Cover image of show Positive Psychiatry - with Rakesh Jain, MD

Positive Psychiatry - with Rakesh Jain, MD

Podcast by Rakesh Jain, MD

English

Health & personal development

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About Positive Psychiatry - with Rakesh Jain, MD

Positive Psychiatry with Rakesh Jain, MD explores the science and practice of fostering mental wellness, resilience, and flourishing through the lens of psychiatry. Join me as I discuss articles and opinions from expert clinicians, researchers, and thought leaders as they discuss emerging strategies to enhance well-being, purpose, and strengths—not just reduce symptoms. From gratitude and optimism to meaning and connection, this podcast brings evidence-based insights into the heart of mental healthcare.I am additionally a proud member of the Steering Committee of Psych Congress. This year's annual meeting is September 17-21 in San Diego, California.

All episodes

16 episodes

episode Dr Lori Kumar on Positive Psychiatry: Expert Tips On How To Add Mental Wellness Skills To Medication Visits artwork

Dr Lori Kumar on Positive Psychiatry: Expert Tips On How To Add Mental Wellness Skills To Medication Visits

Most mental health care starts with symptoms and medications, but too often it stops there. We wanted a more complete map, so we sat down with Dr. Lori Kumar, a psychiatric nurse practitioner serving community mental health patients across Austin and Central Texas rural areas, to talk about how positive psychiatry can fit into the real world of 20 to 30 minute visits, crisis follow-ups, and heavy med lists. We get specific about timing and language: when a person is still in crisis, safety and stabilization come first, but once things settle, we can shift toward mental wellness and patient agency. Lori shares a simple way to reduce confusion and resistance by using a medical analogy like asthma: medication matters, and so do the daily behaviors that calm the system and reduce triggers. From there, we dig into the practical pillars she returns to again and again, especially sleep wellness. Instead of reflexively reaching for sedation, we talk routines, realistic boundaries around phone use, and why “sleep hygiene” has to match modern stress and modern screens. We also unpack one of the best re-frames we have heard in years: if “exercise” makes patients shut down, call it movement. You will hear concrete, doable options for older adults, anxious patients, and anyone with low energy, plus low-cost cognitive training ideas like puzzles and word searches. We finish with gratitude practice that feels real, including a free app recommendation (“I Am”) that sends prompts throughout the day, and we connect all of this to clinician burnout and sustainability. www.JainUplift.com

26 May 2026 - 28 min
episode Norepinephrine and Positive Psychiatry: A Relationship in Need of Celebration artwork

Norepinephrine and Positive Psychiatry: A Relationship in Need of Celebration

If you’ve ever heard “norepinephrine” and instantly pictured panic, racing heart, and fight-or-flight, we’re about to flip that story. We make the case that norepinephrine is not just a stress chemical, it’s one of the brain’s most important tools for attention, cognitive control, resilience, and even post-traumatic growth when it’s regulated well.  We start with the big problem in mainstream psychiatry: a deficit framework that treats symptom reduction as the finish line. From a positive psychiatry lens, the real target is human flourishing. That brings us to the locus ceruleus, the tiny brainstem hub that provides most of the brain’s norepinephrine and acts like a master conductor for brain state. We break down tonic versus phasic firing, why the Yerkes-Dodson curve still matters, and how the “sweet spot” supports focus and flow without tipping into chaotic hyperarousal.  From there, we zoom into receptor dynamics and the tipping point where too much norepinephrine can shut down the prefrontal cortex and trigger an amygdala hijack. We connect the dots across the neurochemical ecosystem: norepinephrine’s tight relationship with dopamine in the prefrontal cortex, serotonin’s role as a natural dampener, and how downstream signaling can influence BDNF, neuroplasticity, and adult neurogenesis. Finally, we translate the science into real life by contrasting involuntary distress with voluntary stress, and showing how controlled challenges, exercise, cold exposure, mindfulness, and psychotherapy can “train” the system like weightlifting for the brain.  www.JainUplift.com

23 May 2026 - 43 min
episode PTG (Post Traumatic Growth) & Positive Psychiatry artwork

PTG (Post Traumatic Growth) & Positive Psychiatry

Trauma doesn’t just hurt; it reorganizes. It reshapes sleep, memory, attention, stress physiology, trust, identity, and the story you tell yourself about what life allows. That’s why I start from one non-negotiable place: respect for suffering. And I make one crucial distinction that changes how we think about trauma recovery and PTSD treatment, especially for complex PTSD: change is not the same thing as damage. POST TRAUMATIC GROWTH: We then take on a topic that’s often misused and often feared: post-traumatic growth. I’m not talking about silver linings, forced resilience, or spiritual bypassing. I’m talking about a careful, trauma-informed inquiry into what can become possible after survival, and why “getting back to who you were” can be an unrealistic and painful goal for many people. We walk through the neuroscience of growth after trauma, including the default mode network and meaning making, the salience network and threat-based attention, executive control, and why neuroplasticity needs safety to move in a healing direction. On the clinical side, I dig into timing, readiness, and language. Growth introduced too early can harm. Growth demanded can shame. Growth framed carelessly can invalidate grief. I share practical ways to listen for readiness, how to invite complexity without imposing meaning, and why growth can coexist with distress. We also talk moral injury, relationships as co-regulation, existential reframing without coercion, and the inner work clinicians need to do to avoid burnout while staying human. www.JainUplift.com

2 May 2026 - 48 min
episode Glorious Glutamate - The Spark Behind Mood, Learning, and Positive Psychiatry artwork

Glorious Glutamate - The Spark Behind Mood, Learning, and Positive Psychiatry

Glutamate is everywhere in the brain, but we’ve treated it like an afterthought. Rakesh Jain, MD, MPH joins us with a bold, clinically grounded argument: if we want real progress in depression, PTSD, anxiety, schizophrenia, OCD, addiction, and chronic pain, we have to understand glutamate as the main network driver, not just another neurotransmitter on a list.  We talk through why glutamate is both essential and dangerous, and why the right model isn’t “raise it” or “lower it,” but regulate it across regions and across time. Rakesh explains the two glutamate patterns that matter for symptoms, the overlooked role of glia and astrocytes, and the dizzying complexity of NMDA and AMPA receptors that makes one-size-fits-all treatment a fantasy. We also connect glutamate to brain circuitry, including default mode network rigidity in depression and the switching role of salience and executive networks.  Then we get practical and future-facing: what ketamine may be doing (including replicated evidence of opioid involvement), why durability remains a challenge, and why the field is shifting from NMDA to AMPA, mTOR, BDNF, and other neuroplasticity pathways. We explore classic psychedelics as rapid glutamate modulators, the rise of plastogens and biased 5-HT2A agonists, surprising links between GLP-1 agonists and glutamatergic control, and why neuromodulation depends on glutamate signaling. We close with a needed corrective: exercise, mindfulness meditation, sleep, and psychotherapy are not “extras” but powerful glutamate interventions.  www.JainUplift.com

1 Apr 2026 - 56 min
episode Positive Psychiatry and Humor As A Clinical Skill artwork

Positive Psychiatry and Humor As A Clinical Skill

What if the missing piece in mental health care isn’t more gravity—but more gentle levity? We take you inside the science of humor as a core psychological skill, not a distraction or denial. Drawing on research in positive psychiatry, Dr. Rakesh Jain explains how healthy humor works at the neural level to restore flexibility, ease anhedonia, and strengthen connection without minimizing pain. We break down the mechanisms that make humor a biologically efficient intervention. From benign prediction errors that light up dopaminergic pathways to shared laughter that triggers endogenous opioids, you’ll hear how the brain’s reward, salience, and stress systems recalibrate when we engage with lightness. We also dig into cortisol reduction, attention widening, and immune shifts that show humor’s impact is measurable—not just metaphorical. Expect practical tools you can use right away. Learn the difference between passive humor (borrowing joy through short, intentional exposure) and active humor (training attention to notice irony and play), why “sip, don’t binge” protects presence, and how the Three Funny Things exercise can boost mood for months after just a week. We also draw a firm line between affiliative humor that bonds and aggressive humor that harms, so you can use humor as a bridge, not a weapon. We close with an honest look at clinician well-being. Burnout and humor rarely coexist, and cultivating lightness—respectfully, safely—can help us show up better for our patients and ourselves. Subscribe, share this with a colleague who could use a lift, and leave a review with one amusing moment you noticed today. Your story might become someone else’s borrowed joy. www.JainUplift.com

15 Feb 2026 - 37 min
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