The Anchor Point
What actually happens to a human being who meditates not for a week, not for an eight-week course — but for years? For decades? In Episode 11 of The Anchor Point, host Alexandria Quinn Love zooms way out to explore the science of long-term contemplative practice: what changes structurally in the brain, how the resting nervous system shifts, and what longitudinal research reveals about the kind of transformation that doesn't arrive like a lightning bolt — it accumulates. Drawing on landmark studies from Sara Lazar at Harvard, Richard Davidson at the Mind & Life Institute, and Judson Brewer's default mode network research, Alexandria walks through findings that genuinely changed how neuroscience thinks about the adult brain — including evidence that sustained practice may offset age-related cortical thinning, reshape resting-state neural networks, and produce gamma wave coherence that persists beyond formal sitting. She also addresses what the research says about individual variability, the honest science on practice-related challenges (including Willoughby Britton's groundbreaking work), and why consistency may matter more than intensity. The episode closes with a guided contemplative practice on locating yourself in the long arc of your own change — and a reflection on what the long game actually looks like in real human lives. This one is for everyone who kept going. “Stillness isn’t silence. It’s coming home to yourself — and in a world that rushes, that’s rebellion.” ⚠️ CRISIS RESOURCES — 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline: Call or text 988 (US) Crisis Text Line: Text HOME to 741741 (US) SAMHSA National Helpline: 1-800-662-4357 (free, confidential, 24/7) International Association for Suicide Prevention: https://www.iasp.info/resources/Crisis_Centres/
13 episodios
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