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Ever feel like your brain’s been hijacked by a stress gremlin with a penchant for demolition? In this visceral deep-dive, neuroscientist Jacquelyn Cuyler unpacks how trauma doesn’t just haunt your memories—it physically remodels your brain, shrinking critical regions like a sweater in a boil wash. Backed by chilling studies (Duke, 2024; Neuropharmacology, 2012), she reveals how chronic stress downgrades your mental hardware—turning your prefrontal cortex into a studio apartment and your hippocampus into a library after a riot. But here’s the twist: your brain isn’t doomed. From van der Kolk’s The Body Keeps the Score to defiant park bench rebellions, this episode maps the escape route from trauma’s cage—proving connection (even silent, even small) can rebuild what stress tore down.
Then, a brutal mea culpa: millennials had the tools—the internet, the megaphones—but traded real change for digital noise. In "Dropped the Ball?", Cuyler challenges Gen Z: Do better. Use tech as a scalpel, not a crutch. Call out the "jokes," reach for the drowning, and remember—knowledge without action is just poison in a TED Talk wrapper. Ends with a rallying cry: Namaste, bitches. Healing isn’t pretty, but it’s possible.
Trigger Warning: Contains frank talk about trauma, dark humor, and a cameo from your amygdala’s panic button.
By Jacquelyn CuylerEver feel like your brain’s been hijacked by a stress gremlin with a penchant for demolition? In this visceral deep-dive, neuroscientist Jacquelyn Cuyler unpacks how trauma doesn’t just haunt your memories—it physically remodels your brain, shrinking critical regions like a sweater in a boil wash. Backed by chilling studies (Duke, 2024; Neuropharmacology, 2012), she reveals how chronic stress downgrades your mental hardware—turning your prefrontal cortex into a studio apartment and your hippocampus into a library after a riot. But here’s the twist: your brain isn’t doomed. From van der Kolk’s The Body Keeps the Score to defiant park bench rebellions, this episode maps the escape route from trauma’s cage—proving connection (even silent, even small) can rebuild what stress tore down.
Then, a brutal mea culpa: millennials had the tools—the internet, the megaphones—but traded real change for digital noise. In "Dropped the Ball?", Cuyler challenges Gen Z: Do better. Use tech as a scalpel, not a crutch. Call out the "jokes," reach for the drowning, and remember—knowledge without action is just poison in a TED Talk wrapper. Ends with a rallying cry: Namaste, bitches. Healing isn’t pretty, but it’s possible.
Trigger Warning: Contains frank talk about trauma, dark humor, and a cameo from your amygdala’s panic button.