『# Train Your Brain to Catch the Good Stuff』のカバーアート

# Train Your Brain to Catch the Good Stuff

# Train Your Brain to Catch the Good Stuff

無料で聴く

ポッドキャストの詳細を見る

今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

# The Magnificent Rebellion of Noticing Good Things

Your brain is a magnificent pessimist. Evolution sculpted it that way—scanning for threats, cataloging dangers, remembering every social embarrassment from 2007 with crystalline clarity. This negativity bias kept your ancestors alive when saber-toothed cats lurked behind bushes, but it's considerably less helpful when you're spiraling because someone left you on "read" for forty-five minutes.

Here's the delightful plot twist: you can hack this ancient wiring.

Neuroscientist Rick Hanson describes the problem perfectly—our brains are like Velcro for negative experiences and Teflon for positive ones. Bad moments stick; good ones slide right off. But neuroplasticity—your brain's ability to rewire itself—means you're not stuck with factory settings. You can install some Velcro for the good stuff too.

The mechanism is absurdly simple: linger. When something pleasant happens—a genuine laugh, unexpected good news, the perfect temperature of your coffee—don't just notice it. Marinate in it for ten, fifteen, twenty seconds. This isn't toxic positivity or forced gratitude journaling (though if that works for you, wonderful). It's giving your brain time to encode positive experiences into neural structure.

Think of it as strength training for optimism. Each time you pause to savor something good, you're doing a rep. You're literally building new pathways that make noticing pleasant things easier tomorrow.

The intellectual beauty here is that you're not denying reality or pretending problems don't exist. You're correcting for a documented cognitive bias. You're balancing the scales that evolution tipped heavily toward anxiety and threat detection.

Try this today: Set three arbitrary alarms on your phone. When they go off, pause and find something—anything—that doesn't actively suck in that moment. The warm sun on your arm. The fact that you're not currently being chased by a predator. Your playlist hitting just right. Then stay with that feeling for a few extra breaths.

Will this solve climate change or your inbox situation? Absolutely not. But it will make you marginally better at being human, which is really all we can ask of ourselves on any given Tuesday.

The Roman emperor Marcus Aurelius, writing in his tent between battles, reminded himself: "When you arise in the morning, think of what a precious privilege it is to be alive—to breathe, to think, to enjoy, to love."

Even an emperor needed the reminder.

So do we all.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
まだレビューはありません