Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - Neuroaesthetics: How Art Can Improve and Extend Your Life | Ivy Ross and Susan Magsamen
Episode Date: August 7, 2023Did you know that just 20 minutes of art a day is as beneficial as exercise and mindfulness? Or that participating in one art experience per month can extend your life by ten years? Our ...guests Ivy Ross and Susan Magsamen talk about their new book, Your Brain on Art: How the Arts Transform Us. Together they explore the new science of neuroaesthetics, which explains how the arts can measurably change the body, brain, and our behaviors. This is the first installment in a three part series we’re running called, Mundane Glory about learning not to overlook the little things in your daily life that can be powerful and evidence-based levers for increased happiness. In this episode we talk about:Their definition of the arts and aesthetic experiencesHow they see nature as, “the highest form of art”How simple actions like humming in the shower & gardening can be categorized as art experiencesHow you don’t have to be good at making art to benefit from itThe difference between “makers” and “beholders” of artWhat they mean by art being a part of our evolutionary DNAHow engaging in the arts can help strengthen our relationships and connectivityHow arts and aesthetic experiences create neuroplasticity in the brainHow society’s emphasis on optimizing for productivity has pushed the arts asideThe four key attributes that make up a concept called an “aesthetic mindset”The benefits of partaking in a wide array of art experiencesThe importance of infusing play and non judgment into the art you makeHow art can be a form of meditation and mindfulnessHow artistic experiences can extend your life, help treat disease and relieve stressHow the arts affect the way we learnThe emerging field of neuroarts and neuroaestheticsHow food fits into the arts categorySimple ways to integrate the arts into our daily livesTechnology’s relationship to the artsAnd the importance of architecture and your physical space as a form of artFor tickets to TPH's live event in Boston on September 7:https://thewilbur.com/armory/artist/dan-harris/themightyfix.com/happierFull Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/tph/podcast-episode/ivy-ross-susan-magsamenSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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This is the 10% happier podcast.
I'm Dan Harris.
Hello, my fellow suffering beings.
Welcome to the show.
When the idea for this particular episode was pitched to me, I'll be honest, I was not enthusiastic. One of our producers, shout
out to Lauren Smith, wanted me to interview the authors of a book called Your Brain on
Art. And I immediately assumed that these people were going to try to get me to go to museums
more often. And I don't want to go to fucking museums. I know, I know, I know that disliking museums makes me a Philistine or whatever,
but it's my truth.
What can I say?
However, one of the things I've been really trying to work on in recent years is being
less dismissive.
So I endeavored to keep an open mind as Lauren made her case in one of our recent
pitch meetings.
We have these pitch meetings where the whole staff gets together and discusses ideas for the show. And I'm glad that I
kept an open mind because the book is actually making a fascinating argument. The first thing to know
is that the author's defined art very, very broadly. The way they use the word, it's basically
interchangeable with beauty. So it can encompass not only a death march through a huge museum, but also music, dance, books, plays, movies, TV, food, architecture, gardening, humming in the shower, and being in nature.
The second thing to know is that the benefits are quite compelling.
Art or beauty, whatever word you want to use here can help us get better at learning, regulating our emotions and exercising empathy.
It can help treat disease and relieve stress.
Here are some other research findings.
Just 20 minutes of art a day is as beneficial as exercise and mindfulness.
Working on an art project for 45 minutes can reduce the stress hormone cortisol and participating
in one art experience per month can extend your life by 10 years.
And the third thing to know is that you don't have to be an artist per se to benefit.
You can be either a maker or a beholder to use the terminology of my guests.
Speaking of my guests, they are Ivy Ross, who is the vice president of design for hardware
products at Google and an artist herself with work in over 10 international museums.
And Susan Magsamon, the founder and director of the International Arts and Mind Lab Center
for Applied Neuroesthetics at the Peterson Brain Science Institute of the Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine, where she's also a faculty member in the Department of
Neurology.
The final thing to say here is that not only did I listen to my producer, Lauren,
and agree to bring Susan and Ivy on the show, but I also ended up liking this interview so much
that we are today launching a whole series about how tuning into the seemingly small things in
your life can have outsized benefits. This is another thing aside from dismissiveness that I am
personally working on. Even after so many years of meditation, I really can't, I hate admitting this, I really
can't find myself rushing through the day, frantically ticking items off of my to-do list.
So this is something I'm quite interested in.
We're calling this series Mondayne Glory.
Little phrase that I like.
Of course, I like it because I came up with it.
Anyway, we're going to be following up this episode with interviews about
microdosing awe and how to arrange your personal and professional spaces to
boost your happiness and productivity. Hope you enjoy it. Hit me up on Twitter or
threads or Instagram or wherever or via the 10% happier website, 10% calm, to let us know what you think.
Have you been considering starting or restarting your meditation practice?
Well in the words of highway billboards across America.
If you're looking for a sign, this is it.
To help you get started, we're offering subscriptions at a 40% discount until September
3rd.
Of course, nothing is permanent. for and I'm going to be back to the show. Thank you. Great to be here.
Thank you for having us.
Pleasure.
That was Ivy who spoke first and Susan
who spoke second just for those of you
who want to track who's speaking when.
I have to say just to get this off my chest
at the start here, I was quite skeptical
when my colleague Lauren, who's the producer
of this episode, hitched this as a subject for us.
I am not, well, I heard the terms art and the brain,
and I love the brain, but I'm not particularly interested
in art, at least narrowly defined.
I'm not artsy, crafty.
I don't go to museums, which I'm embarrassed to admit.
So I was a little, as I said, skeptical,
but then in reading the 11-page document
that Lauren put together
for me to prep for this interview, I'm completely, I'm flip-flopping here. And I really, you
know, when I give talks, I often talk about the pantheon of no-brainers when it comes to human
flourishing. And I include things like sleep and exercise and meditation and therapy and
medication if you need it and access to nature
and perhaps most importantly relationships.
But I'm now thinking I should probably be including art
as you define it broadly on this list.
So having said way too much at the beginning
of this ostensible interview,
what do you think of all the four going IVL start with you?
Well, first of all, I love, we love converts,
because I'm sure there's many people that feel the same way,
but then after reading the book have a different perspective.
And just like the reason we exercise and sleep
is because science has it drilled into our heads
and has proven that that's good for us.
And the great thing about the project Susan I worked on
is now that science can get into your heads,
we're able to prove the same thing about art.
And when we say art, we talk about the arts.
So it's visual, it's singing, it's dancing, it's theater,
it's either making or beholding art.
So it's very inclusive.
It's the things that allow us to self-express. So I'll
let Susan chime in on some of her thinking here, but I am thrilled and I definitely think you should
add it to the repertoire. Oh, yes, I totally agree. I think that you should add art and aesthetic
experiences to your repertoire. And you already have one of them, which is nature. We think of nature as sort of the ultimate highest form of art. It's really where we come from.
Being in nature, there's so many great studies about how just 15 minutes of nature lowers cortisol helps you reach homeostasis, really helps you clear your brain and have much more clarity and insight. But I began to talk about this.
We see art as a definition of looking
at creative self-expression.
And we do that in so many ways.
And I think when we limit it to the strict dogma of painting,
dancing, performing arts, we limit ourselves.
So things as simple as humming in the shower,
gardening, which someone recently said to us is the slowest art form. But thinking about these very
everyday things that we do that are really ways of being and using the arts. One other thought is
that, you know, indigenous cultures, and there's still 5,000 indigenous cultures around the world,
you know, indigenous cultures, and there's still 5,000 indigenous cultures around the world,
didn't have a word for art because it's how they live.
And it's what they do every day in the everyday moments
that make up our lives, the rituals, the traditions,
the ways we use food, clothing,
dance, storytelling, drawing.
And I think in some ways, we can take a page
from where we were to really think about where we're going.
Yeah, the great thing is you don't have to be good at any of these arts because
many people have done some of these art works when they were kids and then stop doing it because they decided it wasn't going to be their profession.
They don't think they were good at it, but the great thing here is that you don't even have to be good.
I have so many questions I want to talk about. The evidence that you referenced at the top,
that this is good for you, but you've kind of taken me in a few other directions that I do
want to pursue first. Let's stay on a definitional tip for a minute here. What is in and what is out
of the art or arts bucket from your point of view?
You know, we're in an era that has been described as the golden age of television, for example,
although with all the streaming woes, we might be exiting that era, but is watching succession?
Is that qualified as beholding of art? I'm writing a book. It's a non-fiction book, and I pretty
much hate every minute of it,
but is my day filled with art by your definition? So interestingly, the research on this has been
increasing. What we're learning is that being in a live situation, live music, live performances,
theater has a slightly greater benefit from a neurobiological perspective, but things like television streaming
video has a very strong impact and would certainly qualify as some kind of an art form that can be
beneficial as a beholder. You know, there's certainly lots of really good examples where you're
listening to the radio or you're using digital tools that really bring
those different types of art forms in. Writing a book, writing a nonfiction book is certainly
a creative act. And so it may not be pleasurable all the time, but it's definitely a maker's
act. Yeah, and you know, we learned that even writing down a secret and then burning the piece
of paper lowers the cognitive load. Like it doesn't even have to be writing that then you share with anyone, but a
lot of these arts is the act of doing versus the sharing.
Yeah, I was thinking about this difference between makers and
beholders and you know we're makers and beholders all the time just by nature
that's what we do. Like right now, we're in an improvisational conversation with you.
You don't know what we're gonna say, we don't know what you're gonna say.
I don't know what I've is gonna say, I've he doesn't know what I'm gonna say.
And so I think we also are listeners, we are bringing in this information as a beholder.
And as a beholder, there's a couple of things that I think are different than being a maker, to that stand out for me.
One is that we have this ability as beholders
to be perspective-taking.
So I can explore without risk,
different types of emotional ranges,
or different ideas, or different thoughts,
from a storyteller who's sharing information
in whatever art form they're choosing.
I also have the ability to really empathize
and to understand something through my own lens.
As a maker, no one can tell you what to make.
It's such a act of freedom and of self-expression
of an individuality.
And that's something that gives you both an introspection, but also an opportunity to share yourself with
the world in exactly the way you want to. And as I've said, good
or bad isn't part of the conversation. It's not the paradigm.
It's really what is it that you're trying to express? And
what's the best form for you that allows you to do that?
You both were quite keen to start this interview. And I that's the best form for you that allows you to do that.
You both were quite keen to start this interview, and I guess I didn't do what you were hoping I would do,
but I'm gonna put it up pretty high here.
To start this interview, or at least get to this early,
with the notion that art, again, broadly understood,
is part of our evolutionary DNA.
What do you mean by that?
So we had an opportunity to meet with E.O. Wilson,
the evolutionary biologist, who spent a lot of time
thinking about this when we were researching the book.
And he talked about the fact that we share an interesting
phenomena called use social with termites, ants and bees.
And that basically means that we are highly social.
We need each other to survive, to flourish as a species.
And why it doesn't always seem that way,
that preclude to be together and to work together,
met that from the very beginning of humanity,
we had to find ways to express ourselves,
to creatively express ourselves.
And so, dancing, singing, storytelling, circling around the fire, creating spaces where people lived that felt safe.
So, you know, using spaces where behind you were curved spaces that helps you to look out onto a horizon, for example.
And so we know that the evolutionary biology is quite compelling, but then there's also the physiology.
To give you an example, you're born with a hundred billion neurons, and those neurons are really there for you to connect,
to create these neural pathways that become how you think, how you feel, how
you move, how you collaborate, communicate, all the things that we humans do, how we connect
different physiological systems all happen because those neural pathways are connected with
multiple systems simultaneously.
And it turns out that the arts and aesthetic experiences that we bring in through our senses
offer the most salient types of material for creating very strong, neural pathways.
So the songs of your youth think about the way that even music might affect you today.
We know that there are these cascades of neural pathways that are created through strong,
aesthetic experiences
like nature, but also through all of these different art forms.
And if you understand that at a very basic neurobiological level, that lays the groundwork
for how this work can be employed in physical health, mental health, learning, flourishing,
community building, all the things that we do to be our
most human and most powerful selves.
And as Susan mentioned, we did this during tribal days. And then I think what's happened
is we started optimizing for productivity since the Industrial Revolution and we pushed the
arts aside. Thinking that productivity would make us happy
and it's clear as a society where not happy
for the most part, mental health is at a high
versus physical health.
There's a quote that we have in the book
from Jill Bulti Taylor and she says,
we think we're thinking beings that feel
but we're actually feeling beings that think.
And when you think about that, it turns everything upside down or inside out in that our sensory
systems are what make us human, and that we are first and foremost feeling beings that
an evolution have recently been able to think.
But we think that we're thinking beings.
We kind of really cherish the cognitive mind.
We're taking this position that it is critical
that we understand how the arts and aesthetic experience
ignite our sensory systems, which are core to being a human
and a happy human.
And foundational, I think really foundational
for these areas of our lives, like physical
health and disease states, like mental health and all the various ways that that manifests
from stress to serious mental illness, from really being a better learner and learning
is something that I think we talk a lot about, but we really usually relegate learning to
education systems,
which aren't the same thing.
Just as a signal to the listener here, Ivy and Susan have mentioned a lot of things that
I'm sure have piqued your curiosity.
And I'm making notes of them, and I will follow these threads throughout this conversation,
including their mentions of learning and their repeated mentions of the scientific evidence,
which we'll dive into coming up.
But just staying with the thread of the conversation, at least, the threat as it's
flowing in my own mind. One of the things that I heard there was you sociality. That's
EU sociality, meaning good sociality. And it seems to tie back to something in my pantheon of
no brainers.
And I usually end the list with this, and the list expands and contracts depending
on who I'm talking to.
But I usually say that the most important lever, according to the data I've seen, for
a human being to pull when it comes to their own happiness, is the quality of their relationships.
And it seems like arts fit very firmly into that or are very strongly related
to that, wired right into our DNA.
That's a great point. I love your idea of the pantheon of no-brainers. People say to
us when they've read the book or when we've talked about some of the content in the book
that it really sort of makes what they have felt visible.
And so it's interesting, I think, that this sort of ties into that, that it sort of makes a lot
of sense that the arts would be incredibly important for this idea of socializing and relationship
and connectivity. I want to tell you a story that maybe will illustrate this a little bit. I'm a twin.
And when I was 12 years old, my sister had a very serious accident. She almost lost her leg.
And she was so traumatized that she couldn't talk about what happened. And if you know anything
about twins, you know that we finish each other sentences. My stomach hurts, she's getting her
appendix out, right? You're very, very close.
But when this trauma happened to her, I couldn't feel her.
I didn't know where she was, and she couldn't share where she was.
So she started to draw.
And she started creating these illustrations and ways of bringing out what was really stuck
deep inside of her. And I was then able to see what she was feeling
through her artwork, and she was able to get back
and touch with herself.
And so, at a very intimate level,
something as simple as a child's drawing
really allowed me and my sister to be able to have
a connection that was so important for our lifeblood.
You know, we were born in relationship and when you can't be in relationship with someone like
that, it's really hard. I think that's true for all of us, though. You know, we want to understand
the other. We want to share what we're feeling and art, whether it's visual arts, singing, dancing,
you know, synchronicity is something that we're also wired for. So you see it in visual arts, singing, dancing, synchronicity is something that we're also wired for.
So you see it in marching bands,
or you see it in gospel choirs or in choruses
where we synchronize with each other.
You know, it makes me think of the birds,
the starlings that move in emergence with each other.
Humans also have that capacity and that desire
to be in relationship, to move with each other.
And so the arts are sort of a natural evolutionary way
that that happens.
And as Ivy said, I think somehow we have left that
on the sideline, we've optimized out of it,
we've thought it was a luxury
that we'd come back to it if we had time,
but it's actually our essence.
And it's part of what makes us most whole and most healthy.
And I agree with the relationship at the end of the day
is all there is to each other, to ourselves,
to the natural world, you know, 100%.
And as Susan says, even when there are no words
for things, the arts allow you to make that connection
with the other.
And with yourself, by the way, I mean, the arts are a great way of mirroring back to
yourself, how you're feeling when you don't even know.
And you know, Susan talked about the trauma of her sister and the damage to her leg, but
we have micro traumas every day, like little micro traumas, one on top of the other that
we just suppress
and a certain point that gets too much. And the arts, if we can do a little bit each day,
is a way of time releasing those traumas. So it never gets to a place where it has to explode
or create depression. It does get me thinking though about some of the more solitary, artistic, beholding experiences
like watching TV or maybe playing video games, although some video games do have a community
aspect to them.
My son, who's eight plays a lot of roadblocks and there's a lot of chatting in that.
But nonetheless, he's on his own.
And so I wonder, is that less powerful than being in a chorus or anything else that would
be truly in community
versions of art?
We talk about something called the aesthetic mindset that sort of frames this idea of an
aesthetic diet or sort of aesthetic literacy, if you will.
And I'm just going to briefly say what those four things are and then kind of come into
what you're sharing with your son's activities or other kinds of more solitary
activities.
The first thing in an aesthetic mindset is this idea of curiosity, bringing yourself
into a beginner's mind where you're open to new experiences and wanting to know what's
on the other side of the hill and being really, really interested and wondering about things.
So that's a mindset.
The second is playful exploration, being able to do things without an intended outcome
and without judgment or criticism.
The third is this idea of sensorial stimulation and being really aware of your senses around
you, all of them.
And then the last is moving in and out of being a maker and a beholder.
So when you're playing video games
and you are in a strong narrative
with a very visual view,
you're being immersed into that experience,
that's a certain kind of aesthetic mindset
and aesthetic growth that can give you introspection, it can also give you
distraction, it can give you a sense of agency. But I think the most important thing to remember is the
diet of those things. So if you're only doing that, you're only really expanding your capacity in one
way, where if you're doing some video games, you're doing some reading, you're doing some,
maybe it's working in nature or maybe you're doing some kind of physical motor experience
like dancing, you're kind of creating different types of art-based habits that become your
life.
And so I think it's everything in moderation, maybe it's what I'm trying to say, is that
you want to make sure that you're experiencing lots of different things because the ways that you're bringing in the world are changing those neural pathways
and creating new neural pathways and pruning neural pathways that are already there.
So it's really using those aesthetic mindsets to think about how you move throughout your
day and ultimately through life.
Maybe Susan what you're saying is it's a kind of cross training.
Like when we exercise, we do lots of kinds of exercise.
When I meditate, I do lots of kinds of meditation.
Art's are really important, but if knitting is the only thing you ever do and you're not
going to the theater or you're never, I don't know, joining a chorus or whatever, then you
are kind of limiting yourself.
Yeah, there's a range of emotional experiences
and physiologically experiences
that really make up the human diaspora.
And so you want to make sure that you're experiencing
all of those things.
And I was talking about Dear Evan Hansen recently.
I don't know if you saw that play
versus La La Land.
Same guy Benj Pasek wrote the lyrics for both of those.
They're hugely different experiences.
And so the range of human emotions are so huge.
You want to offer those to yourself to be able to experience those.
And you want to try new experiences,
because as Susan says with neuroplacicity,
you're constantly making new synapse connections
and pruning out the old.
So you want to keep having these new experiences so that your brain will pruning out the old. So you want to keep having these new experiences
so that your brain will prune out the old, making room for new connections.
Coming up, Susan Magsaman and Ivy Ross talk about the importance of infusing play and not being
judgmental when you're making art, how art can be a form of meditation and mindfulness, and how
artistic experiences can extend your life,
help treat disease and relieve stress. I, let me say with you for a second, because you said something that I think is extremely important
or resonant to me at least, that we post the Industrial Revolution culturally, there's
this major emphasis on productivity, optimization.
I feel that has only accelerated of late, and I feel it in my own mind really prominently.
This desire to maximize, optimize every moment.
Am I doing something that checks some sort of box?
And I'm wondering, is there a way to co-opt this wiring?
Because it's there, and it's a very powerful habit pattern
in many of our minds.
Is it possible to co-opt that in service of getting people to either
behold or make more often? In other words, if I can think to myself, oh yeah, every day
I do my exercise, I try to get enough sleep, I do X amount of meditation, I need my, again,
broadly defined arts time. Could we co-op to that mental trend to a positive outcome here?
That's absolutely what we have to do because to your point, we've been so outcome driven
because of productivity, we're literally digging those neural pathways deeper and deeper,
and the deeper they are, it's true, the harder they are to get rid of.
And so you have to actively make the decision that says, I'm going to do, this is
really good for me, 20 minutes a day of taking a lump of clay, no expectations. Because by the way,
the opposite of play, people think it's work and it's not, it's depression. Because your brain needs
to do things where there's no preconceived expectation. And so that's what a lot of these arts do without judgment.
I'm gonna take a paintbrush and just start slapping paint on it.
I don't know what it's gonna look like.
I don't care what it looks like.
But to dig ourselves out of where we've gotten to
as a society and dug those neuro pathways
all about checking the list, optimization, productivity, everything has a reason
for doing, we must start playing.
And we must start playing with different art forms.
You're absolutely right.
And that's why we're excited and wanted to write
this book for the masses to explain that
and to absolutely put it on the list
of the things that you do. Sharon Salzburg, who is big
in the meditation movement, we interviewed her, we interviewed about a hundred people for the book,
and she says that art is the best form of meditation. And when you think about it, it is getting
yourself in that state of mind, kind of down the rabbit hole of out of your cognitive mind,
and just focusing on something else entirely.
How is that watercolor dripping on the page?
How is that lump of clay?
What form am I making?
So it's a great form of meditation, actually, art.
So you might want to, if you're short of time,
combine those two on your checklist.
Well, interestingly, it's counterintuitive. The irony is that when you are in these other
states of mind, when you are in flow states, when you are, you know, lowering your cortisol,
when you're doodling in that distracted state, it turns out that you actually are ultimately more creative.
You are more relaxed, you are more innovative.
It turns out that when you have these experiences,
the ROI on it is significantly greater,
and there's been some really wonderful studies to look at that.
If that's not enough,
what we've seen in some of the epidemiology studies
is that one or more art experiences a month can extend your life by 10 years. So if you
really need a reason, I think that does it.
Just to shout out a couple of former guests who have talked about this stuff a lot, Alex
Su-Jung Kim Pang, who wrote a book called Rest that had a huge impression on me, will put
a link to his interview in the show notes and also a Catherine Price, who's a book called Rest that had a huge impression on me. We'll put a link to his interview in the show notes and also a
Catherine Price, who's a good friend of mine, and wrote a book about play and
also gave a great TED talk about play. We'll put links to her episodes and
also to her TED talk in the show notes if people want to go deeper on this.
But back to productivity, I can imagine, you know, I've sometimes joke that I have
this mystical ability to channel the thoughts of my imagine, you know, I've sometimes joke that I have this mystical ability to channel
the thoughts of my listeners, which is, you know, only partially bullshit. But I can
imagine some listeners thinking, okay, I get it, you know, you've only given me tidbits
of the evidence, but it's very compelling. And also, I can interpolate back into my life
and see how I've been running on these to-do lists instead of actually enjoying the,
what limited time I have on the planet and through art,
et cetera, et cetera.
But it does kind of feel like another thing
I might to-do list now, like, oh, shit,
how am I gonna find time to get this gardening done?
I think it's about perspective.
In no way are we asking people to do more,
but it's to be more intentional
with the things that they are doing.
And I'll just give you a couple of simple examples.
You wake up in the morning, you make coffee, right?
Or you make tea or whatever you're making.
Really, you know, smell informs about 75% of your emotions.
So what are you bringing in when you're getting up in the morning?
What are those sensorial experiences of the light?
Is it the temperature?
Is it the smell? You get in the shower, you turn on this really warm water, the four million
nerve endings in your skin, totally light up. Your Vegas nerve is engaged if you're humming or
singing in the shower. It engages your parasympathetic nervous system. And so you're going to take a shower
and have coffee one way or another, right? But how do you really intentionally bring that into your life to really change the way
you feel?
So those are just two really simple examples of that.
A lot of us already guard and a lot of us are already taking walks, but we're doing them
in transactional ways.
And I think what I've been saying is that these are transformative opportunities that you
can begin to start to really use.
We made it mention doodling for a moment.
We know that sitting and doodling in a business meeting actually makes you more attentive, you
pay attention better, you actually can retain information and recall information better just
by the act of doodling.
So there are certain things that I think we've believed are true about the things that we think we want to do that are just not true.
Just that point about doodling, I can't resist dunking on proponents of Zoom. We're on Zoom right
now. Zoom is a great technology, but I sometimes get beat up for not wanting to be on video calls,
but I listen so much better if I can be outside in nature,
not in the panopticon of technology where everybody's looking at me and I can doodle or whatever it is,
I take it in so much better. Right, right, I'm doing it right now. Look,
because I'm like listening to you and I'm thinking, yeah, that's interesting. And I, you know,
I'm like working my way. We all have been so penalized for that.
And I think shamed in some way too that,
oh, we're not doing it right.
And that makes it really hard to want to enter into it.
And I think this lack of judgment on ourselves
and really just opening up the space.
We just somebody tell us recently that they were doing,
Ivey, you have the name, art date night. Yeah, we never expected this quite frankly. I mean,
we wrote this book because we had information that we thought was important to share,
but we're getting emails and linked in with stories about, oh my god, I started after reading
your book. We now do a date night that's art focused, you know, once a week. And they're sending us pictures
of what they do together. And someone yesterday actually talked about what 100 days of art, he
set himself up for a challenge, an hour a day, 100 days of doing this. And so it's been fantastic
to see people taking it on as a challenge and having fun with it. And by calling it art date night, they're experimenting with different things.
Let's go to the theater.
Let's go by watercolor paints and just start water coloring together.
I mean, it's been really fun to hear these stories.
People are picking stuff up that they did 50 years ago.
I have had a woman that sent me love beads. She started
beading. And she's like, you know, I used to be when I was younger. And I loved the motor
activity. And it settled my mind. And so she started beating again. And people are doing all kinds
of things. So I think the way we enter it is we start from where we are. And we're not prescribing.
You have to do these particular things,
but sort of oftentimes you can go back to when you were a kid
and reconnect to some of those aesthetic arts experiences
that really touched you, and that can often be a kind of a place
to begin if you think, well, I don't know where to start,
I don't know what to do, and that can be really helpful.
Yeah, picking up on that, I have a kid, as you know, because he showed up on the Zoom call
up before we started rolling.
And he and I play the drums together and I played the drums when I was a kid.
And so now he has this drum set in his room that I play all the time.
I might play it more than he does, frankly.
And that is one of the few things in my life that I do with no agenda.
Mm-hmm.
There's no productivity aspect to it.
It's just because I enjoy it.
That's fantastic.
And, you know, I was a drummer too.
I can't believe I had a Roger set of drums.
I played in an all-boys band.
And I actually started to realize
that the drumming would get my heart
and resonance with the beat.
And so it was almost my form of meditation.
But now I play African drums.
And so I think that's a perfect example of an art form,
just going in there and banging on those drums
every so often would be incredible.
And there's been some studies about the difference.
And maybe Susan, you could talk about that in playing music
in an improv way versus reading music.
I mean, both are great for you,
but now that we can get inside the brain,
you can see different parts of the brain light up.
The drumming conversation is really interesting.
So there's a researcher named Charles Lim
who's at University of California, San Francisco,
and he studies creativity.
And so he has done some really interesting work
with jazz musicians, putting them in an FMRI machine,
and first they play a piece that's rehearsed,
and then they play a piece that's improv,
and what he's found is that in the prefrontal cortex,
there's a part of the brain that shuts down
when you're improvving,
and there's a part of the brain that lights up
when you are controlling for perfection,
you know, for getting it right.
And I think what it's showing us really beautifully is that, you know, there are times when
we need to go from interest to mastery, and we're very conscious of that.
And there are other times where that just gets turned off so that you really move into
what would be considered a flow state.
He's also now done that same study
with lots of different kinds of improv
versus technical abilities.
He's done it with poetry and slam.
He's done it with characters where people draw
these very fast sort of improv characters
versus portraiture.
And it's the same part of the brain
that consistently is showing those kinds of variations.
But even drumming is a great example.
You guys drum and you kind of move into a flow state and you feel better.
You feel good.
You feel in harmony and sync.
We see drumming in drumming circles in communities where it's really building a sense
of that synchronicity and that connectedness.
Drumming's also being used for Parkinson's patients, where Parkinson's patients have a problem with
gate or motor movement, cognition.
They also tend to have problems with sleep
and sometimes with mood.
Drumming and other kinds of musical instruments,
as well as dance for Parkinson's patients,
turns out to be incredibly helpful in minimizing symptoms
and in looking at things
like dosen dosage, the more they do it,
the longer they do it, they have better outcomes.
And so, you know, we're seeing how using this physiological,
neurobiological truth around how something
the simple is drumming can have such vibrations
in so many different ways.
Just to go back to something you said earlier, you invoked Sharon Salisberg, who's a frequent
flyer on the show. She's been on here many, many times. She's a very close friend of mine.
And we talk a lot about meditation on the show. So people will be familiar with her and at the
very least familiar with meditation. And so I would love to have you sort of hang a lantern on
or amplify the point you were making about the fact that
they're throughout our day, many aspects of the arts that show up and you were using the
term in a sort of transactional way.
We're taking walks, we're making coffee, but if we can use the power of mindfulness that
we all have, whether we meditate or not, to tune into the senses, the sensation of walking
while we're walking, the being in nature, even
if you're in a city, there are trees, there's the awe that can be produced by the architecture
around you, the feeling of the air on your skin.
There's so many ways to tune in to the arts broadly defined that we may be missing.
Am I on the right track with all of this?
No, you're absolutely right.
It's like a sense of radical presence.
If you can tune into these things and just notice,
notice the colors, notice the smell,
notice what is around you.
That in itself will be fantastic for you
and is an amazing way of getting the art or aesthetics
dosage.
I want to share with you on that note in 2018, Susan, I did at the Milan
Design Fair and exhibition, along with Google's support, where we showed the public for the
first time they experienced this idea of neurostetics, which I'll explain in terms of how these
sensorial things, some of which you touched on, is affecting our body all the time, and our mind might not be aware of it.
So what we did is we collaborated with Suchi Ready and Architect,
and we created three rooms.
It was the same living room, dining room, setup,
but each one had a different set of colors, textures, artwork, scent, lighting.
Every aesthetic aspect was different.
When people came to the experience,
we gave them a band that they wore on their hand,
that Susan's Arts and Mind Lab
and Google worked out in algorithm
that would take in the physiology of the person's body
and work toward determining in which room is your body, not your mind, more at ease
or less stressed.
And we asked people to spend, it was called the space for being, just be in each room
for five minutes.
It was only ten people at a time, no talking, no photos, just be.
Touch the texture of the couch. You can even touch the art. Notice the
music. Take in the scent. After the three rooms, people gave their band to a band tender, not a bar
tender, who took the data off of the band, and of course we deleted it right after we shared it.
And we asked the person, which room did you like the best?
And they said, oh, room number two or room number three.
And then we showed them through the algorithm
and the data, the fact that their body
liked a different room potentially.
And let me, Susan, I thought, okay,
this is gonna be a problem if at least over 50%
of the people didn't have that disconnect.
But luckily, I think it was 58% had a difference between what their cognitive mind liked
and what their body actually felt the most comfortable or at ease in.
And people would go, wow, how could that be? Why is that?
And we had to explain, and it was a great exercise to tell people, our body is feeling all the time sensing, taking in information, but we are so in our cognitive
minds and not embodied often, that we're not getting that information from how our body is feeling.
So I know some of the journalists were like, oh, it's Google going to make a band the people
wear to tell them how they feel, as I'm not,
I don't wanna be in a world where you have to do that.
This was just an exercise to bring awareness
that our body is feeling all the time.
And it's time we start making that connection,
which is what you were saying earlier, Dan,
about being aware, and we have agency over what we surround ourselves with and how
we tune into it, and the benefit that that could have by being aware.
Certainly, from an end of one perspective, I can tell you that my perceived ability to
listen to my body, or if you put it in the type of language that I don't particularly
feel drawn to, you might say, listen to your heart, that has improved via meditation.
That's, I think, super interesting. Researchers are starting to see this idea of embodied cognition,
of feeling that sense, those sensory systems, is really another true sense. And, you know,
we may have as many as 50 senses, not five. We only are conscious of about 5% of what
is really happening to us.
Sharon Salsberg, I'm a big fan of hers too.
And I just finished real life.
I don't know if you've had a chance to read that yet.
It's fabulous.
It's really a fabulous book.
And she talks a lot about this idea, the unconscious,
and how things like mandalas, for me, it's collage.
I find that when I put pieces, scraps together on a piece of paper, I can then come back
to those symbols and metaphors and understand one I'm feeling.
And that's another great example of something as simple as a mandalo or collaging or coloring, even stick figures help you really tap into
your psyche in a way that you can't sometimes do without that kind of visual representation,
that also at the same time lowers anxiety levels in a almost immediate way.
And I think so many people are experiencing so much stress and anxiety.
Something as simple as drawing can do that.
Coming up, Susan and Ivy talk about how the arts affect the way we learn,
the emerging field of neuro-arts and neuro-esthetics, how food fits into the arts category,
simple ways to integrate the arts into your daily life,
technologies' relationship to the arts, and the importance of architecture
and your physical space as a form of art.
Let's go hard at the scientific evidence. We've kind of kissed it a few times throughout the conversation.
Can you say more about what art does to our brains and the rest of our bodies?
So we do know that arts and aesthetic experience is alter complex physiological networks of
interconnected systems.
So when I say that, what I mean is neuronal systems.
We've talked a little bit about that, but also psychological systems, arts affect our immune
and integrant systems, circulatory systems, respiratory systems, and also interestingly higher brain
systems like cognition, reward and motor systems. And we know that at a very sort of operational level,
the neurobiology of different arts for different reasons,
affect emotional learning.
You probably've talked before on your show about executive function,
but also increasing synapses and even increasing brain mass.
So there's a great study, several,
but one study that comes to mind is a study that was done with music and children.
And these were children who are just reading music
and playing music.
So it's not necessarily proficient or have mastery,
but this is a work that was done with an FMRI study,
five-year longitudinal study,
University Southern California.
And what they have found is that brain structure
actually changes and
synaptic connection increases. So these studies are pretty definitive in showing
that the arts in this case, it's music, but it's also been seen in other art
forms are literally changing how fast the brain is working, how synapses are
really increasing connections, but also how the shape and size of the brain is changing.
And this speaks to learning. We were talking about learning earlier. You want to have experiences
where you're having those kinds of substantive changes. I'll just tick off a few other bullet
points that I found interesting. Some of these may have already been mentioned. Just 20 minutes
of art a day is as beneficial as exercise and mindfulness working on an art
project for 45 minutes can reduce the stress hormone cortisol to extend your life by 10 years,
as mentioned earlier, participate in one art experience per month.
So it's quite compelling stuff.
Yeah, and you know, I sometimes explain this field as the elephant in the room, where
depending upon where you touch it, so you're touching it for
Parkinson's, there's a certain art form and research. You're looking at Alzheimer's and singing.
There's a lot of work that's being done with both EEG, FMRI, looking at autobiographical music
and what's happening in the brain, where the brain has actually distributed this highly
salient autobiographical experience
outside of the hippocampus into the auditory cortex
into the lymphics system,
into other parts of the brain where someone who has lost
their hippocampus, the ability to use that memory holder
can still pull up a song, can still become very present.
So depending upon what you're looking at, once you understand
this core neurobiological foundation of how the arts are wired through neuroplasticity,
you can start to look at any number of outcomes, whether it's physical health, mental health,
learning, etc. And I think that's where it really becomes interesting. And there's a whole new field emerging called NeuroArts,
which is using this neuroacetic research and expanding it.
NIH has been funding something called the Sound Health Network,
which is funding research in right now music and sound,
and really developing very strong protocols
and research tools and outcome measures.
So we're seeing it in the United States,
but in other countries, there's a lot more prescribing
of the arts for many, many different purposes,
where public health is actually paying for doctors
to write a prescription for people to go to a museum
to be able to work with cognition or stroke recovery or for
describing dance. And so we're seeing this show up literally all over the world.
One of the most fascinating studies that in writing this book we came upon was a woman
and Susan could probably tell you more about her at MIT, who is using sound and light, which are art forms, specifically
40 herts of sound with a combination of light to help in dementia and Alzheimer's.
In terms of actually the combination of that sound and light sequence, we'll literally
clean the brain or activate something that cleans the brain of some of its plaque, and
they're having amazing results.
We're just food fit in all of this.
I never do this, but I've been quite rudely eating some oatmeal and berries while we're
doing this conversation because my day has gotten out of my control a little bit.
We're just food fit into the arts, if at all.
Oh, totally, totally.
I had this big debate with a colleague about whether food was an art form.
And she was like, it's just not an art form.
It's just, it's something that you have to have for survival.
And I said exactly, exactly.
Food is an art form that you need for survival.
I mean, taste, our taste buds turn over every 30 to 60 days, right?
And it's also, taste is one of the last senses that really leads us towards the end of our lives,
which is also really fascinating sugar in particular.
The sweet taste of life is one of the last things
that we have towards the end of our life.
We know that when people eat together,
they tend to be more agreeable,
they tend to be able to collaborate better. So this idea of breaking
bread, there's been some really wonderful studies looking at that. Also that the different
ways that food reinforces culture. So one of the things I mean I talk about is food falls
in this category is art creates culture, culture creates community and community creates
humanity. And food is so important for developing rituals and traditions.
And because regionally and culturally,
food is so unique to who we are for our identity.
It's really fundamental for how we think about that
and all the things that we do throughout the day.
In the book, in the community chapter,
we talked about corn and the many, many ways that
corn is used in the Hopi tribe, whether that's for birth, for death rituals, for sub-synates,
for sacred ceremonies, and that corn became and is such an important life-sustaining symbol,
but also life-sustaining food.
So yeah, totally.
And I think it's really important.
Yeah, cooking itself is absolutely an art form.
I think of it sometimes making a soup
is like making a painting, right?
You decide you have agency over what you put in it.
So both the act of cooking and the act of,
as Susan said, eating together is an art form.
What if I'm just mindful as I eat my strawberry?
That's fantastic as well.
I have a little video.
I have a grandson who's one year old, and my daughter made a video of him tasting a strawberry
for the first time, and that video is extraordinary.
He's like the poster child for neuroesthetics
because you watch his face,
every muscle in his face change as he just starts
to taste the strawberry, then he pulls it out,
kind of looks at it, like what is this thing?
Squishes in it, you know, so it's touch, taste,
he smells it, and so sometimes if I'm ever bored
in a corporate meeting at work,
I have this video I watch of him eating a strawberry
under my desk and I immediately get fully present.
That video sounds amazing.
We touched on this a little bit,
but let's just really hit it again
before we run out of time.
For people who are compelled and I suspect
that that's most, if not all of us,
what are some simple
ways to integrate all that you've learned into our lives on a daily basis?
Well, I have to say, right now, I'm salivating over your strawberry.
I think it's really about appreciating the things that are in your life right now, starting
with where you are, and in bringing these acts of art into
your everyday life and that's thinking about things as simple as the sensory things that
are around you. So I mentioned how you hum in the shower, how you might sing in your car.
My husband and I dance every Friday night almost without fail and we laugh, it's just so much fun, making meals together, thinking
about the way different herbs or ingredients smell, how they come together. You know, scent
is one of those unbelievably emotive sensory systems. So it pulls back memory so amazingly.
And so really thinking about that, we know that moms with postpartum depression
are singing and humming and feeling better.
People are doodling.
We talked about doodling, coloring, collaging.
All those things that you can do every day
getting out in nature, even just looking up in the sky
and just appreciating cloud watching.
There's this great term I love called peridolia,
which is the way that you make images out of things
that aren't really there.
So seeing faces in the electric socket or images and clouds,
all of those ways that you can really tap into the world
around you are really easy to do.
And you're moving through your day anyway.
So how do you make it feel more alive and enriched?
And I think these are some of the very simple ways to do that.
So, and then I want to say, and or be intentional about carving out
that 20 minutes or 30 minutes a day to experiment with either pick up
some art form that you used to do as a kid or as an adult and stopped
because you were told you were not good at it.
Sir Ken Robinson said he would go into nursery schools.
Who's an artist?
Everyone's hand would go up by the time
he got to third or fourth grade.
No one's hand would go up.
And so because someone judged what we were doing
and so we just put it aside.
So pick up something that you used to do
or do what some of our readers are doing.
Create an art date night, be intentional
about carving out, as you mentioned earlier, Dan,
just like we do exercise, et cetera,
and say, I'm gonna have some fun with this, no expectations,
and by a coloring book, listen to music, get some clay,
try to paint.
You could move through these different art forms,
and as long as you have no judgment, it becomes play.
It becomes total play and fun.
You reminded me, Ivy, that we talked about this in the book,
but reading poetry lights up some of the same parts
of the brain as listening to music.
And it also stimulates the brain's primary reward
circunctury.
Clay, yarn, soil.
All these things where your hands are stimulating
your skin and nerve endings, they ignite an entire internal sensory receptors that are
part of the somatic sensory system, and they actually help you become more attentive
and focused. And so the benefits of these kinds of activities have a very strong physiological and psychological
outcome response.
And so I think sort of feeling your way through that is also really interesting.
And I want to say, I'm not here to talk about technology, but I do want to say, as you
know, technology moves more into our lives, I think some of the things we're talking about are so important for us to amplify
those sensory systems that we humans have and this ability to creatively express is going to become
more and more important as the world changes. And that brings you back to what Dan, you were talking
about with one of your no-brainers, which is relationship. How we build strong, creative,
innovative, spontaneous relationships with each other, I think is such an important part of this work
as well. You said you weren't here to talk about technology, I have you, but that is kind of where I
want to end this, which is your argument that we're on the verge of a shift where these benefits
of the arts of neuro-esthetics become more widely available, and I would imagine technology
as part of that.
Well, it is in some ways in the sense that dissemination and scaling technology provides that way
beyond anything we've ever known.
Also in the interventions, some of these medical interventions
and mental health interventions
and even learning interventions
are using virtual reality
and other kinds of biometrics and biomarkers
for the actual intervention themselves.
And that's pretty great.
And then on the diagnostic side
and the research side,
technology is actually allowing us to get inside our heads,
but also the biomarkers that we can use to help understand
what some of these aesthetic arts experiences are doing
and how we can think about things like dose and dosage.
And so technology and service to humanity
is really what we're talking about.
And I think there's many ways that that's allowing us
to expand this work with technology. really what we're talking about. And I think there's many ways that that's allowing us to
expand this work with technology. Because technology is a tool. I mean, it's a tool for us to work with.
And it has done some amazing things even in terms of us being able to, if you want to try to water
color, you could on the internet find a class that you could take on watercolor.
Everything from that to, as Susan said, actually helping in mental and physical interventions.
And maybe you're so good at this.
These immersive experiences that are being developed highly sensorial, immersive experiences
that are incorporating arts and aesthetics and technology
are popping up all over the world.
And you probably saw the Van Gogh work
where you walked into a Van Gogh painting.
But that's accelerating.
And I think that's also helping to amplify
some of our sensorial experiences.
I mean, you know, I want to talk about some of that.
Yeah, I think it's no accident
that this new art form of immersive art is happening
where you do walk into a painting
instead of looking at it
or we've had some experiences lately
where you'll come into a space
and you see sound and hear color for 15 minutes
an eyes open experience.
And you walk out of there and you are radically present because by being in these
sensorial experiences that we've never had before, we are forced to get out of our
cognitive mind. And I think we're searching as a species for these ways to have
those experiences.
Some people are doing that through psychedelics,
but there are plenty of other ways
through these experiences that we're talking about,
these immersive art experiences,
where you can light up similar places in the brain
and walk out with a different fresh perspective on life.
So I think we have a chapter at the end of
the book called The Art of the Future, and we talk a little bit about this, but I think we're
going to see more of these physical, I'm not talking about ARVR, but physical in the real world,
experiences, and a lot of museums are now very much showing these immersive exhibits.
Before I let you go, just want to get to the two questions I
have literally asked, one is, is there something I should have asked, but didn't?
Well, I was going to raise that we have a chapter in the book about flourishing,
and I think it's worth spending a moment on that. We've talked about mental health,
we talked about physical health, we've talked about learning, but I think that at the core of what Ivy and I are sharing is that we want
more than to cope, right?
We want more than to survive as a species we want to flourish.
And I think that there are attributes to flourishing, like curiosity and wonder, building
the muscle for awe and for enriched environments, creativity, novelty and surprise, and ritual.
Coming out of COVID, I think we all sort of felt like we weren't sure, and maybe we all still feel this way,
that we weren't really sure what the future was going to hold, but I think we all can agree that we want to flourish,
not just to survive. And a lot of this work comes back to that.
And I would say the one thing that we didn't mention,
I would love to mention is architecture
and designing space is an art form.
And it's one of the places where again,
we've kind of gone a little awry,
designing our spaces for efficiency
versus designing them,
because you know, you change the space
and you change the way you think and you change
the way you feel.
And I think we have to get back to the place in ancient times architects used to be doctors
and philosophers because they had to understand how the decisions that were being made, how
tall is the ceiling?
Do I have light or windows?
How that's going to affect the people they're inside. So it's just a something I wanted
to bring up because we as EO Wilson pointed out to us 99.8% of the time we've been on the planet
as humans. We have been in nature. It's only like point one or two percent of our time here that we've
lived in the built environment and we need to get more conscious about the spaces that we are
creating, both for the individual and for our communities
in terms of schools, public housing,
from more of a neuroesthetic perspective.
That means translating research with practice practitioners
so that we understand how to bring that together.
And that field of translational research where you're bringing highly interdisciplinary teams together to work together is happening with space.
So, thinking about green space, nature, but also physical built environments and all those different locations.
And that's where the action is, is bringing all of these fields together to solve intractable
problems.
I mean, this issue of how you can organize your space so that your mental health is improved.
It's a big and rich one.
And just to say we're going to pair this episode with an interview with Ingrid Fattel-Lee,
who wrote a book about just this.
So more to come on this particular aspect. Before I let you both go,
can you please shamelessly plug your book
and anything else you've put out into the world
that you want people to know about?
Sure, well, the book is called Your Brain On Art,
How the Arts Transform Us.
And we have a website, www.yourbrainonart.com,
which we post and share stories.
And we have a place where we'd love to hear your stories.
We also are on Instagram.
It's your brain on art, book on Instagram.
But we are really interested in making this a dialogue.
As Susan said, this is a new field.
The science is neuroesthetics.
The field is neuro arts.
And the field is taking all kind of action in terms
of both gathering research, funding, working all around the world to build community.
I would just add that, you know, we think that we are standing on the verge of a cultural
shift where the arts are delivering potent, accessible, and proven
health, and well-being solutions to billions of people.
And I've even mentioned neuro-arts.
I would say if people are interested in the field, they can go to neuroartsblueprint.org,
and they can learn a lot more about this blueprint that is really a five-year plan to create
the tent poles to really lift this field up.
And it's very exciting.
It's a really exciting time to be an artist,
an arts practitioner, a researcher interested in this work.
And people with lived experiences
who are all coming together to make this happen.
Or just a human that wants to be more human.
Have more happy human.
Well said, great to spend time with you both.
Thank you for your work.
And thanks for coming on this show. Thank you for having us. Thank you.
Thanks again to Susan Meg salmon and Ivy Ross. Thanks to you for listening. 10% happier is produced by Lauren Smith.
By the way, Lauren Smith is the one who pitched this episode shout out again to Lauren. Our
episode shout out again to Lauren. Our compatriots also include Gabrielle Zuckerman, Justin Davie and Tara Anderson. DJ Cashmere is our senior producer,
Marissa Schneiderman is our senior editor and Kimmy Regler is our executive producer,
scoring and mixing by Peter Bonaventure of Ultraviolet audio and we get our
theme music from Nick Thorburn of the Great Band Islands. We'll see you all on Wednesday
for part two of our Monday and Gourry series.
We're gonna talk to Ingrid Fatel Lee,
who's a designer and author
who's got a whole book about the hidden influence
of our surroundings and our happiness. Hey, hey, prime members. You can listen to 10% happier early and ad free on Amazon Music.
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