Tell Me Something New
On today's episode of Tell Me Something New, join psychiatrist Shelby and astronomer David Hoyt to explore a powerful idea: that emotional anchoring drives new learning and discovery. Drawing from his work at the Daniels Observatory, David shares how storytelling transforms science and new knowledge in general into something deeply personal, helping people forge emotional connections as they learn new information. When I asked David what new idea he wanted to share, he said: "Emotion is not what we feel after we discover something. It is what makes discovery possible in the first place. Without an emotional anchor, knowledge stays inert. With one, it ignites. This philosophy did not arrive fully formed. It emerged from a specific and ordinary moment that turned out to be anything but. I was taking a little boy on evening walks and pointing out stars. He was learning the names but something was missing. The information was landing but not sticking in any way that mattered. Then I stopped naming and started telling stories. I gave the stars personalities. Histories. Lives. He started calling them his friends. From that point he remembered everything. Not just the bright familiar stars but the obscure ones. The ones most adults cannot name. He remembered them because they were no longer data points. They were characters in a world he felt connected to. The emotion created the memory. The story created the emotion. That was the beginning. I did not know yet what I had stumbled onto. I volunteer at an observatory. One evening I was explaining the life story of a prominent star to a woman who had come with the general public. I told her about AE Auriga, a star ejected from its home system, an orphan traveling through a hydrogen cloud, causing it to glow as if in anger at its abandonment. I told her about Hodierna, who catalogued deep sky objects for decades and received almost none of the credit, and how Messier got the glory. I told her about William Herschel, a band director with an obsessive amateur passion who outperformed the professional astronomers of his era, driven entirely by something that had nothing to do with career or recognition. A few minutes later I found her standing outside alone looking up at the sky. She was softly crying. I walked over and asked her why. She said she felt like she was looking at a completely different sky. She had seen that sky her entire life. The stars were not new. The telescope was not new. The facts were not new. What was new was that someone had given those stars a story. A life. A human dimension she had never been offered before. And in that moment the universe stopped being something out there and became something she was in relationship with. That face was the proof. Not just that my approach to teaching worked. But that something much larger was true about human beings and how we actually grow." Thank you so much, David, for sharing your unique approach to learning with us! Be a STRANGER (Someone That Really Allows New Good Energy). Email me at newthoughtexperimentowner@gmail.com [newthoughtexperimentowner@gmail.com] if you would like your new idea to be featured on my podcast. Follow NewThoughtDoc: Stay connected and join the conversation across platforms: Instagram: @newthoughtdoc TikTok: @NewThoughtDoc Facebook: NewThoughtDoc YouTube: NewThoughtDoc X (Twitter): @NewThoughtDoc Substack: NewThoughtDoc Bluesky: @newthoughtdoc.bsky.social [http://newthoughtdoc.bsky.social] This post was written with the help of AI in the essence of time ~ <3
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