That Brain of Yours: The Glitch and the Function

Your Pain Doesn't Equal To My Pain

11 min · 23. feb. 2026
episode Your Pain Doesn't Equal To My Pain cover

Description

Why can two people feel completely different pain from the same injury? Because pain isn’t just in your body—it’s constructed by your brain. In this episode, we explore how context, expectation, and meaning shape the pain you experience. You’ll learn why soldiers sometimes feel less pain than civilians with smaller injuries, how placebo treatments trigger real biological pain relief, and why your brain adjusts pain based on what it believes is happening. Pain isn’t a simple signal. It’s an interpretation. Your brain constantly evaluates threat, predicts outcomes, and decides how much pain you should feel to protect you. 🧠 Pain is real—but it’s also processed, filtered, and shaped by your mind.

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episode Mute Isn't Good artwork

Mute Isn't Good

You try to work in complete silence… and somehow your brain becomes louder than ever. That’s because silence doesn’t turn your auditory system off. It turns it up. Your auditory cortex is designed to detect signals. When there’s no external sound, it increases its sensitivity, searching for anything meaningful. Suddenly, things you normally ignore—your breathing, heartbeat, swallowing, even tiny muscle movements—become distractions. Your brain enters what scientists call a kind of “hyper-listening mode.” But here’s the surprising part: moderate background noise can actually improve focus and creativity. A steady, low-level sound—like a café, rain, or soft ambient noise—creates a consistent sensory floor. This prevents your brain from scanning for new signals and helps stabilize attention. It’s not silence that helps you focus. It’s predictability. So if silence makes you restless, don’t fight it. Try low, neutral background sound—rain noise, white noise, or quiet café ambience. You’re not distracting your brain. You’re calming it. Your brain focuses best when it has something predictable to ignore. Follow for more neuroscience that explains your everyday experiences.

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