch

    netflix for two hours

    it’s not great but it’s pretty benign

    you with me

    but then

    maybe you know better anti-ruminative

    absorbing things like what well

    shared activity with a friend shared

    activity with a loved one

    taking my dog for a walk

    um

    you know something where i’m connecting

    and belonging something where i feel

    purpose something where i feel

    you know like like a part of the tribe

    and then finally i would say something

    generative

    that’s like apex level i would say for i

    have to be in a good space for this but

    like oh i’m gonna go noodle around on

    the piano or the guitar and try to write

    a song like i’ve had this like four

    ideas for it’s like i got this song but

    like there’s no bridge

    like i’ll noodle on that for a while you

    know

    and that’s really anti-ruminative for me

    it’s like i get so caught up in it like

    but i have to be in a pretty good head

    space for that right like some

    anti-ruminant anti-ruminative activity

    is like break glass in case of emergency

    like oh i’m just gonna go for the big

    gun i’m gonna go for the video game i’m

    gonna go for the the binge watch

    right

    and some is more like oh if i’m in a

    better place like i can enjoy my

    friend’s company if i’m in a better

    place oh i can

    um just be alone in nature and that’s

    anti-root i can get absorbed and lost in

    nature but if i’m not in a good space i

    might ruminate while i’m lost in nature

    you see it so we got to be nimble we got

    to be nuanced but that’s really fun

    clinical work and i hope patients i hope

    prospective patients their families as

    they hear this they can think about oh

    wait there’s like detective work there’s

    like trial and error there’s like yeah

    we’re going to fine-tune

    if we’re going to help break the

    rumination habit

    the rumination addiction as it were

    we’re going to have to be doing

    personalized medicine we’re going to

    have to be

    fine-tuning what’s going to work for

    this individual at this point in their

    journey

    because early on in the journey they’re

    going to need lots of really really

    really high high high engagement stuff

    and as they get further along

    they’ll be able to do higher level

    you know like oh i’m going to you know

    just get absorbed in nature i’m gonna do

    some mindful meditation i’m gonna

    you know just connect with my friend

    that makes sense yeah absolutely i you

    know for me it makes

    especially i can think of an individual

    session with a patient like that and

    being able to roll through these things

    in real time one-on-one let’s think

    about this so you’re dissociating are

    you ruining it you know we can capture

    things the the challenge of our industry

    is that to provide this acute level of

    care and promise is that the downward

    pressure from the insurance lens is to

    do this for four to six hours in a group

    setting depending on the level of care

    and

    which doesn’t seem like a great tea up

    for a depressed patient also it seems

    like an environment where rumination can

    just go wildly out of control because

    once it’s done once we’re done talking

    about the topic in relation to ship to

    me it feels like i can be wildly

    distracted within the room and so

    there’s a way to manage that though okay

    i so so i where i’m going absolutely

    yeah so i’ve done depression groups okay

    with typically eight depressed often

    severely depressed patients

    that all have this rumination habit and

    we’re now like having a session where

    we’re going to focus on rumination

    so the first session it’s a lot of

    psycho-education it’s a lot of like

    equipping here are the tools here’s

    here’s what it is here are the steps

    here’s how you you know here’s some

    strategies now let’s brainstorm not

    let’s ruminate out loud together let’s

    brainstorm

    what has worked for you

    in your whole life whenever you found

    yourself ruminating what had what have

    been some of the things that have worked

    to stop it

    or and or

    what would you imagine

    could be a big enough gun that you could

    pull out

    break glass in case of emergency that

    would allow you to interrupt an episode

    of rumination about a rumination

    let’s compare notes let’s brainstorm

    together that’s fine that’s creative and

    that’s not sparking rumination we’re not

    co-ruminating

    we’re collaborating we’re you know we’re

    we’re just brainstorming together then

    we come back

    we have an assignment

    start tracking

    start noticing when you’re what are your

    high risk rumination times let’s compare

    notes on that when are you likely to

    ruminate when are you more protected

    and then

    what did you practice did you are you

    are you having trouble noticing when

    you’re ruminating in real time what

    would help with that

    ooh maybe some mindful training ooh

    maybe use an app that will just

    periodically just interrupt you

    randomly and ask you hey what are you

    doing what are you doing right now are

    you ruminating you know what’s the

    setting and so

    it’s like this can be a really

    collaborative process where patients

    validate each other

    and strategize together

    and

    all the whole time not co-ruminating not

    sparking each other

    on the relationship because we really

    want to avoid that you’re absolutely

    right yeah we don’t want to let that

    spiral out of control yeah but it

    doesn’t have to in my experience it

    doesn’t yeah

    yeah it takes a good clinician because

    it it

    it doesn’t necessarily go toward health

    like yola might tell us like sometimes

    you have to provide some of that spark

    and direction i think oh absolutely yeah

    and and you know you have to be willing

    to be directive as a therapist to say

    wait i’m just i’m gonna stop right now i

    hope you know i just

    you know i in fact i wanna i want us to

    have a chance to talk about this

    after

    but remember you know our goal was that

    we’re not going to be ruminating out

    loud together and this feels like it

    could go down that that path would it be

    okay with you if we just you know and so

    gently validate but like redirect and

    just be like no we’re pumping the brakes

    right now like we’re just not going to

    let it go because why because as a

    clinician in a group i have a

    responsibility to everybody else present

    i need to keep them safe

    you know and it’s not going to be safe

    for them to hear about this person

    ruminating about their trauma that you

    know it’s like

    no i’m going to protect them right right

    now

    but that’s not hard i mean no

    it’s not rocket science really

    no it i mean it’s

    especially describe it it’s just fairly

    obvious exactly

    and just brainstorming ways to interrupt

    that i think it makes sense yeah and and

    i feel like most patients really enjoy

    that process

    inviting them into the process of

    discovery like hey this is fun this is

    creative like we’re gonna

    and it’s it’s it’s personal it’s like

    right we’re gonna fine-tune it we’re

    gonna discover what works for you and

    what works for you is not gonna be what

    works for me and vice versa

    it’s like

    it’s anti-ruminative for me to pour over

    a sheet of nba box scores

    because i’m a basketball junkie

    yeah

    my name is steve i’m a hoopaholic

    [Laughter]

    um

    my wife passes by me on my ipad and

    she’s like it’s just numbers

    what the hell are you i’m like

    oh honey no you have no idea this is

    like so exciting

    it’s like it’s numbers

    i’m like yeah i know isn’t it so anyway

    it’s so it would not work for her right

    but works for me

    interesting i like that there’s that

    that moment of discovery that very it’s

    individualized it’s unique it’s

    it feels special and it feels active

    right like there’s um

    this component of

    being a part of your own

    answer right like exactly part of your

    own cure

    absolutely and actually being able to

    just by

    um becoming more aware of what you

    actually do like to engage in is is part

    of the process of taking you out of the

    things that keep you away from them so i

    like that and then so what the next step

    then would

    would be what to to practice that to

    actually put that into action

    yeah and just to treat it as a kind of

    and i use i i have to be careful with

    addiction as a as a metaphor rather than

    a real thing i mean there are real

    behavioral addictions yeah obviously

    gambling addiction is

    by far the most

    probably treacherous but there are lots

    of other rivals

    i think rumination is a kind of soft

    addiction it’s it’s it’s a it’s a very

    toxic habit how about that

    and it’s seductive and alluring as a

    habit which makes it kind of

    adjacent to addiction

    and i think when patients are willing to

    be vulnerable with each other and share

    their journeys but cheerlead for each

    other it’s beautiful because now they

    feel like

    they’re useful they’re providing support

    to you know and

    my favorite moments as a clinician have

    always been

    watching patients

    step up for other patients

    and be part of the healing journey for

    their fellow travelers

    and i’m just there soaking it in maybe

    facilitating a little bit sure but

    honestly just feeling privileged to be a

    part of that like you know

    um so much of the magic of a group when

    it when it goes well

    is patients are able to discover that

    they have their own latent healing sure

    talents that they can share with each

    other yeah the less you talk the better

    yes yeah as a clinician and you get the

    magic of the millions absolutely

    yeah and and

    it it it’s really humbling absolutely to

    watch

    patients have insight into each other’s

    journey that i don’t have

    and

    it’s like oh yeah this is the way it’s

    supposed to but but see that’s why i

    love doing depression groups

    because when people are depressed they

    don’t want to be in a group when people

    are depressed they want to just crawl

    into a cave crawl into a hole

    and they feel like nobody gets me

    nobody and i’m gonna be a bummer and i’m

    gonna be a downer and you know and

    people are just gonna tell me stupid

    [ __ ] like just cheer up or snap out of

    it or you know but then they’re in a

    group with other depressed patients and

    they’re like oh these people get it like

    they get i don’t have to explain myself

    to them

    and then it’s like well but i’m afraid

    they’re going to bring me down and i’m

    going to bring them down and then it’s

    like

    no there’s enough structure here to like

    there’s there’s safety here

    and then

    they tap into their own ability to like

    encourage each other and and

    i don’t know it’s just it’s really

    magical when it works

    so

    well

    i love this and i know we could go on

    and on and we could break out some

    chalmers philosophy problems of

    consciousness i’m here for it

    on the next episode

    idealism

    viable solutions to the conundrum of the

    mind body problem tune in next time

    is every

    particle of the universe

    conscious yeah tune in next the

    hand psychism on the scrabble board here

    we go yeah you will steal the night yeah

    oh the scrabble board yeah between pan

    psychism and zyprexa you’ve got it

    covered

    well on our way out last time i nearly

    stole some of your thunder and would

    like to hear what you’re doing in the

    background and what you would like to

    promote here with us at this time your

    podcast okay yeah so super super quick

    um i’ve dipped my toes in the water with

    this brilliant irish writer his name is

    hugh james

    he’s my like polar opposite in all the

    best ways so i’m old he’s young he’s 27.

    i’m a scientist he’s a poet

    i’m an american he’s irish he’s cool

    he’s got a great accent and we’re doing

    this show together called

    mental health what what a creative title

    mental health wow with steve allardy and

    hugh james and so we we’ve we’ve got

    great chemistry somehow we and it’s

    weird because we’re so

    such an odd couple but like so different

    that it works

    and we we both like to laugh and we make

    each other laugh which is really so

    we’re tackling

    like these crazy dark

    like dark sober difficult challenging

    topics with humor with humility with

    curiosity and um

    we have a lot of fun so that’s our show

    it’s called mental health with so you

    can find it mental by the way if you

    just type mental health into your

    podcast search thing no you’re not going

    to find it because they’re a million

    million you’re like mental health and

    type illardie i la rdi you’re golden

    you’ll find it

    um

    we have a youtube channel that goes

    along with it we have a oh website

    mental health dot fm and if you go to

    mental health that’s our url mental

    health dot fm

    you will find all the things and we’re

    growing it and we’re excited about it

    and you know it’s a long shot but but

    we’ve already got a little

    uh faithful band of you know audience

    that seemed to really value it i think

    it’s my mom and like

    like

    q’s mom and maybe like three former

    students or something but that’s how it

    starts yeah you know great demographic

    yeah create the movement yeah the

    monster the mom and your reviews are

    always a hundred percent with money so

    we we have a patreon

    my mom because our first patron is

    awesome

    is there uh on on top of that uh work

    that you’re doing there uh can we dangle

    a carrot around the depression cure and

    update oh yeah yeah so so my publisher

    has contacted me there is going to be a

    revised and expanded uh second edition

    of the depression cure which i’m really

    excited about because

    a lot’s happened um in the last decade

    and lots of cool stuff i want to share

    scientific stuff as well as just

    clinical stuff as well so

    yeah awesome

    beautiful

    thank you so grateful for your work um

    such an important topic uh to be

    discussing overall to share with the

    public and the viewers of finding peaks

    in your podcast and all through the

    depression care and everything that

    we’re doing

    uh just greatly appreciate your time for

    coming

    listen man this is an honor it’s a

    privilege i

    i feel so lucky to be so old

    and so

    i’m 58 okay

    and to be able to hang out with young

    talented folks like you guys that are

    like

    keeping me in the game keeping me

    excited and passionate and youthful and

    god my hope is like we’ll be doing this

    not this but you know still doing cool

    stuff

    in a decade and a decade beyond that and

    um

    i feel like the key to healthy aging

    more than anything else successful aging

    is staying in the game yeah

    staying in the game staying challenged

    physically staying challenged mentally

    feeling like you matter feeling like

    you’re making a contribution no matter

    and there’s no contribution that’s too

    small like we talked about earlier today

    like you could be flipping burgers but

    if you’re bringing some little bit of

    joy and light and and and compassion and

    humanity it’s like that can change the

    world somebody’s world so and we need

    you in the game yeah oh yeah absolutely

    thank you well i i i’m

    i’m loving the ride so much i just you

    know just with gratitude

    um

    it’s just all about the gratitude yeah

    so as we were doing this morning can i

    get an amen

    brother yeah totally all right well

    beautiful awesome finding peaks at

    peaksrecovery.com

    clint’s looking at me like i do the box

    thing yeah we’re just gonna put that out

    yeah i know we got the talents yeah

    we got chris burns president founder on

    the tick tock follow us on tick tock the

    other social medias uh the twitter the

    facebook the instagram

    all of that and jason’s gonna be like in

    the hosting chair at some point and

    jason is next in the hosting seat so he

    will be tuned in he will be improved

    from his pride

    a lot of learning here yeah a lot of

    [ __ ] going on love you guys love all the

    viewers out there thanks for

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    Finding PeaksBy Peaks Recovery Centers

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