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Susan Magsamen

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3 Takeaways

This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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I'd be happy to. You know the transformative power of art. You've gotten lost in music, in a painting, in a movie or a play, and you felt something shift within you. You've read a book so compelling that you press it into the hands of a friend. You heard a song so moving. You listen to it over and over, memorizing every word. The arts bring joy, inspiration, well-being.

3 Takeaways

This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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I will say with music, if you're a beholder of music, we see tremendous brain activity in all different lobes of the brain. And we also see a synchronicity between listeners that are listening together. So one of the things about music in particular is that we see that there is this ability to be able to be in union with each other.

3 Takeaways

This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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And we see that at concerts where people are kind of moving together. But there is an amazing opportunity for social cohesion when you're thinking about being together and experiencing music with each other. And we also see this idea around awe and possibility emerge when you're listening to something that is activating neurotransmitters that are hopeful.

3 Takeaways

This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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Not all music, not all arts make us feel good. And so this is why I say context matters. If you're in a prison and music is being played nonstop to keep you awake or to agitate you, that dissonance is also going to be something that is affecting your neurophysiology. And so I think we have to really think about the power of these different kinds of arts and to what purpose and to what impact.

3 Takeaways

This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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In the 60s, there was a researcher named Marian Diamond who did the first experiments around enriched environments. What she did was create three conditions. The first was an enriched environment that had novelty and surprise and things changed. They were places for curiosity. The middle was kind of a status quo environment.

3 Takeaways

This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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The third was an impoverished environment where there was very little to rest on or to gain attention. And these three environments were created for rats. So she put the rats in these different conditions for just two weeks. And after that period of time, the rats were sacrificed. And what she saw was that in the enriched environments, the brains of the rats grew.

3 Takeaways

This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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They actually got larger, which is extraordinary. The synapses were stronger, but the mass, the physical mass of the brain got bigger. In the status quo environments, nothing really changed in the rats. But sadly, in the impoverished environments, the brains got smaller and there were less connections.

3 Takeaways

This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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And so this work in those days was shared and initially it was shared with other scientists with disbelief, like no one believed that the brain could change. This was the the first experiment on neuroplasticity. People thought that you're kind of born with a certain amount of connections and they maybe grow when you're young, but then they stop.

3 Takeaways

This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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And what we saw was that environments change the brain. They change it in profound ways. And now those experiments are being done non-invasively and in human subjects. And we're seeing, in fact, that that's true, that enriched environments matter.

3 Takeaways

This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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And so how those environments are created and how you have agency over your environments are really important, whether it's light or smell or temperature, novelty, as I mentioned, really thinking about what are those spaces for you? What do you need those spaces to do? I think sound is one that's also incredibly important. And how does that sound really change your neurophysiology?

3 Takeaways

This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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And how can you moderate that and begin to create those environments that really support what you need, regardless of where you are?

3 Takeaways

This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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I think the ultimate enriched environment is unique to each of us. That's why it's really important to know your physiology and to be able to feel that somatic sensory systems in us.

3 Takeaways

This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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People often say, what do I need to do to have this use of the arts? Should I paint? Should I draw? Should I dance? And what we really thought a lot about was what are the ingredients that you need? in order to move in the world, thinking about this idea of aesthetics and the arts.

3 Takeaways

This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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The first one is curiosity, and that's really having an open mind, looking around the corner, really lifting your head up from your phone, being curious about the world. The second is playful exploration, and that is around not having to have an answer. not having to have a conclusion, not having to have finished making something, but just to explore.

3 Takeaways

This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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And it turns out that that's very hard for us in a world that looks for production and looks for outcomes. And then the third is this idea around sensory exploration. So feeling, looking, smelling, touching, just being more engaged in those sensory experiences that felt, sensed. And the last is being intentional about making and beholding.

3 Takeaways

This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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So this idea about being a maker and a beholder in an intentional way. So it's those four things that make up the aesthetic mindset.

3 Takeaways

This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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An aesthetic mindset with those kind of ingredients, with those sensibilities, it's really an adventure. It's really a journey. And it doesn't mean that you're always gonna be happy because journeys have darkness and they have worry and they have curiosity and they have joy and they have all of the emotions. There's some researchers now that say we have over 30,000 different feelings and emotions.

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This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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So it's gonna be different for each of us, but waking up to the sunlight, taking a shower where you're humming in the shower and you're activating your vagus nerves, but you're also activating the over 4 million touch receptors on your skin.

3 Takeaways

This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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So you're literally waking up your skin, making tea or coffee and slowly waking up to the smell of breakfast, being able to think about what it is you're wearing that day and why you're choosing to wear that. Going throughout the day, thinking about what the spaces are around you. You know, if you're working in a space, do you need light? Do you need natural light? Are you taking a walk?

3 Takeaways

This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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And just really allowing your nervous system to regulate based on our natural world. And, you know, our natural world is the most aesthetic place. You may decide that you want to dance at the end of the day, that you want to put on some music and dance with or without somebody.

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This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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And then even thinking about as you create your rituals for bedtime, what are those sensorial things that are helpful for you? How do you dim your lights? Do you listen to music? These are all moments that are woven throughout our days. And I think if you take care of the moments, the years take care of themselves.

3 Takeaways

This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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I think they're different pillars. I think we have forgotten that the arts and aesthetics are essential pillars. or being human, like exercise and nutrition and good sleep patterns and habits. And I think without the arts and aesthetic experiences, I don't think we will heal, grow, or thrive.

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This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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And we saw that in COVID, where what was missed, people could exercise, people could eat well, and people could sleep. We saw an increase in arts and and aesthetic experiences during COVID because people were missing something. They were missing this need to express what they didn't understand, this need to express grief and pain and fear and lack of connection.

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This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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And so I think it is absolutely a component of humanity that for many reasons had been sidelined. The scientific revolution, the age of reason basically said, oh, Creative expression, the arts are not important. What's important is logic and reason. And we started to devalue this creative expression, this knowing, this way that we understood the world and ourselves and we're healthy, right?

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This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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We really created health. and well-being, we started to lose that because it didn't have societal value. If you look in the United States and you look at the way the arts have been literally gutted out of schools, and this has been going on since the 70s, we don't value the arts. And I think as a result, that actually has affected things like sleep, has affected things like nutrition, you know,

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This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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Culinary arts are an art. You know, they're an art form. Good food is a kind of art. And so I think we need to really start to think about how we weave these things together that make us whole.

3 Takeaways

This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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Yes, I am. I think those things are incredibly important and they're not hard to do. This is not more in your day. This is not add something else to your already overloaded schedule and cognitive load. It's saying little things make a difference as simple as making a cup of tea.

3 Takeaways

This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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Just acknowledging the water in your shower of beginning to see where you actually are a maker, this idea of intention and not about being perfect, but beginning to start to change the way you see what you're already doing and layering in that will make a huge difference.

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This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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Yes, this is my favorite quote in the book. The world is full of magic things, patiently waiting for our senses to grow sharper.

3 Takeaways

This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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The first is we have proof that the arts and aesthetic experiences change our brains, our bodies and behavior. Number two is there is an art for that. And what I mean by that is that if you are experiencing health issues around dementia or family members are, if you are stressed and you're feeling caught inside your body, dance.

3 Takeaways

This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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If you're feeling overwhelmed and you don't know what you feel or what's happening, write poetry. Write it down. Creative expression will help you understand what at that moment you can't find words for. And then the third is change your lens and change your life.

3 Takeaways

This Is Your Brain on Beauty — And It's Powerful (#252)

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When you are intentional and you see that these arts and aesthetic experiences are all around you and you become more present and you feel your way through your life, everything changes. And that's at an individual level, at a family level, at a community level, and I would say at a societal level.