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You know that thing where you learn a skill in class, you can explain it to someone else, and then you get into a scene and your brain does the old thing anyway? This episode is about why that happens and what to do about it. Your brain runs on pathways, and the ones you've reinforced the most fire first under pressure. Understanding a concept intellectually doesn't change the pathway on its own, which is why a single workshop or class series on a skill often doesn't stick.
The good news is those pathways can change. Neuroplasticity, my friend!
Drawing on Olympian Eileen Gu's approach to neuroplasticity and metacognition, this episode breaks down how repeated, focused practice on a single skill can start to compete with your old defaults. For neurodivergent brains, this is both encouraging (your current defaults aren't necessarily permanent) and sometimes frustrating (executive function challenges can make sustained practice harder to maintain). The exercise this week is designed to give you a high volume of reps on one specific habit, with a solo modification you can adapt to conversations in your everyday life.
KEY TAKEAWAYS:
CHAPTERS:
00:00 Why your brain defaults to old habits under pressure
01:16 How brain pathways work and why the most reinforced one fires first
02:36 Eileen Gu on neuroplasticity and tinkering like a scientist
03:35 Applying this to your improv practice
04:05 Why understanding a concept doesn't change the pathway on its own
05:51 What this means for neurodivergent brains
06:36 Nervous system regulation as a prerequisite for building new defaults
08:28 Exercise: Stop That Move (partner version with coach)
12:31 Solo modification: recording yourself and practising in everyday conversations
RESOURCES and RELATED EPISODES:
Download the Free Post-Show Reflection Guide: Sent to your inbox when you subscribe to either newsletter (and added to the footer to each message if you're already subscribed).
NEW! Comprehensive guides all about getting notes as a student, or giving them as a teacher. Two guides, big discount if you get both! https://improvupdate.com/notes
Get a booklet with six exercises to help you get reps in challenging scenes called "Exercises to Ruin You"
Get more downloadable booklets here: https://improvupdate.com/downloads
Review the showPlease consider leaving a review wherever you review podcasts. Don't know where? Here are some options.
Apple Podcasts | Podchaser
It helps out! Thanks!
Support the showThis podcast was created, written, and is hosted by Jen deHaan. Jen has certifications related to healthy communities (Tufts University Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy), nervous system regulation and soon teacher training certification on community resilience. She has a BFA in teaching creative arts to adults. You can find her full bio here.
This episode was and edited and produced by StereoForest.com.
This podcast was made in British Columbia, Canada by StereoForest Podcasts.
Mentioned in this episode:
Wired Divergent
Find the new show wherever you get podcasts, like this one, or at https://jendehaan.com/wired-divergent
By Jen deHaanYou know that thing where you learn a skill in class, you can explain it to someone else, and then you get into a scene and your brain does the old thing anyway? This episode is about why that happens and what to do about it. Your brain runs on pathways, and the ones you've reinforced the most fire first under pressure. Understanding a concept intellectually doesn't change the pathway on its own, which is why a single workshop or class series on a skill often doesn't stick.
The good news is those pathways can change. Neuroplasticity, my friend!
Drawing on Olympian Eileen Gu's approach to neuroplasticity and metacognition, this episode breaks down how repeated, focused practice on a single skill can start to compete with your old defaults. For neurodivergent brains, this is both encouraging (your current defaults aren't necessarily permanent) and sometimes frustrating (executive function challenges can make sustained practice harder to maintain). The exercise this week is designed to give you a high volume of reps on one specific habit, with a solo modification you can adapt to conversations in your everyday life.
KEY TAKEAWAYS:
CHAPTERS:
00:00 Why your brain defaults to old habits under pressure
01:16 How brain pathways work and why the most reinforced one fires first
02:36 Eileen Gu on neuroplasticity and tinkering like a scientist
03:35 Applying this to your improv practice
04:05 Why understanding a concept doesn't change the pathway on its own
05:51 What this means for neurodivergent brains
06:36 Nervous system regulation as a prerequisite for building new defaults
08:28 Exercise: Stop That Move (partner version with coach)
12:31 Solo modification: recording yourself and practising in everyday conversations
RESOURCES and RELATED EPISODES:
Download the Free Post-Show Reflection Guide: Sent to your inbox when you subscribe to either newsletter (and added to the footer to each message if you're already subscribed).
NEW! Comprehensive guides all about getting notes as a student, or giving them as a teacher. Two guides, big discount if you get both! https://improvupdate.com/notes
Get a booklet with six exercises to help you get reps in challenging scenes called "Exercises to Ruin You"
Get more downloadable booklets here: https://improvupdate.com/downloads
Review the showPlease consider leaving a review wherever you review podcasts. Don't know where? Here are some options.
Apple Podcasts | Podchaser
It helps out! Thanks!
Support the showThis podcast was created, written, and is hosted by Jen deHaan. Jen has certifications related to healthy communities (Tufts University Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy), nervous system regulation and soon teacher training certification on community resilience. She has a BFA in teaching creative arts to adults. You can find her full bio here.
This episode was and edited and produced by StereoForest.com.
This podcast was made in British Columbia, Canada by StereoForest Podcasts.
Mentioned in this episode:
Wired Divergent
Find the new show wherever you get podcasts, like this one, or at https://jendehaan.com/wired-divergent