Articles

Be sure to subscribe to my newsletter for updates on the latest posts!
Subscribe

Body Tension and Self-Image

How are we aware of the space between what we want or need to do and what we think we are able to do? It's a feeling, isn't it? An underlying sense of tension, resistance, and insecurity if the space is wide enough. It seems that when there's a discord between our...

New Additions to the Reading List – February 2016 Edition

It's been awhile since I've put a Recommended Readings post together and, while I have been sharing them on Twitter, I thought it was time to put one up on the site. This post includes books on the neuroscience of trauma, learning and habits, consciousness and...

Labeling, Experience, and Self-Regulation

Humans are social creatures with our capacity for language giving us dominion, as we perceive it, over other species. Given our inclination for spoken and written communication, we humans love to label things. So it's no surprise that the medical model often goes...

Guest Post: Making a Difference in Chronic Pain

This guest post is written by Leda McDaniel, who wrote a fantastic article for SethOberst.com back in 2014 entitled An Athlete's Open Letter on Pain and Recovery. So I was thrilled to have her approach me to write a follow-up in which she outlines two steps we can...

The Best of 2015 on SethOberst.com

SethOberst.com saw considerable growth in 2015 despite the entire country of Paraguay's insistence on not reading my articles. To put a bow on this year's content, here's a quick summary of the goings-ons. ​Here are the Top Articles based on traffic in 2015. The...

Maps, Predictions, and Behavior

Do we ever really know reality? Or do we only experience the world thru our own perception of reality? Modern neuroscience indicates quite clearly (read Subliminal) that our subconscious interpretation of sensory input is largely viewed thru a predictive lens informed...

Using Pendulation to Change Movement Patterns

Improving, removing, or otherwise altering patterns is what we do as therapists and coaches. But it's quite challenging to truly change how someone moves and behaves because changing a pattern is a systemic process. If you change one pattern all the neural systems...

Awareness as an Agent of Change

Once upon a time, I wrote a piece called Neuroception and the Hierarchy of Needs. In it I discussed how the brain determines threats from the environment, altering the way the world is perceived and directly influencing the nervous system. A hypervigilance to threat...

Behavior and Anatomy

Our habits define us more than our anatomy. Form follows function. Moshe Feldenkrais wrote in Body & Mature Behavior that anatomical peculiarities only partially explain our behavior. It is our repeated output patterns - movements, thoughts, emotions - that become...

New Additions to the Reading List – August 2015 Edition

Our ability to appropriately integrate stimuli from the environment is crucial to our self-perception and neurological wiring — ultimately altering our capacity for optimal function and performance. This month's additions to the Recommended Readings List focus on two...

Habits, Conditioning, and the Plastic Paradox

In case you haven't been following this blog (looking at you, people of Mongolia), the last few posts have centered on the appraisal of threat by the limbic system of the brain, the resting tone of the nervous system based upon said threat, and how consistency and...

SethOberst.com at Year Two

This post marks the 2-Year Anniversary of SethOberst.com and we've seen continued and considerable growth over the past year. In light of this, I wanted to reflect on where we've been and where it's going.Over the past year, we have: Been viewed in 133 countries...

An Environment for Better Learning and Performance

In a post not so long ago in a galaxy very near here, we discussed neuroception and the hierarchy of needs. In it, I described how the nervous system's subconscious evaluation of threat determines one's ability to engage with, or disengage from, the environment. This...

New Additions to the Reading List – June 2015 Edition

As I did back in April, once I reach a critical mass I will post the most salient points from books I've found highly engaging. This month's additions to the reading list are focused on three of my most favorite of topics: stress, neuroplasticity, and the mind.Why...

Subscribe To My Newsletter

Subscribe To My Newsletter

Sign up to receive updates on new articles, when I add new reads on my Essential Book List, and learn about upcoming workshops or seminars!

You have Successfully Subscribed!