Positive Psychiatry - with Rakesh Jain, MD
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
21 episodios
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