Music, Creativity, and Mental Health: Six Missing - Roundtable
I found this roundtable discussion of the 6 Missing podcast to be both delightful and thought-provoking. First, we discussed the idea of an addictive personality and how we can convert such impulses into 'useful addictions'. We also agreed how 'comforting' TJ Dumser is as a person as reflected by his insights, vocal tone and general demeanour. We explored the idea of ‘state dependent cognition’, which led to a discussion of the shift in psychology to include somatic or body-based therapies. A quite profound discussion followed about accepting our relative insignificance and how this takes a self-imposed weight off our shoulders. We agreed that a new insight was that ambient music doesn’t so much dictate what emotions we are to feel, but allows us to uncover what's there and finally, we explored how TJ’s music is a type of mindfulness practice.

Mark Murphy: The Five Critical Roles You Need to Build a Winning Team

The Gaslighting Expert Jefferson Fisher: If They Do This, You're Being Manipulated!

Chloe Carmichael: Can I Say That? - Roundtable

Conan O’Brien Delivers the Commencement Address | Harvard Commencement 2026

Music, Creativity, and Mental Health: Six Missing

Golden Retriever Meets Completely Broken Rescue for the First Time

Love is a skill, not a feeling | Alain de Botton: Full Interview

Psycholytic Ketamine Therapy: A Conversation with Sharon Niv

Lessons on Creativity with Rick Rubin

The World's Leading Autism Expert - Professor Sir Simon Baron-Cohen

How I Set Myself Free | Keke Palmer | TED

Micheal Pollan On The Mystery Of Consciousness.

Andrew Ross Sorkin on What 1929 Teaches Us About 2025 | The New Yorker Radio Hour

Mark Murphy: The Five Critical Roles You Need to Build a Winning Team - Roundtable

Chloe Carmichael: Can I Say That?

Paul Simon: “I never thought they were hits”

This Is Why I Find Pema Chödrön So Essential | The Ezra Klein Show

From Perception to Pleasure: How Music Changes the Brain | Dr. Robert Zatorre | TEDxHECMontréal

Stop Walking 10,000 Steps/Day (do this for 10 minutes instead)

