The upward spiral
The body talks to the brain more than the brain talks to the body. A field guide to using that, and to all the levers on the cable that aren't breath.
Part three of a trilogy. See also: Your body decided before you did (the diagnosis) and Breathe and the cable answers (the breath lever).
Contents
- The meal in another country
- The vagus is mostly listening
- The downward spiral
- The upward spiral
- Genuine versus performed
- The levers that aren't breath
- Co-regulation: the most underused tool
- The practices you may already do, named
- A note about the appeaser
- A layered daily practice
- The cable hears good news too
You travel somewhere. The Greek island, the Italian coast, the village in Thailand. You eat the same kinds of foods you eat at home, sometimes worse ones. Heavier, oilier, more bread, more dairy, more sugar. Things that would bother you at home don't bother you here. Your digestion works. You sleep deeper. The headaches don't come.
You fly home. Within two days, the old pattern returns. Same body. Same gut. Same microbiome (more or less). No genetic change in fourteen hours of flying. The variable that changed was your nervous-system state.
If you've had this experience, you've already met the central fact of this document. The body has more reversibility than we're told. The same physiology that produces chronic stress, digestive trouble, anxiety, and depleted mood can also produce calm, deep digestion, ease, and energy. The cable runs in both directions. We just spend more time training the downward direction than the upward one.
This is the third piece in a small set. The first piece (Your body decided before you did) explained how stress hijacks the body. The second (Breathe and the cable answers) gave you the breath as a primary lever for changing that. This one is about everything else. All the other ways into the same cable, the bidirectional traffic between your gut and your brain, the upward spiral that contemplative traditions have been describing for thousands of years, and the practices you may already be doing that are operating on this exact mechanism through different doors.
Most people train their nervous system down without realizing it. You can train it up the same way. Same mechanism. Different direction.
Section 1The vagus is mostly listening
Here's the fact that changes everything about how you should think about your body, your moods, and your mental state.
The vagus nerve has roughly 100,000 fibers in humans. About 20% of those are efferent (brain to body — "do this"). About 80% are afferent (body to brain — "this is happening").
Said differently: your brain spends four times more bandwidth listening to your body than directing it. The vagus is not primarily a control line from brain to viscera. It's primarily a sensor cable from viscera to brain.
This is one of the most consistently underemphasized facts in popular wellness writing. The implication is large:
- Your brain learns the state of your body from a stream of vagal sensory data, second by second.
- Your emotional state is, in part, a brain's interpretation of that body data.
- Change the body data and the emotional state shifts, often before you "decide" anything cognitively.
This is also why "stop being anxious" doesn't work. Your conscious thought is downstream of body signals it can't directly see. The cortisol-soaked gut, the constricted blood vessels in your hands, the shallow chest breath, the tense jaw — all of these are sending data up the vagus that the brain is reading as "something is wrong." The brain then constructs a story to match. The story is what you experience as the thought.
Change the body signal and you change what the brain has to interpret.
Section 2The downward spiral
Before we describe the upward spiral, the downward one. Most people are running it. Knowing the mechanism is half of being able to step out.
The previous pieces in this series describe the stress side. "Your body decided before you did" covers the acute cascade and the recovery curve in detail. What's worth doing here is naming the feedback loop that lets a chronic stress state perpetuate itself, with the gut as the central node.
The gut-brain loop in chronic stress
- Sympathetic activation. Triggered by anything from a stressful meeting to anticipatory thoughts about tomorrow. Blood shunts away from gut, motility slows or becomes erratic, digestive enzyme secretion drops.
- The gut state changes. Food doesn't digest cleanly. The gut barrier (tight junctions between cells) loosens under stress. Within weeks of chronic stress, the microbiome shifts toward less diverse, more pro-inflammatory species. Roughly 90% of the body's serotonin is made in the gut, and gut serotonin signaling changes under stress.
- The vagus reports back. Afferent fibers pick up these changes — distention, inflammation, abnormal motility, microbial signaling — and send the signal up to the brainstem.
- The brain interprets the signal as threat. The brainstem routes vagal signals to the insula (interoception, "how do I feel"), amygdala (threat), and prefrontal cortex (story-making). The result is a baseline of low-grade anxiety, often experienced as "coming from nowhere."
- The story matches the signal. Your prefrontal cortex constructs an explanation: "I'm worried about that email." "I'm anxious about Sunday." The thought is plausible but downstream. It is the brain rationalizing a body signal, not a free-standing cognition.
- The story drives more sympathetic activation. Worrying activates the same stress machinery as a real threat. Back to step 1.
The loop is self-sustaining. Once it's running, you don't need an actual external stressor anymore. The gut keeps sending threat signals, the brain keeps constructing threat explanations, the explanations trigger more gut disturbance. People can be locked in this for years.
The evidence the loop is real
This isn't speculation. Several converging lines of evidence:
- Vagotomy reduces anxiety behaviors in animal models. Surgical sectioning of the vagus (done in the 1980s for ulcers, before better drugs existed) was associated with mood changes in humans, and in animals it reliably blunts anxiety responses.
- Probiotics affect mood through the vagus, not the bloodstream. A famous 2011 study with Lactobacillus rhamnosus showed it reduced anxiety-like behavior in mice. When researchers cut the vagus before the probiotic, the effect disappeared. The signal was traveling up the nerve, not through the blood.
- IBS and anxiety are extremely co-morbid. Roughly 60% of IBS patients have an anxiety disorder. The directionality is not "anxiety causes IBS" but rather a bidirectional locked-in loop.
- Travel and environmental change frequently disrupt the loop. The "I digest better abroad" phenomenon is partly novelty-state (sympathetic state changes), partly removal of conditioned-stress cues. This is also part of why retreats and pilgrimages have therapeutic effects that survive the return trip, sometimes.
The thought that "comes from nowhere" usually comes from somewhere. It just came in via a wire your conscious mind can't see.
Section 3The upward spiral
Same wiring. Opposite direction.
- Parasympathetic activation. Triggered by slow breathing, warm voice, safe presence, gentle movement, genuine positive emotion, or any of the levers in Section 5.
- The gut state changes. Blood flow returns. Motility regularizes. Digestive secretion appropriate to the meal. Over weeks, microbiome diversity recovers. Inflammation drops.
- The vagus reports back. Afferent fibers pick up "everything is okay." The signal travels to the same brainstem nuclei, but the signal is different.
- The brain interprets the signal as safety. Amygdala calms. Insula reports interoceptive ease. Prefrontal cortex comes online — broader attention, more cognitive flexibility, easier emotional regulation.
- The story matches the new signal. Instead of "I'm anxious about Sunday," the thought becomes "I'm looking forward to Sunday." The Sunday hasn't changed. The body state has.
- The story drives more parasympathetic activation. Positive affect, gratitude, warmth, all activate the same vagal machinery. Back to step 1.
Fredrickson's broaden-and-build theory
Barbara Fredrickson at UNC Chapel Hill described this loop formally in the early 2000s. Her "broaden-and-build" theory says that positive emotions do two things:
- Broaden cognition. Positive affect literally widens the visual field, increases peripheral awareness, expands the set of behaviors you can imagine, improves creative problem-solving. Negative affect narrows all of these. This is measurable in lab tasks.
- Build resources. Over time, the broadened state allows you to accumulate social bonds, skills, resilience, and yes, vagal tone. Tomorrow's positive emotion is easier because of today's.
The combined effect is a slowly compounding spiral. Each genuine moment of positive affect makes the next one slightly easier, just as each unresolved stress event makes the next stress event slightly harder.
The 2013 study that proved it on the vagus
The strongest evidence is a Fredrickson and Bethany Kok study published in Psychological Science. They had participants do six weeks of loving-kindness meditation (LKM), 60 minutes per week, versus a wait-list control. Two findings:
- The meditation group showed measurably increased vagal tone (HRV) over six weeks. The control group did not. The change was specifically in cardiac vagal control.
- The effect followed an upward spiral. Participants who started with higher vagal tone gained the most from the practice. People with weaker baseline vagal tone gained less. The rich get richer. Vagal tone is trainable, but it trains itself faster when there's some tone to work with.
The implication: the cable is plastic, but it has momentum. Starting the spiral takes more energy than maintaining it. Once it's running, it accelerates.
The other evidence
- Sheldon Cohen (Carnegie Mellon) spent decades showing that people with higher positive affect get sick less often when deliberately exposed to the same virus. Mechanism: vagal/HPA tone affects immune function. Not magical thinking. Measurable resistance.
- Gratitude interventions reduce systolic blood pressure (Mills et al., 2015), improve sleep quality (Wood et al., 2009), and shift HRV upward over 4-8 weeks of practice. The effects are small per session and additive over months.
- Social connection is one of the largest single predictors of HRV in cross-sectional studies, controlling for everything else. People with strong relationships have higher vagal tone. The mechanism is co-regulation (Section 7).
- Facial feedback affects mood and HRV. Holding a genuine smile (the Duchenne kind, the one that engages the muscles around the eyes) for 60 seconds shifts physiological state upward. Frowning does the opposite. The effect was originally demonstrated by Strack et al. (1988) and has had a complex replication history, but the broader claim (facial muscles signal up to the brain) is well-supported.
Section 4Genuine versus performed
This is the crucial caveat without which everything else gets mistranslated into wellness theater.
The vagus responds to genuine signals, not performed ones. The body is not stupid. It is, in fact, an extremely sensitive lie detector for its own state. You can tell yourself you're grateful while your jaw is clenched, and the body will register both signals correctly: clenched jaw, false story. The clenched jaw wins.
The Duchenne smile
The classic example. A "polite" smile uses only the zygomatic muscles around the mouth. A genuine smile (named after the 19th-century French neurologist Guillaume Duchenne) also engages the orbicularis oculi muscles around the eyes — the crinkling that you can't fake consciously without practice. Research consistently finds that Duchenne smiles shift mood and physiology upward, and non-Duchenne smiles do not.
The body distinguishes these because they involve different motor patterns and produce different facial-feedback signals back to the brain. The cable can tell the difference.
Toxic positivity as a failure mode
The wellness-industry version of the upward spiral often collapses into forced cheerfulness, gratitude-list ritualism, and the suppression of "negative" emotions. This is worse than nothing:
- Forcing positivity over real distress requires effortful suppression, which is itself sympathetic-activating. The body works harder to maintain the cover than to feel the underlying state.
- The cable still reports the suppressed distress as a body signal. The brain has to reconcile two contradictory inputs (face says happy, gut says terrible). This is dysregulating, not regulating.
- Over time, the gap between the performed signal and the felt signal widens. People in chronic toxic-positivity mode often have lower HRV than people who let themselves feel what they feel.
What actually works
The mechanism that does work, across every body of research:
- Acknowledge the current state honestly. The vagus settles when the felt signal is being correctly named, not when it's being covered.
- Find a small genuine shift. Thirty seconds of real warmth toward something is worth more than five minutes of forced gratitude listing.
- Stay with the genuine signal long enough for the body to register it. The minimum effective dose for positive affect to leave a vagal trace seems to be 15-30 seconds of full embodied feeling.
- Repeat regularly. The spiral is built one small genuine moment at a time, over weeks.
A genuine thirty seconds beats a performed five minutes. The body is keeping score, and it is not fooled.
Section 5The levers that aren't breath
Breath is the most well-known input to the vagus, and the most-studied. It got its own document. This section is everything else. Each lever is a real, mechanistically grounded way to talk to the same cable. None of them are alternatives to breath. They stack.
Humming, singing, chanting
The most direct, on-demand vagal stimulation available without a device. Humming a low tone for several minutes produces measurable HRV increases. Singing along to a song you love, especially with a long sustained exhale, does the same.
Group singing
Group singing reliably synchronizes HRV across participants within minutes — a phenomenon called "physiological coupling." A 2013 study found that members of a Swedish choir synchronized their heart rate variability when singing slow hymns. The effect was strongest in songs that produced six-breaths-per-minute breathing rate (the resonance frequency — see the breath piece).
This is most of why group singing feels disproportionately good. You're doing breath-resonance training, laryngeal vagal stimulation, social bonding, and physiological co-regulation simultaneously. Four levers at once.
Cold water on the face
The dive reflex is what allows seals to stay underwater for an hour. In humans, even briefly exposing the face to cold water produces a measurable vagal surge. It's the fastest non-drug way to drop acute sympathetic activation, faster even than cyclic sighing.
Loving-kindness meditation (metta)
The classical Buddhist practice. You direct sustained warmth toward (1) someone easy to love, (2) yourself, (3) a neutral person, (4) someone difficult, and (5) all beings. The mechanism is generating real (not performed) warm affect, sustained for 10-20 minutes, repeated daily.
Fredrickson and Kok's 2013 study used exactly this protocol. Six weeks at 60 minutes per week measurably raised vagal tone in the practice group. This is the most well-evidenced practice in the entire upward-spiral literature.
Gratitude that lands in the body
Generic gratitude listing ("I'm grateful for my health, my family, my job") doesn't reliably produce vagal effects. The version that works is specific, sensory, and sustained: recall one particular moment in the last 24 hours when something felt good. The taste of coffee. A kind word. The way the light hit something. Then stay with the body sensation that recall produces. Not the thought. The sensation.
The Duchenne smile
Not a polite social smile. The kind where your eyes crinkle. You can practice this by recalling something funny or someone you love, and letting the smile actually arrive. Then hold it for 60 seconds. The longer you hold a true smile, the more vagal signal it sends.
Safe touch
Hugging someone you trust for 20+ seconds reliably lowers cortisol and raises HRV. Stroking a pet does similar things. Your own hand on your chest or belly does some of the same, especially when paired with slow breath. The skin has specialized "social touch" receptors (C-tactile afferents) that respond specifically to slow, warm contact at the speed of natural petting (roughly 3-5 cm per second).
Slow, rhythmic movement
Yoga, tai chi, qigong, and slow walking all produce vagal activation when done at meditative pace. The mechanism includes breath regulation, postural support, and rhythmic vestibular input. Fast intense exercise is sympathetic-activating during the session and rebounds parasympathetic after. Slow rhythmic movement is parasympathetic during the session, which is why it's better for acute regulation.
Slow, warm voice (your own)
Speaking slowly, with warmth, at lower pitch than usual, activates vagal pathways through your own larynx. This is part of why reading aloud to a child is calming for both child and reader. It's also why coaching yourself out loud, in a slow warm voice, works better than thinking the same words silently.
Soft gaze, panoramic vision
Sympathetic activation narrows your visual field (tunnel vision under threat). The reverse works too: deliberately broadening peripheral vision, softening the gaze, can downshift sympathetic activation. The eye-movement work in EMDR therapy is partly based on this. So is the yogic practice of "soft eyes."
None of these are alternatives to breath. They stack. The strongest practical effects come from combining: humming while breathing slowly, with hand on heart, with a soft gaze, while genuinely smiling, while remembering someone you love. Each lever adds. The body integrates the signals.
Most "magical" experiences during retreats, prayer, or therapy are not single-lever events. They are five or six levers stacking accidentally.
Section 6Co-regulation: the most underused tool
This section gets its own treatment because it is, on the evidence, the strongest single intervention for nervous-system regulation that humans have access to. The piece on stress mentioned co-regulation as "the most underused tool" but only in passing. It deserves a full unpack.
Humans do not regulate their nervous systems alone. We never have. Across mammal evolution, the nervous system is built to be synchronized with the nervous systems around it. Infant heart rate variability syncs with the mother's. Adult couples' HRV synchronizes during shared activity, particularly during eye contact, conversation, and quiet co-presence. Therapy works partly because a regulated therapist's nervous system entrains the patient's. Groups of meditators show inter-personal HRV coherence during meditation. Singing in a choir does this, as does drumming, as does sitting in silence in a meditation hall with thirty other people.
This is not a poetic metaphor. It is biology.
How co-regulation actually works
Several mechanisms running in parallel:
- Voice tone. A slow, warm, low-pitched voice activates the listener's vagus through the auditory pathway. Singing lullabies works for the same reason. The "motherese" pitch contour mothers use with infants is acoustically optimized for vagal entrainment.
- Face. A relaxed, warm face is read by the other person's nervous system as a safety signal within 100 milliseconds. Their facial muscles unconsciously mirror it (the mirror-neuron system). The mirroring activates their own facial-feedback loop. Their face relaxes. Yours reads the relaxed face. Loop.
- Breath. Breath rates synchronize between people in conversation, especially in silence together. A calm person's breath rate slowly pulls a more activated person's breath rate down.
- Posture and rhythm. Even without speech, two people in the same room slowly synchronize micro-movements, postural shifts, and rhythmic patterns. This is observable on video over minutes.
- Touch. When safe, touch is the most direct co-regulatory channel. A hand on the back, a hug, holding hands — all measurably synchronize HRV and lower cortisol in both parties.
Why isolation is so damaging
Loneliness is one of the largest predictors of mortality in modern epidemiology, equivalent to smoking 15 cigarettes a day in Holt-Lunstad's meta-analyses. The mechanism is partly chronic sympathetic activation without the co-regulatory inputs the system evolved to use. The nervous system was designed in an environment where someone was usually nearby. Solitary regulation is possible, but it is harder than co-regulation, and most humans are not very good at it.
You can do an hour of breathwork and gain less than a 20-minute conversation with a person whose presence makes you feel safe. This is a hard pill for self-improvement-minded people who like to optimize alone. The data is the data.
The practical implications
- Time with safe people is autonomic infrastructure. Not luxury, not socializing for its own sake. Maintenance for the system. Skipping it is like skipping sleep.
- Choose carefully. Not everyone co-regulates upward. People in chronic dysregulation can transmit that, especially under stress. The "lift" or "drag" you feel after a specific person is usually accurate. Pay attention to it.
- Pets count. Especially dogs and cats. The data on dog ownership and HRV/cortisol is unusually clean. The reason is that animals are some of the most reliable co-regulators available: they don't bring their own anxieties, they offer continuous warmth signal.
- Groups are stronger than dyads. A group of regulated people produces a much larger effect than the sum of one-on-one time. This is part of what makes things like MKP groups, retreats, sanghas, and good families therapeutic in a way that individual practice rarely matches.
- Phone calls and video can do it. Less than in-person, but more than nothing. A 20-minute call with the right voice and presence still moves the needle.
- Therapy is mostly co-regulation. The specific modality (CBT, IFS, psychodynamic) matters less than people think. The thing that consistently predicts outcome is the therapeutic alliance — which is, autonomically, two regulated nervous systems making contact.
For men, especially men trained to be self-reliant and stoic, the co-regulation lever is the hardest to pull. Asking to be witnessed when you're struggling, sitting close to someone in silence, letting someone see you in a state you'd normally hide — these violate the script. But the script is the thing that's keeping the nervous system isolated. Co-regulation is most needed exactly when it feels most awkward to ask for.
Group-format men's work (like MKP) is one of the few cultural structures designed to make this accessible. The "carpet" practice and similar exercises explicitly create the co-regulatory environment most men never had in their families of origin.
Section 7The practices you may already do, named
If you've spent any time in contemplative or self-development traditions, you've probably been doing some of this without the vagal-tone vocabulary. Here are the most common practices, named at the autonomic layer. The point isn't to debunk them or to reduce them to physiology. The point is to recognize the cable that all of them are operating on, so that you can be intentional rather than accidental about how you stack them.
Practice → mechanism
Different doors. Same room.
Section 8A note about the appeaser
This section is for anyone whose default in conflict is to agree, smooth over, keep the peace. The pattern is in the earlier piece ("Your body decided before you did") under the "fawn" response, and it has a specific autonomic signature: outwardly calm, inwardly cortisol-soaked. The body is running a stress response that the mind never named.
What's worth adding here is that the appeaser doesn't heal by becoming braver. The appeaser heals by building a nervous system that doesn't need others' approval to stay regulated.
The mechanism: the appeaser script ("if I push back, they'll be angry, and I'll be alone") is held in place by an underlying body state that experiences disagreement as existential threat. The threat appraisal is what's dumping the cortisol. The agreement-as-default is the strategy the system found to avoid that cortisol bath.
You don't change this primarily by trying harder to push back. Pushing back without sufficient regulation just produces threat-mode pushback, which is brittle, often delayed, and frequently followed by guilt. The body learns "asserting is dangerous," which strengthens the appeaser.
You change it by building positive vagal tone at baseline, until disagreement no longer registers as existential threat. Then assertion comes from a regulated place, sounds different, lands differently, and reinforces the new pattern.
Concretely, for the appeaser, the highest-leverage practices are:
- Loving-kindness toward self. The appeaser usually has a hollow place where self-warmth should be. Building genuine self-warmth is foundational. Six weeks of LKM with self-directed segments is a serious intervention.
- Co-regulation with people who don't need you to perform. Friends, mentors, men's groups, therapists. People in front of whom you can be unagreeable without consequence. This rewires the prediction that disagreement equals abandonment.
- Slow voice for yourself. "It's okay to disagree. I'm allowed to disagree. The disagreement is not the end of me." Said out loud, slowly, repeatedly.
- Body-state assertion practice. Practicing the body state of standing your ground while still being calm, in low-stakes contexts. Yoga can do this. Tai chi push-hands can do this. Even just standing in a balanced stance and saying "no" out loud, slowly, while staying calm.
The work goes slowly because the underlying pattern is old, often originating in the family of origin. But the directionality matters. You're not training assertion. You're training a nervous system that can tolerate disagreement without leaving its regulated state. Once that's in place, the assertion comes naturally and lands differently.
Section 9A layered daily practice
You don't need all of these every day. You need a few of these every day, integrated into a life that already exists. Here is a layered architecture that combines the breath levers from the previous piece with the upward-spiral levers from this one.
Morning (10 minutes total)
- 5 minutes of resonance breathing (5:5 or 4:6) — see the breath piece for protocol. Builds baseline.
- 2-3 minutes of self-directed loving-kindness, or recalled gratitude with body sensation. Builds positive-affect baseline.
- 30 seconds of genuine smile while imagining someone you love. Direct vagal kick.
Across the day
- Cyclic sighing whenever stress spikes. 3-5 cycles, takes 60 seconds.
- Humming during a commute, a walk, dishwashing. Cost: zero.
- Slow walk after lunch, if possible. Helps digestion via vagal motility activation, plus afternoon light.
- One real conversation with a safe person. Voice or video, ideally in person. 20+ minutes.
- Soft-gaze break when overwhelmed. Look out a window for 30 seconds. Broad vision.
Pre-meals
- 5 minutes of slow breathing or humming before lunch and dinner, especially when stressed. Primes the gut to actually digest.
Evening (5-10 minutes)
- 3 specific moments from the day, re-felt in the body for 20-30 seconds each. Not listed. Felt.
- 4-7-8 or nadi shodhana before sleep, in bed.
- Hand on heart, hand on belly, for 60 seconds before drifting off.
Weekly
- One session of slow movement (yoga, tai chi, qigong). 45-60 minutes.
- One longer co-regulation event: group, friends, family. 2+ hours.
- If practicing: one men's group session, IFS session, or similar.
This stack is achievable. It is not a maximalist program. The point isn't to optimize. The point is to weave the cable into a life so that the nervous system has consistent inputs in the upward direction, over years. The compounding does the work.
Section 10The cable hears good news too
Here is what's worth remembering.
You have a nervous system that has spent years, probably decades, learning the downward direction. Chronic stress, gut disturbance, anxiety, agreeableness as a survival strategy, vague malaise as a baseline. The cable has learned what to expect, and it dutifully reports it.
The cable has no preference. It will report whatever data the body is sending, in whichever direction. If the body starts sending different signals — slower breath, warmer face, softer voice, safer contact, genuine moments of warmth — the cable will report those just as faithfully. The brain has to interpret what it gets.
The work of the upward spiral is not to think different thoughts. It's to give the body different data to send up the cable, consistently, for long enough that the brain learns the new pattern. That takes weeks for measurable shifts and months to years for the deeper layers. But the wiring is the same wiring. The cable runs both ways. Most people just never train the upward direction.
You don't have to believe in anything. The mechanism doesn't require belief. It requires consistent, small, genuine inputs into a system that is, mercifully, still plastic.
The wisdom traditions figured this out without instruments. The instruments have now caught up. The cable is always there. It can carry old patterns indefinitely. It can also carry new ones, if you start sending them.
Same body. Same cable.
Different signal.
Different you.
The series
- Your body decided before you did — the diagnosis: what stress does, the cost of incomplete recovery, reading your own gauge.
- Breathe and the cable answers — the breath lever: vagus anatomy, the science, the wisdom traditions, concrete protocols.
- The upward spiral — the cultivation: the gut-brain loop, positive-affect training, co-regulation, all the levers that aren't breath.
- The master reset — the foundation: sleep architecture, the two clocks, light as the master signal, the cortisol-melatonin dance.
- The starter protocol — the action layer: a 30-day ramp combining all of the above into a working practice.
- What the body actually eats — nutrition: the small set of agreed-upon principles, what's contested, and a practical playbook.
- The body adapts to what you do — the physical practice: three pillars and a baseline, what the evidence says about training for health.
- The temperature lever — the heat and cold practices: sauna evidence, cold honesty, what to skip from the marketing.
Sources & further reading
- Kok, B.E. & Fredrickson, B.L. (2013). How positive emotions build physical health: perceived positive social connections account for the upward spiral between positive emotions and vagal tone. Psychological Science, 24(7), 1123-1132.
- Fredrickson, B.L. (2001). The role of positive emotions in positive psychology: the broaden-and-build theory. American Psychologist, 56(3), 218-226.
- Cohen, S. et al. (2003). Emotional style and susceptibility to the common cold. Psychosomatic Medicine, 65(4), 652-657.
- Bravo et al. (2011). Ingestion of Lactobacillus strain regulates emotional behavior and central GABA receptor expression in a mouse via the vagus nerve. PNAS.
- Mills et al. (2015). The role of gratitude in spiritual well-being in asymptomatic heart failure patients. Spirituality in Clinical Practice.
- Wood, A.M. et al. (2009). Gratitude influences sleep through the mechanism of pre-sleep cognitions. Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 66(1), 43-48.
- Vickhoff et al. (2013). Music structure determines heart rate variability of singers. Frontiers in Psychology. (Choir HRV synchronization.)
- Holt-Lunstad, J. et al. (2015). Loneliness and social isolation as risk factors for mortality: a meta-analytic review. Perspectives on Psychological Science, 10(2), 227-237.
- Strack, F. et al. (1988). Inhibiting and facilitating conditions of the human smile: a nonobtrusive test of the facial feedback hypothesis. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 54(5), 768-777.
- Coan, J.A. & Sbarra, D.A. (2015). Social baseline theory: the social regulation of risk and effort. Current Opinion in Psychology, 1, 87-91.
- Porges, S.W. (2007). The polyvagal perspective. Biological Psychology, 74(2), 116-143. (Useful map, contested in parts — see the breath piece for caveats.)
- Damasio, A. The Feeling of What Happens. (Body-to-brain emotion theory.)
- Schwartz, R.C. No Bad Parts. (IFS, the Self-energy framework.)
- Fredrickson, B.L. Love 2.0. (The upward-spiral and co-regulation in accessible form.)
- Brown, S. & Gerbarg, P. The Healing Power of the Breath. (Cross-references the breath piece.)