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Today on Something You Should Know, how you hold your shoulders tells people a lot about you. Then things you never knew about pets, dogs, cats, hamsters, and I bet you never knew this about goldfish. A goldfish that has everything that it needs can live to be about 20 years old. And they eat everything and they disrupt a lot. So now goldfish are ranked as one of the most destructive invasive species on the planet.
Also, is it true people with big heads are smarter? And why you should plan your work around your brain, because your brain is on a schedule. We know that creative work seems to be much better if it is undertaken first thing in the morning and last thing at night, whereas the peak zones for focus actually happen slightly later in the morning. All this today on Something You Should Know.
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Hi and welcome and let's start today with a quick posture check.
How are you holding yourself? Because you see, when someone sees you slouching, you're sending a bad message. People with depression often slouch their shoulders. It's a good idea to be aware of how you hold your upper body. When people see broad, straight shoulders, they're likely to read that as strength and confidence. When they see someone slouching, it sends the opposite message.
Interestingly, a study showed that if you deliberately sit up straight, it can actually make you feel more proud after a success, increase your persistence at an unsolvable task, and make you feel more confident in your thoughts. It also seems that good posture can make you feel more alert and enthusiastic, less fearful, and give you higher self-esteem after a stressful task. And that is something you should know.
Two-thirds of U.S. households have at least one pet living in that household. Cats, dogs, hamsters, turtles, birds, fish, and who knows what else.
And while we pet owners like to think we understand our animals pretty well, there is much more, I suspect, that you don't know, things you've always wondered about. And that is why Eleanor Spicer Rice is here. She is an entomologist and author of many nonfiction books, one of which is called Your Pets' Secret Lives, The Truth Behind Your Pets' Wildest Behaviors. Hi, Eleanor. Welcome to Something You Should Know. Hi, Mike. Thank you so much. I'm so happy to be here.
And so let me first ask you about the science behind all this. Because, you know, people say, oh, you know, when your cat does this or your dog's tail does that. And I don't know if they know what they're talking about. And how would anybody know what they're talking about? Is this real science? Yes, it is. What I did was I took our most kept pets in the United States, North America, and
And I went to the peer-reviewed journal articles and I found the studies that were absolutely the most jaw-dropping studies to me, the ones that I didn't know. And then I had a researcher go with me and we verified that these studies are solid and that they make sense statistically and all of that.
So let's start with something really fascinating and let's pick dogs since that's the most popular pet. Something so amazing about dogs that I probably don't know. There's some things about dogs that I've noticed before, but I just did not think that there was a reason for why they were doing it. And one of the things that was just amazing to me was that when they go to the bathroom outside, when they go number two, when your dog goes to the bathroom, do you watch it spin around?
kind of go one way and go the other way and then kind of stop yeah yeah so i just thought that was a random funny little thing that a dog was doing just to put himself in position to go to the bathroom but it turns out that what's actually happening is that the dog is aligning its body with the north south axis of earth's electromagnetic field no way
It's real. And the thing is that we've often, we've thought, we've heard these wild stories of dogs coming home from long distances and over places that they'd never been before. You know, there was this dog in the 1920s, Bobby the Wonder Dog, who got left in Indiana on vacation and had to go 2,500 miles to get to Oregon to get home over land that Bobby had never been over before. And that's, nobody could figure out how,
the dog could get from one place to the other. And people thought that one of the things that dogs could use is our select your magnetic field to help orient them, like give them a directional sense. And a lot of animals can detect the field. Cows can, deer can, hammerhead sharks, lots of birds. So, but humans cannot. And one of the ways that we figured out that dogs are able to detect the field is because when they go to the bathroom,
animals who can detect the field when they're resting or when they're relaxing in some way feel more comfortable aligned with Earth's north-south axis. So if you drive by a cow pasture, for example, and everything's calm and everything's normal inside, you often see the cows are facing the same way. And if you watch to see which way they're facing, it's usually north to south or south to north.
And that's the same thing for dogs when they stop to go to the bathroom. I have a little dog, Nature Boy. He's very, very short. He's compact. And it's so fun to me to watch him now because I would say probably more than nine times out of ten,
If it's not an emergency, he always stops north to south or south to north when he is going to the bathroom. So my dog, when she goes to the bathroom, what I find interesting is like she's like all ready to go and then decides, no, no, not here. Let's try over there. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. Let's go. Oh, yeah. Why are they so picky?
It's a big decision for where they need to go to the bathroom because they're leaving a lot of information in their bathrooms. So with number two, they're saying they are saying this is me. This is where I am. And this is my area. This is my hood.
And with number one, what they're saying, they actually say a whole bunch. Urine can tell the other dog's sex, whether it's receptive to a mate, if it's a familiar dog, how big the other dog is, you know. Oh, and something about that with urine anyway is that small dogs, like my dog Nature Boy, when they're going to the bathroom, they actually aim higher than large dogs do when they pee.
And researchers believe that it's because they want to make the other dogs think that they're actually bigger. So it's like wearing platform shoes. So your dog is very picky about how they want to spread the message of their presence in the area. But when they do go to the bathroom, they're giving a lot of information away. So I get that dogs are leaving information when they go to the bathroom.
But what I don't really understand is why other dogs find it so fascinating. My dog, and I've seen plenty of other dogs do this, where they'll go up to the rock or the fire hydrant or the tree or the phone pole that every other dog pees on and just sniff away like it's so... Why is it so interesting?
That is what they are getting all of the news in the neighborhood. So all of that information that we just talked about that they have been handed is
All of that information changes on a daily basis. The dogs who show up at different places come at different times of day. Some dogs are receptive to mates at different times of the year. And so they're picking up every single bit of news that they possibly can.
I want to move on to other animals, but one more dog question, because my dog does this, and I know some other dogs do. And if you're a dog owner of a female dog, you probably would like to know this. My dog, who is female, humps. You know, she'll hump on somebody's arm. And I've always thought of that as a male behavior. I don't understand why a female dog would do that.
Well, actually, it's both. Both sexes will hump people because it can be like a self-soothing thing for dogs to hump people. They're asking you to pay attention to them. They're relieving their stress. They're they're doing that kind of stuff. They're not trying to be weird. But both sexes will hump people or their pet or their toys or their pets.
housemates. Let's move over to cats. I'm not a big cat person, but I like cats. I've had cats. I've had some really cool cats, actually. But what about cats would I be fascinated to learn? So one thing I love about cats, and this happens with dogs as well, but I'm going to give cats as an example because of how we have lived together for so long, is that they can tell our emotions. So if you're feeling sad, and
A cat that loves you, the cat that lives with you, will come up and bump you, usually with their forehead. And what most people do with that is instinctively, without thinking, hey, I'm going to do this, they'll reach out and they'll pet their cat.
And when they do, the people start to feel get better and the cat will start to look at them and they'll blink at them really slowly. And most pet cat owners who are bonded with their cats will blink back at them. And what's happening is the cat is releasing oxytocin, which is that hormone that mothers release when they're bonding with their babies. It's the love hormone that a lot of people talk about.
But we are sensing that and releasing oxytocin as well. So on a chemical level, we are connecting with our cats and it becomes this feedback loop of feeling better that our cats can do for us and intentionally. Can you tell much about a cat by its meow or is a meow a meow?
A meow is not a meow. Cats have a lot of different meows and cats that live in different places have different meows. They, they, they teach each other meows. Cats will chirp. They will chitter. There's a, I'm an, and humans that live with their cats can tell the difference between the meow, whether they've actually thought about it or not. A human will know the difference between I'm hungry. Give me food and let me out. And cats,
I am afraid people who live with their cats intentionally or not can tell the difference between the sounds, the vocalizations that their cats make. I think one of the first pets people have when they're kids is a goldfish. And we've heard that thing about how a goldfish's memory is only three seconds long. Is that true?
That's 100% false. And they're actually really, really brilliant, especially like for a fish. And we don't think that they live long, but a goldfish that has everything that it needs can live to be about 20 years old. No. So, yes. A little goldfish that you buy at the pet store or you get at the fair, if you take care of it really, really well, it'll live 20 years.
Oh yeah, I have met so many people that have had their goldfish for a lot longer than that and they talk about their goldfish the way that I talk about my children or my dogs. Like, they have really connected with these fish because the fish have great, great memories. All right, well, I want to ask you more about that because how great can a goldfish's memory be, really?
I'm speaking with Eleanor Spicer-Rice. She is an entomologist and the author of the book, Your Pet's Secret Lives, The Truth Behind Your Pet's Wildest Behaviors. We have talked on this podcast about how losing weight on your own, it's just really hard. Which is why a lot of people, I bet you know some people, who are trying these new weight loss medications like Ozempic. Because there is just no denying that being overweight or obese comes with serious health risks.
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$45 upfront payment required, equivalent to $15 a month. New customers on first three-month plan only. Speed slower above 40 gigabytes on unlimited plan. Additional tax fees and restrictions apply. See Mint Mobile for details. So, Eleanor, you said that goldfish have this great memory. Well, how great can it really be?
So they can remember each other. They can remember the people who are coming to their bowl. So Mike, if you had a fish, they could remember you. And if I came and visited you, they would know that there was a stranger that was showing up and they'll remember who that stranger is. You can teach them different tricks. So this team of scientists in Israel last year, a year before last, built a little fishmobile, which is like a little fish tank with wheels.
And they taught the fish to drive it. And the fish learned how to drive down the street and get food and drive back home. They learned directions on a landscape. They can remember mazes and all that kind of stuff.
But all of that combines to be really horrible in terms of ecology because they're so smart and because they're so long-lived and because we get them at the fair and we dump them in a pond or a stream and they're so adaptable that
Goldfish come originally, they're Asian carp and they're beautiful in our bowls. But within a few generations, because they have so many babies, they revert back to their wild type, which is this big, boring, dull colored, very, very, very smart fish. And so they can have
up to 40,000 eggs a year. And they grow to be about the size like of a man's big shoe, a big man's big foot, you know? And...
What they do is because their memories are so great and because their navigation is so great, they can navigate all these streams and waterways to these massive spawning events. They can go over 100 miles through the water to go to these massive spawning events and then swim back to their streams and release their 40,000 eggs every year.
And they're so smart that like they've learned that one of the ways that people get rid of fish that are unwanted in a pond or something is they come and they shock the pond and the fish that were there will float to the top and then they harvest the ones that they don't want in there. It's like weeding a garden. But goldfish can learn really quickly. So when they see this pond shockers coming, they just swim to the bottom and they wait it out and they're beyond the electric current and they're fine. So.
So they can evade our detection, and they eat everything, and they disrupt a lot. So now goldfish are ranked as one of the most destructive invasive species on the planet. Whoa. And so when you said that goldfish can live to 20 years, and I don't know, you know, I've certainly never had fish that live that long and haven't had a lot of fish, but I don't know anybody who's had a fish that lived 20 years. What are we doing now?
That we're killing them off. What are we doing wrong?
Well, we think because we think about goldfishes living in fish bowls. And so we don't put them in a tank that can provide them with enough space to swim around. They're basically in a very tiny jail cell when we put them in there. And I was saying this at growing up, I had a ton of goldfish and fish bowls. So we have to give them a larger space. And because goldfish are inquisitive and they're very, very smart, they need like
dimensions and plants and things to move around in and explore just like they would in the wild. So another pet that a lot of kids have growing up, I had growing up, my son had, is hamsters. We have hamsters and people have gerbils.
Not really sure what the difference is, but what about them? There's a big difference. I think hamsters are much cuter than gerbils, Mike. They'd have like really small tails and they just look like little chicken nuggets with fur. They're just adorable. But here's the thing about hamsters. They can't see very well and they're colorblind. So on those chubby little bellies, they have stink glands.
And when they fight, they don't like to actually fight. So they have stink fights.
And a male hamster will like slam his stink on the ground and the other male hamster will get so mad he'll waddle up to it and he will slam his stink on the ground. And the stinkiest hamster will win the stink battle. They just, to me, that just elevates their adorableness to like another, they turned it up to 11 with that. And how long can they live? Hamsters can live up to, I think, six years, seven.
They're a prey item. They're not designed, I guess, they're not built for living very long. That's why they have lots of babies and stuff. You know, gerbils are kind of wild too, though, because they dig in the wild in Mongolia and China and Russia. They live in these tunnels.
And at the bottom of the tunnels, they have all these chambers. And if their parents have dug them enough chambers and everything, they'll just live with their parents forever. And they have all these escape holes because they're also a prey item. But in pet stores and people who breed gerbils, they don't give them tunnels. And so what the researchers have found out is if a gerbil is born into a life where there's a tunnel when they're babies, they don't dig tunnels.
Ever. They're fine. Even if you just stick them on a flat bottom box for the rest of their lives, they don't dig because they feel comfortable because there's an imprinting phase of safety when they're young. But if they are born into a place where there are no tunnels, they will dig compulsively for the rest of their lives.
So a lot of people who have gerbils don't like to be kept up by them because they sit around all night long and they dig nonstop for hours and hours and hours and hours. They'll never stop. You can give them tunnels forever and they will keep digging tunnels. What's another animal that people have as pets that surprises you?
There are so many pets that people keep that I'm amazed that they bond with. Like, for example, you know, things like bearded dragons. A lot of people keep bearded dragons or lizards or snakes in general, reptiles in general,
I get turtles. I understand turtles and tortoises. Like, I feel like humans can connect with those. I don't know. What do you think? I mean, do you think you could bond with a reptile? I don't know. I never had a snake. But it does seem that there are animals like that that don't seem to care a whole lot whether you're there or not.
And they just and snake is another example of it doesn't seem like it belongs in a glass cage in some boy's bedroom. It seems like it should be out burrowing into the ground or doing whatever it does, not lying in a glass cage. I don't understand the need to keep snakes. That said, I have two children who beg me for a snake every day.
But we do keep them and they do amazing things, but they've also caused tremendous damage. I mean, in the Everglades, we've dumped so many Burmese pythons out there. They've killed up to, what, 99% of their small mammals, the Burmese pythons have, and we can't catch them because they're so sneaky.
I want to ask you about spiders. And in fact, I heard a guy that's a big into, what do you call those guys that are big into spiders? Arachnologists? Yeah, I guess that's what he was. Said that like, you know, a lot of people...
don't kill spiders in their house. They'll take them and put them outside. And he said, those spiders are dead in no time because they've probably been in your house their whole life. They have no idea how to survive in the wild. I mean, it's a nice gesture, but you're not really saving their life. Oh, no, it's 100% true. And, you know, the thing about spiders, 95% of them in your house have never been outside. And
you're never more than four feet from a spider. And I based that on research that was done by Chris Buttle at McGill University, where he did spider densities in all kinds of environments. Even if you're standing in the Arctic tundra, you are never more than four feet from a spider. They're under your floorboards. They're under your, you know, counters. They're under your couch. And so the ones that frighten you in your house, they're adults. They've been living their whole lives. So...
It's kind of wonderful. It helped me to stop being so afraid of spiders. As an entomologist, that was a big shame of mine. You know, we've been talking about how people have all these different kinds of pets and keep them and take care of them. And it kind of begs the question, why? Why do we have pets? What do they do for us?
The thing is that despite all that we're saying about not taking these weirdo pets home with you and giving them a life they can't have, the pets that we do have do immense good for our health. I mean, they increase our health and emotionally and physical health. So they decrease our stress. They improve our heart health.
And they help children and adults with their social and emotional skills because we're connecting with things that are not talking to us. And we're learning about behaviors and learning how to read another being. And dogs can help if a mother is pregnant and has a dog, whether she has a dog when she has the baby or not. The mother takes microbes, bacteria and fungi, tiny little creatures from that dog and gives them to her baby.
And that baby is shown with those microbes that she got from her dog when she had her baby in her belly. Those microbes are shown to help protect the child from obesity and lower its stress as it grows. So in many weird and microscopic ways, our pets are actually enriching our lives.
Which is a message I think most pet owners are happy to hear and already know that to some degree, that animals, pets enrich our lives or we wouldn't have those pets.
I've been speaking with Eleanor Spicer Rice. She is an entomologist and author of several nonfiction books, one of which is called Your Pets' Secret Lives, The Truth Behind Your Pets' Wildest Behaviors. And there is a link to that book at Amazon in the show notes. And it is a children's book, but it's really interesting. Thanks, Eleanor. Thank you for coming on today. Thanks so much, Mike. It's been a hoot. I really appreciate it.
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Whatever work you do, you want it to be as good as it can be. However, and as I'm sure you know, sometimes your brain doesn't cooperate. There are times when your work seems excellent. Other times you struggle and aren't really happy with the results. Sometimes your work flows and seems effortless, and other times it doesn't, no matter how many cups of coffee you drink.
So what if you could get your brain in better sync with what you're doing so you perform at peak efficiency and do better work?
That's what my guest is here to show you. Meet Dr. Mitu Storoni. She is a physician, neuroscience researcher, and ophthalmic surgeon. She advises multinational corporations on mental performance and stress management, and she's author of a book called Hyper-Efficient, Optimize Your Brain to Transform the Way You Work.
Hi doctor, welcome to Something You Should Know. Thank you so much for having me. So this is very exciting that we can actually adjust our brain to tune in to the work we're doing and make it better. But before we get into the details, explain the basic thesis here.
My thesis is that I would guess that while you're working, you're working very well, or you think you're working very well, but you're not working in the right state of mind that you should be in for the work you're doing. So if you could be conscious of your mental state while you work, or even shift to the most optimal mental state you can be in, your work's quality would be vastly better.
Well, I think for me, and I think many people think for themselves, that your mental state when you're working is just your mental state. You have a good one or a bad one, and some days things go easily, and some days things are more of a struggle, but it is what it is on that day in that moment. Right. So that's what I used to think myself and what many people assume is,
But it really helps if you imagine your brain as though it were a machine with a set of gears in it. So when you're sitting down to write, to do any kind of work that you usually do, your brain changes.
assumes one of three distinct mental states. So it helps to imagine these as three different gear settings that your brain runs on. Gear one, gear two, and gear three. And each of these gears
configures your brain into a certain state. So for example, in gear one is a sort of a restful state of mind. Your attention wanders and your thoughts are quite slow and drifting. In gear two, you're able to hold your attention, your mind feels sharper and your thoughts feel faster. And in gear three,
You can focus but your focus darts about to anything that comes and distracts you. You can't quite deliberate on problems. You can't analyze things very calmly. So of these three mental states, the optimal mental state to be in is in gear two. But most of us end up in gear three for a variety of reasons.
stemming from the way we work and to a whole load of other factors. Alright, so how does one get oneself into that mental state, assuming you're not in it automatically? How do you, is there a way to kind of get your head in the right place? So I'm going to answer that question upside down. So I'm going to answer it by describing what doesn't get you to that right place.
And the answer to that is the following. So there are two real sort of issues, features of the way we work, which prevents us from being in this optimal gear to state where we can focus attention and be in a state where we can analyze, think and create to the best of our potential. One aspect of the way we work is simply the pattern in which we work. So for instance,
When you're focusing on something, when you're doing any kind of mental work, the mind or your brain naturally needs to drift away and rest around about an hour, an hour and a half, sometimes two hours into what you're doing, depending on how intense it is. But the way we work with our continuous days and the way we are expected to put in
continuous effort across an entire day and across an entire week forces us to keep going when the brain or when the mind is tired. But when your brain and your mind is feeling tired and you push on, your brain sort of steps on the accelerator. So you go from gear two to gear three and you stay in gear three for the most part of most days. And this
tendency to step on the accelerator and stay in gear three was actually quite advantageous in the past when we worked on assembly lines and following the Second World War and the knowledge age boom, when we did mostly sort of clerical work in the knowledge workspace. And this is why we turned to coffee, we turned to other stimulating sort of features, stimulating cues to stay in that state because we can work fast, but we can't work well.
A second aspect of the way we work, which affects us, is simply the environment we are in, specifically the way technology is accelerating information transfer. So if you think of your brain as an information slicing or information digesting machine,
When you're in gear one, you're going through information slowly. When you're in gear two, you're going through information at just the right level. When you're in gear three, your brain is just munching through information as fast as possible.
So all the features of the environment that cause your brain to process information much faster than it comfortably can. So the very high speed at which information is being transferred, the way information can be transferred at no cost. So the large volumes of salient information your brain is receiving, right?
These two things make your brain think that it really needs to work faster to get through the information. It needs to process more information per unit time. In order to do that, it can't simply work in gear 2. Your brain has to push the pedal and you go up to gear 3.
And a third element is uncertainty. So when your brain feels that the world around has some element of uncertainty, some element of threat, this can be a deadline, this can be some kind of job insecurity, this can be simply confusion about not understanding what you're doing or even worry that you're not getting through the information you are supposed to be getting through. You're not doing the work and so on and so on.
When you're in that state, your brain thinks, okay, the world is uncertain. In order to make it more certain, I need to figure it out. And I can figure it out by slicing and kind of munching through information as quickly as possible. And that also pushes you into gear three. So out of this Goldilocks zone of gear two. And just to refresh my memory, gear three is what?
Gear 3 is the typical state of mind most workers have on a Friday afternoon after a week of having worked very hard. So the way you would feel is you would have sort of a slight kind of quite fast thoughts race, not necessarily racing through your head, but you'd be able to think fast, react fast, and
you can focus, but you can't hold your focus. So your focus flips to anything that's coming your way, whether that's simply a distraction, noise, a beep here, a tone there, or multitasking. So all the different kinds of work that you're having to do during a typical work session. So it's a sort of a state of mind that's faster with attention that's flying everywhere and
And it prevents you from sitting down and thinking deep thoughts, contemplating, analyzing, but most importantly, prevents you from getting into a creative mode. So just as you can't daydream while you sprint, you can't get into a creative state of mind if you're in gear three. You can't daydream when you sprint? Correct.
Have you tried it? No, I'm gonna now. You can't daydream? So what does your mind do when you sprint? Your mind is in gear three. So I'm talking about sprinting 100 meters or so. So when you're sprinting, the next time you try to sprint, try to see if you can daydream. The reason you can't is because...
When your body is in gear three fast mode, your mind keeps up. Your mind essentially orchestrates that. So your mind mirrors what is going on in the body. But the creative state of mind needs to happen at a slower pace. So if your mind is racing with your body, you simply cannot daydream.
So I understand, I think I get the three states of mind and all that, but it seems as if there are an awful lot of things that can affect it, that it isn't in a vacuum that you're in one or the other or the other. You know, how much sleep you got, you know, how much work you have, what's on your mind, what happened this morning at home. A lot of things seem to affect it, yes? Yes.
Correct. So this sort of optimal gear two state of mind, and bearing in mind, this is a metaphor that I'm using to just help explain approximately what happens. This state of mind is, of course, affected by a variety of things. So for instance, if you haven't slept very well, you're going to be feeling tired, your mind's going to feel tired very quickly. And so you're going to slide out of it very quickly.
If you then push on the pedal and force yourself to keep working when you are tired and sleep deprived, your needle overshoots and you go into gear three. Other things that can affect this are things like how you emotionally feel, whether there are any emotional triggers around you.
and also some more subtle aspects of your environment. For instance, you're more likely to be at the softer end of gear 2, at the slower end of gear 2, first thing in the morning and last thing at night if you are not distorting everything with 10 cups of caffeine or things like that. Your brain is naturally in that state at a certain time of day
And how do we know this? We know this because we know that creative ideas, creative work seems to be much better, seems to be performed much better if it is undertaken first thing in the morning and last thing at night. Whereas the peak zones for focus actually happen slightly later in the morning and again later on in the afternoon.
into the early evening, avoiding the period just after lunch. So the mind has these, the brain has these natural fluctuations across a day. And what we tend to do when we work is we are like swimmers swimming against the current. So we schedule meetings in the middle of the morning or late in the morning, which should be reserved for things that need us to think and focus. And
Similarly, the times of the day when we are most creative are the times when we're least likely to actually be at work. So instead of swimming against the waves, we would do far better to swim, to be like a surfer and actually ride these waves, these natural undulations of these mental states across the day. And then we can
flip into sort of this gear to state far more easily. When you say that people do some work better in the morning and late at night, that's my experience for myself, but I've heard it said that, you know, everybody's different. Some people do better at night than in the morning, but it sounded like what you're saying is that that's not true. So can you clear that up for me?
Yes. So actually, both of these things are true. So we all have our 24-hour rhythm, our circadian rhythm. We wake up with the sun, ideally, and we fall asleep when the sun goes down, depending on which latitude you live in. So we have a 24-hour bodily rhythm. But in some people, approximately a quarter of the population, but studies vary,
this 24-hour rhythm shifts slightly. So some people actually wake up earlier and start their day earlier and others begin their day later and end it later. But across the entire spectrum,
It's usual to wake up and then depending on when you wake up, whether you're an early person or a late person, the period immediately after waking up is actually the period for creative work, which is optimal, relatively speaking, for creative work. And then a few hours later, you enter into your zone of peak focus. Okay. Well, that's certainly good to know because that...
I don't think people think that way when they plan their day. It isn't against the backdrop of what you're talking about. It's against the backdrop of whatever else has to happen and the kids have to get to school and the boss is out of town. You know, there's a lot of other things, but not what you said.
Correct. And this is really part of the thesis that you mentioned at the start, which is that, you know, the world is changing now and we are still using the framework or the scaffold that the last hundred years have left us. But now that we have AI and we have automation, a lot of the low level mental work, cognitive work,
is now being delegated to machines. And this work actually formed a large part of knowledge work for the last 50 or so years. But because this is now being taken away, we now have to work differently because we now have to not just work for quantity,
Anyone can sit through meetings, go to work at 8 o'clock or 9 o'clock, write emails, come up with 100 ideas. In any state of mind, you could be tired, you could be distracted, you could be sleep deprived. But now that we have this era of AI-assisted technology,
We now have to really up our game so that we don't measure efficiency or productivity in terms of how many hours we worked or how many emails we sent. We have to flip it. So we have to measure productivity or efficiency according to how little time
did one amazing idea need? Or how few meetings did we require to come up with one innovative brainstorm solution? So you've been talking about, you know, scheduling your work to coincide with your mental state, but are there other things people can do to help shift their brain into the right mental state to match their work?
To begin with, you can sit where you normally work, begin your work session by just asking yourself, how focused am I right now? Do I think I'll feel better if I move to a quieter room? How easy is it for me to daydream, to just let my attention drift for a moment? The answers to these questions will help you establish whether you're in this right zone, in this Goldilocks zone of gear two,
or whether you need to change something in your environment to get back into it. So for example, if you're doing some kind of work where you feel the work is boring, or dull, or monotonous, or repetitive, then you will feel your attention drifting. And you'll find it quite difficult to stay focused. It will actually feel quite effortful.
What you do in that sort of situation is in order to make your brain press on the pedal, you actually can increase the number of streams of information flowing your way. So many people describe to you that if they are looking into a security camera, if they're driving, or if they're doing anything else like that, actually doing something on the side can keep their mind in the right zone. Similarly, at the opposite end,
You might be filing a report, filing a piece that has a strong deadline that's really, really coming up. But you find that, okay, I really need a good idea for this piece. It really isn't coming to me. I've sat here for six hours and I've only produced three words. What can I do?
So in that sort of situation, what actually really helps is just to leave your work behind, leave your desk behind, go take a walk.
A really important feature of the mind is that the mind is not like muscle. It rests while it works and it works while it rests. So when you're taking a walk, you might feel like you're resting, but your mind is actually working on the problem from a different angle. So when you come back after you've taken a walk and you sit back on that chair where you were stuck for six to eight hours, you will suddenly find that
that somehow your mind has come up with, if not an idea, an angle that you can pursue. The problem doesn't quite look as cluttered as it felt before. So these are some of the ways in which you can nudge yourself to be in the right mental state. Well, what's so great about this is, as I said in the beginning, I think people think, you know, their mental state is whatever it is at the time and you deal with it
But you don't change it. You just have to deal with it. But this is really exciting that we have more control over it than I think most people thought. Dr. Mitu Staroni has been my guest. She is a physician, neuroscience researcher, and ophthalmic surgeon. And she's author of a book called Hyper-Efficient, Optimize Your Brain to Transform the Way You Think. And there's a link to that book at Amazon in the show notes. Thank you, doctor. Appreciate you being here. Thank you so much. Have a great day.
Have you ever wondered if people with big heads have bigger brains and might therefore be smarter than the rest of us? Well, it turns out there is some truth to that. Young people with wide heads tend to have higher IQs. Scientists say skull size is directly related to brain volume and mental ability.
And there's more good news for people with big heads. People with bigger skulls have better memories in old age. Researchers tested people ages 70 to 80 with an IQ and memory test, and the ones with the largest head circumference scored much better. They even showed less degeneration three years later and were at lower risk of getting Alzheimer's disease. And that is something you should know. You know, several people work hard at putting this podcast together, but
Our producers, Jeffrey Havison and Jennifer Brennan, executive producer, Ken Williams. And because we work so hard at this, we'd like to reach more people and you could certainly help. It's a great way to support this podcast by sharing it with other people, telling them about it and suggesting they listen. And it's pretty easy to do. I'm Mike Carruthers. Thanks for listening today to Something You Should Know.
Welcome to the small town of Chinook, where faith runs deep and secrets run deeper. In this new thriller, religion and crime collide when a gruesome murder rocks the isolated Montana community. Everyone is quick to point their fingers at a drug-addicted teenager, but local deputy Ruth Vogel isn't convinced. She suspects connections to a powerful religious group. Enter federal agent V.B. Loro, who has been investigating a local church for possible criminal activity.
The pair form an unlikely partnership to catch the killer, unearthing secrets that leave Ruth torn between her duty to the law, her religious convictions, and her very own family. But something more sinister than murder is afoot, and someone is watching Ruth. Chinook, starring Kelly Marie Tran and Sanaa Lathan. Listen to Chinook wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, this is Rob Benedict. And I am Richard Spate. We were both on a little show you might know called Supernatural. It had a pretty good run, 15 seasons, 327 episodes. And though we have seen, of course, every episode many times, we figured, hey, now that we're wrapped, let's watch it all again. And we can't do that alone. So we're inviting the cast and crew that made the show,
along for the ride we've got writers producers composers directors and we'll of course have some actors on as well including some certain guys that played some certain pretty iconic brothers it was kind of a little bit of a left field choice in the best way possible the note from kripke was he's great we love him but we're looking for like a really intelligent dacovni type
With 15 seasons to explore, it's going to be the road trip of several lifetimes. So please join us and subscribe to Supernatural then and now.