My Weird Prompts

Why Airports and War Zones Both Feel Strangely Calm

29 min · 8. juni 2026
episode Why Airports and War Zones Both Feel Strangely Calm cover

Description

Why does the airport departure lounge feel more peaceful than your living room? And why did a third of Israelis report feeling "unexpectedly calm" during the 2025 Iran war? This episode explores the liminal relaxation effect—a phenomenon spanning anthropology, neuroscience, and environmental psychology. We trace the concept from Arnold van Gennep's 1909 work on rites of passage through Victor Turner's communitas theory, then into modern fMRI studies showing the default mode network quiets during train rides. We examine how passive transit reduces cortisol by 15%, how Attention Restoration Theory explains "soft fascination," and why national emergencies can paradoxically lower anxiety by collapsing decision load and creating shared reality. The episode tackles the guilt people feel about being calm during crisis—and why that guilt may be more harmful than the relaxation itself.

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the My Weird Prompts community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

200 episodes

episode Israel's Economy Beyond the Startup Hype artwork

Israel's Economy Beyond the Startup Hype

Everyone knows Israel as the "Startup Nation" — but the actual numbers paint a far more complex picture. In this episode, we break down Israel's economic sector composition using the latest data from the Central Bureau of Statistics. Agriculture sits at just 1.2% of GDP, industry at 17%, and services at a whopping 82%. But within that services number hides a massive internal divide: a high-productivity tech sector employing less than 9% of workers, and a much larger domestic services economy where most Israelis actually work — in healthcare, education, retail, and construction. We explore what the three-sector model gets wrong, why the "dual economy" matters for understanding Israel's social and political fault lines, and how the country's industrial base includes everything from Dead Sea mining to missile defense manufacturing.

12. juni 202635 min