psychophobia* podcast
psychophobia* podcast “All of humanity’s problems stem from man’s inability to sit quietly in a room alone.” — Blaise Pascal — — Inside one of the quietest rooms on earth, the usual assumptions about the mind begin to break down. The anechoic chamber at Orfield Laboratories was originally built for acoustic research, but it has become something else entirely - a place where people encounter their own perception in ways they rarely have before. In this conversation, Emma Orfield, Director of Therapeutics at Orfield Laboratories, explores how extreme silence can reveal hidden dimensions of sensory experience. We discuss invisible disabilities, sensory sensitivity, autism, PTSD, and the possibility that what psychiatry often labels as a disorder may sometimes be a response to a world that has become overwhelmingly loud. “All you’re left with is you.” — Emma Orfield — — Relevant Links Follow us on psychophobia.com [https://psychophobia.com] | Substack [https://psychophobia.substack.com/] | LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/drmontgomery23/] | Instagram [https://instagram.com/psychophobia_project] | Youtube [https://www.youtube.com/@psychophobia_project] Follow Emma Orfield Labs [https://www.orfieldlabs.com] Send us a message: https://www.speakpipe.com/psychophobia — — Emma Orfield-Johnston is a researcher and executive at Orfield Laboratories, a multi-sensory design and research firm focused on human perception. Her work explores how environments, sound, light, temperature, and other sensory factors shape human experience and well-being. Emma leads the lab’s therapeutics program, researching the psychological effects of extreme silence using the facility’s renowned anechoic chamber, often described as the quietest place on Earth. Her work focuses particularly on sensory sensitivity and invisible disabilities, including autism, PTSD, and other perceptual differences. Dr. Michael R. Montgomery is an existential psychoanalyst whose work explores the far edges of human experience, including complex trauma, extreme states, addiction, and the psychological aftermath of conflict. Trained at Regent’s University London, the Tavistock and Portman, and the Anna Freud Centre, his clinical work focuses primarily on community-based care for individuals often excluded from traditional mental health systems. He is faculty, and a supervising analyst at the New School for Existential Psychoanalysis, CA. He is the founder of Logic23.com [http://logic23.com] and Peacefire.us [http://peacefire.us] and a regular contributor to the Society for Existential Analysis, the R.D. Laing Symposium, and ISPS-US. He has published more than 30 peer-reviewed works and is currently developing a new book alongside the psychophobia* podcast. — — Episode Chapters 0:00:05 – Introduction: Psychophobia and the Anechoic Challenge 0:00:37 – Setting the Scene at Orfield Labs 0:02:00 – What Is Orfield Labs? Multisensory Design & Human Perception 0:02:20 – Inside the Anechoic Chamber – From Product Testing to People 0:04:27 – Invisible Disabilities, Sensitivity, and Self-Selection 0:07:02 – Debunking the “You’ll Go Crazy” Myth 0:10:58 – First-Time Reactions & “Doing More by Taking Away” 0:14:27 – Perceptual Silence and Autism-/PTSD-Informed Design 0:19:25 – Measuring the Unconscious & the Harley-Davidson Case Study 0:43:53 – Intuition, Embodiment, and the Body Teaching the Mind This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit psychophobia.substack.com [https://psychophobia.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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