#Default Mode Network

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#Default Mode Network Reel by @theholisticcup - Overthinking isn't just a mindset issue.

Neuroscience research shows it's linked to a specific brain network called the Default Mode Network (DMN).
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@theholisticcup
Overthinking isn’t just a mindset issue. Neuroscience research shows it’s linked to a specific brain network called the Default Mode Network (DMN). This network becomes active when you’re not focused on the outside world, and it’s responsible for: • replaying past situations • imagining future scenarios • analyzing everything over and over again Studies from institutions like Yale University and Harvard University have shown that increased activity in this network is associated with rumination and repetitive thought patterns. That’s the “loop” you feel. But here’s the part most people miss: 👉 The DMN becomes MORE active when your nervous system is dysregulated. When your body is in a subtle stress state, it’s harder to stay present - so your brain keeps scanning, analyzing, thinking… Not because something is wrong with you. But because your system doesn’t feel safe enough to switch off. This is why: • overthinking gets worse at night • you can’t “logic” your way out of it • and trying to control your thoughts often makes it worse The goal isn’t to stop thinking. It’s to bring your body back to a state where thinking naturally slows down. Comment 'CALM' if you want me to share how to actually shift out of this state. #overthinking #stress #nervoussystemhealing #stressrelief #anxietyrelief
#Default Mode Network Reel by @upspiral.life (verified account) - You're not angry.
You're in an anger algorithm.
Your brain works like this:
Whatever you engage with, it sends you more of.
Practice annoyance?
You ge
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@upspiral.life
You’re not angry. You’re in an anger algorithm. Your brain works like this:
Whatever you engage with, it sends you more of. Practice annoyance?
You get more annoyance. Replay resentment?
You get more resentment. That’s not personality.
That’s wiring. Three networks drive it: • The salience network decides what matters
• The default mode network loops your identity story
• The dopamine reward circuit reinforces what feels important When you’re triggered, all three activate. You trained the anger loop. But you can retrain it. Neuroscience calls it dopamine reward cycling. You intentionally give your brain small moments of clean reward by naming what’s already good. Feel it.
Pause.
Let the dopamine land. Three minutes. That’s enough to begin rewiring what your brain scans for. You don’t need a new personality. You need a new algorithm. Comment 2026 or DM me 2026 and I’ll send you details about my manifestation program. #braintraining #dopaminereward #selfregulation #mindsetshift #nervoussystem
#Default Mode Network Reel by @emonthebrain (verified account) - Science shows best way to stop yourself from achieving your goals is to try to plan everything out before you start. 

Here's why:
🧠 Overplanning giv
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@emonthebrain
Science shows best way to stop yourself from achieving your goals is to try to plan everything out before you start. Here’s why: 🧠 Overplanning gives your brain a dopamine hit -> it feels like progress, but you haven’t actually done anything. 🧠 Your prefrontal cortex + Default Mode Network get stuck in analysis paralysis, looping on “what ifs” instead of action. 🧠 And because you never take that first step, your brain never gets the real dopamine + neuroplasticity boost that comes from DOING. Ive seen way too many of my students get caught up in the planning phase. The truth is that you don’t need to know every step. You just need the NEXT step. That’s where the magic begins. ✨ Start small. Send it. ✨ Let the action create the momentum. ✨ Your brain will rewire to meet you there. What’s ONE tiny step you can take today toward your dream? 🚀 🚀🚀 Em #mindset #growth #mindsetmatters
#Default Mode Network Reel by @capiomind - Comment ,,Brain" to get Brain Code guide
People believe they are reacting to facts - to what is happening in front of them.
But neuroscience shows you
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@capiomind
Comment ,,Brain“ to get Brain Code guide People believe they are reacting to facts — to what is happening in front of them. But neuroscience shows you are responding to meaning. Your brain is a prediction machine. Research on predictive processing and the default mode network suggests that perception is not passive. The brain constantly uses past experience to predict what is happening now (Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 2018). Every experience is filtered through memory, emotion, belief, and your nervous system state before it becomes “reality.” Two people can live the same moment and walk away with completely different truths. Not because one is lying. But because each brain is updating reality through a different internal model. When the nervous system feels unsafe, the amygdala amplifies threat signals. Neutral events feel dangerous. When someone carries unresolved emotional memory, silence feels like rejection. When the prefrontal cortex is online and the body is regulated, the same event feels manageable. The event is constant. The interpretation is not. This is why inner work changes everything. You do not need to control the external world to change your life. You need to understand the lens your brain is using to construct it. As awareness increases, the brain updates its predictions. Interpretation softens. The world feels less hostile. More workable. More neutral. The question is: Are you reacting to facts — or to old neural patterns? #Capiomind #Neuroscience
#Default Mode Network Reel by @upspiral.life (verified account) - Here's a neuroscience hack to stop negative thoughts fast.

You're not "a negative person."
Your brain is just running the wrong search.

Your reticul
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@upspiral.life
Here’s a neuroscience hack to stop negative thoughts fast. You’re not “a negative person.” Your brain is just running the wrong search. Your reticular activating system (RAS) filters reality based on what you’ve been rehearsing. Your default mode network (DMN) turns it into a story. Your amygdala decides if it’s a threat. Same loop. Different day. So when you keep replaying stress, irritation, or disappointment… your brain gets better at finding it. Not mindset fluff. Neural gating. Here’s the shift: Don’t fight the thought. Don’t force positivity. Change the search. Ask: “What’s actually working?” Then list simple things: “My car works.” “I ate today.” “That went better than usual.” Pause. Breathe. Let each one land. That’s how you update the filter. And once the filter changes… your reality starts organizing differently. Follow me and comment “upspiral” and I’ll send you more about my unique manifestation program. #neuroscience #negativethoughts #brainhack #mentalrewiring #upspiral
#Default Mode Network Reel by @drtraceymarks (verified account) - Overthinking isn't your personality. It's a stress response. Rumination-repetitive, circular thinking-is one of the strongest predictors of depression
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@drtraceymarks
Overthinking isn’t your personality. It’s a stress response. Rumination—repetitive, circular thinking—is one of the strongest predictors of depression and anxiety. It happens when your default mode network gets stuck in a loop and can’t find the off switch. You can’t think your way out. You have to interrupt the loop. Send this to someone who can’t turn their brain off. It’s Not Your Personality series—Part 7. Follow for Part 8. #ItsNotYourPersonality #Overthinking #Rumination #DefaultModeNetwork #DrTraceyMarks #AnxietyAwareness #MentalHealthEducation #BrainScience #StressResponse
#Default Mode Network Reel by @healthyandwholeforbodyandsoul - Standing at the ocean is one of the most powerful things you can do for your nervous system. And it's not just because it's pretty.
Four things are ha
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@healthyandwholeforbodyandsoul
Standing at the ocean is one of the most powerful things you can do for your nervous system. And it’s not just because it’s pretty. Four things are happening simultaneously: The sound of waves produces a rhythmic pattern that slows your brainwaves from anxious beta waves into calmer alpha and theta waves. It’s more effective than white noise because the rhythm is unpredictable enough to hold your brain’s attention but predictable enough to signal safety. The negative ions generated by crashing waves increase serotonin levels in your brain. This is measurable. Ocean air contains thousands more negative ions per cubic centimeter than indoor air. Your body absorbs them through your skin and lungs. Your feet in wet sand is earthing — direct contact with the earth’s electrical charge. Salt water is highly conductive, which amplifies the grounding effect. Inflammation decreases. Your electrical system balances. And the vastness triggers the awe response. When your brain encounters something immense, your default mode network quiets down — that’s the part responsible for rumination, self-criticism, and anxious looping. Your problems feel smaller. Your perspective shifts. Your nervous system exhales. No app, no supplement, no technique does all four of these at once. Only the ocean. So if you’re near one — go stand in it. Bare feet. Breathe. Listen. Look out as far as you can see. Let creation do what God designed it to do. 🤍​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​
#Default Mode Network Reel by @rndyrbrts (verified account) - synthetic synesthesia - a paragraph that a virtual brain processes the same way it processes music.

Using TRIBE v2, Meta FAIR's brain encoding model,
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@rndyrbrts
synthetic synesthesia — a paragraph that a virtual brain processes the same way it processes music. Using TRIBE v2, Meta FAIR’s brain encoding model, I fed 60 seconds of Debussy’s Clair de Lune into a simulated brain and extracted its emotional fingerprint across 20,484 cortical vertices. That gave me a target — the exact pattern of activation Clair de Lune produces across the Default Mode Network, emotion centers, memory regions, and self-reflection systems. Then I asked: can a paragraph of text — no melody, no sound, no references to music — produce that same brain pattern? I used Claude to generate paragraphs designed to evoke the feeling of Clair de Lune in the virtual brain. Each one was scored against the brain map using weighted cosine similarity across emotional networks. I kept the best, generated variations, scored again. Eight rounds. Hundreds of paragraphs. One got disturbingly close. 90.4% match in the brain’s emotion center. Region by region — emotion, memory, self-reflection — it started matching the song. I tested it against other sounds to make sure it wasn’t just hitting emotion in general. Triumphant music, rain, aggressive speech — the pattern falls apart. It was matching Clair de Lune specifically. The winning paragraph is shown in the video. It’s about grief settling into grace, absence becoming presence, memory carried like light. If the song disappears and the feeling remains — what was the music, really?
#Default Mode Network Reel by @markhughes.breathwork (verified account) - This specific tone does something to your brain that most people completely miss. 🧠🔊
It's a single, flat frequency with zero variation. Because ther
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@markhughes.breathwork
This specific tone does something to your brain that most people completely miss. 🧠🔊 It’s a single, flat frequency with zero variation. Because there’s no „new“ information to process, your auditory cortex just stops searching. The result? Your default mode network—that internal narrator that keeps you awake at night—finally hits the mute button. That’s the exact second your nervous system switches tracks. The shift is real: * The mental „hamster wheel“ just breaks. * You stop bracing for tomorrow’s problems. * Sleep becomes a deep drop rather than a struggle. Most people feed their brain a toxic loop of doom-scrolling in the final minutes of the day. This is the biological opposite. You’re giving your nervous system a clean slate to build the next 24 hours on. 1 minute before bed. Eyes closed. Just let the sound do the heavy lifting. 🌬️✨ Much looove ❤️ #nervoussystem #vagusnerve #sleephack
#Default Mode Network Reel by @thereflectivecouch - "We write to taste life twice." - Anaïs Nin
Neuroscience suggests this idea is more literal than it sounds. When a person writes about an experience,
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@thereflectivecouch
“We write to taste life twice.” – Anaïs Nin Neuroscience suggests this idea is more literal than it sounds. When a person writes about an experience, the brain does not just retrieve a static record but it actively reconstructs the experience. Studies on autobiographical memory show that recalling personal events reactivates many of the same neural circuits involved during the original moment, particularly the hippocampus, which helps rebuild the context of the memory, the amygdala, which reactivates its emotional tone, and the prefrontal cortex, which helps organize meaning. Brain imaging research also shows the involvement of the Default Mode Network, the system associated with self-reflection and personal narrative, suggesting that remembering is also an act of re-authoring the self. This helps explain why expressive writing research, particularly the work of psychologist James Pennebaker, has consistently found that writing about emotional experiences for short periods (often around 15–20 minutes across several sessions) is associated with improvements in emotional processing, reductions in stress, and measurable psychological benefits in some populations. From a clinical neuroscience perspective, writing appears to help shift experience from primarily limbic emotional activation toward greater prefrontal organization, allowing feelings to become structured narratives rather than unprocessed reactions. Every time a memory is recalled, it briefly becomes flexible before being stored again. Memory is not a fixed archive but a living, adaptive process. In that sense, writing becomes a rare human ability to revisit experience not just to remember it, but to metabolize it psychologically. An event may occur only once in time, but within the nervous system it can exist again as sensation, again as recollection, and again as interpretation, each time slightly reshaped by awareness. In this way, the act of writing begins to resemble a quiet dialogue between biology and meaning, where experience is slowly transformed into something the mind can carry with greater coherence.
#Default Mode Network Reel by @capiomind - The brain is a prediction machine. It doesn't chase happiness. It chases survival. According to predictive processing models in neuroscience, your bra
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@capiomind
The brain is a prediction machine. It doesn’t chase happiness. It chases survival. According to predictive processing models in neuroscience, your brain is constantly generating forecasts about what might happen next — using past experiences as data. The amygdala flags possible threats. The prefrontal cortex simulates outcomes. The default mode network replays scenarios behind the scenes. To your nervous system, uncertainty equals danger. So it exaggerates risks, amplifies doubt, and rehearses worst-case outcomes — all to keep you safe. Which means most of what you call “anxiety” is often just unchecked prediction. You are not reacting to reality. You are reacting to a model of reality built from memory. And models can be updated. Through deliberate awareness, exposure, and repetition, neuroplasticity allows you to rewrite the scripts your brain runs automatically. The question is not whether your brain predicts. It always will. The question is: are you training it to predict fear — or possibility? #Capiomind #Neuroscience
#Default Mode Network Reel by @kunashni_psychologist (verified account) - 🧠 WHY TELLING YOURSELF TO "CALM DOWN" NEVER WORKS (BRAIN SCAN RESEARCH)

How to switch off pre-performance anxiety in 3 minutes using the DMN Lock

#
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@kunashni_psychologist
🧠 WHY TELLING YOURSELF TO “CALM DOWN” NEVER WORKS (BRAIN SCAN RESEARCH) How to switch off pre-performance anxiety in 3 minutes using the DMN Lock ## THE DEFAULT MODE NETWORK SCIENCE Marcus Raichle’s lab at Washington University discovered DMN fires when you’re worrying about future, replaying past, or running self-doubt loops. 2020 international meta-analysis of 14 fMRI studies confirmed: pre-performance anxiety isn’t emotion—it’s DMN firing. When DMN is on, visual attention is off. Then 2020, neuroscientists Martin Szinte and Tomas Knapen used 7 Tesla brain scanners, found: DMN deactivates moment visual cortex is activated. Nouran Gohar reached world No. 2 at 19. Year later, 2018, crashed. Injuries. Losses she shouldn’t have lost. Almost quit. Her words: “It got very dark. I’ve always been person who looks into future. I’m always anxious about future.” Worked with mental coaches. Went on 25-game winning streak. THE DMN LOCK PROTOCOL (3 MINUTES) 1. 60 SECONDS: PICK ONE OBJECT Your racket grip, shoe, wristband. Trace it with eyes, name 5 specific details out loud. Example: “Grip is three shades of black, tiny scratch near butt cap, overgrip ends 3 inches from top, logo worn on right side, fraying thread on edge.” Naming details fires visual cortex—DMN switches off within seconds. 2. 60 SECONDS: LOOK AT ANY LARGE WALL Keep head still. Let eyes drift slowly across surface, scanning for one tiny thing—paint streak, imperfection. Slow wide scanning pushes DMN further offline. 3. 30 SECONDS: PICK UP YOUR RACKET Run thumb across strings, counting them. 16. 17. 18. Feel tension between center and edge. Now brain links racket itself to quiet DMN. THE TRUTH Pre-performance anxiety doesn’t get fixed with “calm down” or “just relax.” Only stops when you switch off Default Mode Network. Comment “LOCK” for full DMN Lock Protocol. Train your mind. Train your game. Follow for more sports psychology secrets! 🧠 #DefaultModeNetwork #NouranGohar #SportsPsychology

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