The Wake-Up Call That Transformed Neuroscientist Richard Davidson’s Life

Richard Davidson had been studying the brain for more than a decade when he was asked a question that quite literally changed his life.  “Why have you been using the tools of modern neuroscience just to study anxiety and stress and fear and depression?” Tenzin Gyatso, the 14th Dalai Lama, asked the neuroscientist in 1992. “Why can’t you use those same tools to study kindness and compassion?” The question, which Davidson described as “a total wake-up call,” caused him to refocus his research. One of the first ways his team studied kindness and compassion was by flying Buddhist monks from Tibet and Nepal to his lab at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.  “What we found was remarkable,” Davidson said in a HuffPost Originals video. The brains of advanced Tibetan meditators…


Link to Full Article: The Wake-Up Call That Transformed Neuroscientist Richard Davidson’s Life

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