And yet, I think with all the importance that we've placed on emotions, very few people actually understand how emotions arise in our brain and body, and I mentioned brain and body, because as you'll see today, emotions really capture the brain-body relationship.
So, much of the foundation of any discussion about emotion has to center around this kind of push-pull of attraction to things or aversion from things.
that gets discussed all the time and that is one of the most kind of oversold for the wrong reasons and undersold, unfortunately, for its real power, which is the vagus nerve.
When you eat something sweet, within your stomach, you have cells, neurons, that sense the presence of sugary foods, independent of their taste, and signal to the brain.
And what they find is that even though people can't taste the sugary food, they crave more of the food that contains sugar because of the sensors in the gut that sense sugar.
There are a lot of information, these so-called parallel pathways that are going up into our brain that regulate whether or not we want to eat more of something or not.
Because during the late 80s and early 90s, there was this explosion in the number of prescription drugs that were released, things like the first one and most famous one is Prozac.
Which means to elevate serotonin, and indeed, those drugs were and can be very useful for certain people to feel better in cases of depression and some other clinical disorders as well.
This is a discussion about food, which contains amino acids, amino acids being the precursors to neuromodulators, and neuromodulators having a profound effect on your overall state of alertness or calmness, happiness, sadness, and well-being.
you would find that there were a number of really impressive results showing that it's at least as effective as certain SSRIs, antidepressants at these dosages.
This is an incredible set of findings that illustrate the extent to which whether or not we believe a food is going to be good for us or not good for us.
And discussed a lot of the mechanisms and the actionable items that you can approach if you want to explore this aspect of your biology and psychology further.