Season 14 Episode 385
In this Season 14 review (Part 3) Andrea revisits key insights from Dr. Shane Creado on the critical link between sleep, concussions and performance. The episode explains how even mild or repeated head impacts and sleep deprivation damage the same brain regions that support learning, memory, decision-making and emotional regulation, and how one all‑nighter can reduce hippocampal learning capacity by around 40%.
Practical takeaways include treating sleep as neurological recovery (7–9 hours), protecting the brain after head jolts, avoiding late alcohol and screens, and prioritizing consistent sleep routines to restore learning, resilience and long‑term brain health for athletes, students and professionals.
Welcome back to SEASON 14 of The Neuroscience Meets Social and Emotional Learning Podcast, where we connect the science-based evidence behind social and emotional learning and emotional intelligence training for improved well-being, achievement, productivity and results—using what I saw as the missing link (since we weren’t taught this when we were growing up in school), the application of practical neuroscience.
I’m Andrea Samadi, and seven years ago, launched this podcast with a question I had never truly asked myself before: (and that is) If productivity and results matter to us—and they do now more than ever—how exactly are we using our brain to make them happen?
Most of us were never taught how to apply neuroscience to improve productivity, results, or well-being. About a decade ago, I became fascinated by the mind-brain-results connection—and how science can be applied to our everyday lives.
That’s why I’ve made it my mission to bring you the world’s top experts—so together, we can explore the intersection of science and social-emotional learning. We’ll break down complex ideas and turn them into practical strategies we can use every day for predictable, science-backed results.
As we are nearing the end of Season 14 here, it has been about reflection as we have looked back and reviewed past interviews. Our goal has not been about nostalgia, or remembering these interviews, the goal has been about integrating what we have learned.
Taking what we know, aligning it with how the brain actually functions, and applying it consistently enough to change outcomes.
And if there’s one thing this season has reinforced, it’s this:
Sustainable success isn’t built on intensity or focus alone—it’s built on alignment.
As we move into what’s next, (Season 15) the focus shifts from understanding this alignment to bringing this alignment into a tangible, physical form, or embodiment.
Not more information—but better execution.
After hundreds of conversations with neuroscientists, educators, peak performers, and thought leaders, one truth keeps resurfacing—
lasting success is never about doing more.
It’s about alignment.
Alignment between how the brain actually works, how emotions drive behavior, and how daily habits compound over time.
Season 14 has been about stepping back—not to reminisce, but to integrate what we have learned into our current life.
I knew the minute that I was sent a couple of video clips from our past episodes, that I had forgotten about, that while I thought I had implemented the ideas from our past guests, I had some work to go myself.
For this reason, we spent Season 14 and will resume with Season 15 next January, reviewing past episodes, with the goal of noticing what we have now aligned, that’s bringing us results in our daily life.
Core Reflection
When we started this podcast 7 years ago, the goal was simple:
bridge neuroscience research with practical strategies people could actually use.
What I didn’t fully appreciate then—what only became clear through repetition, reflection, and real-life application—is that information alone doesn
Published on 1 week, 1 day ago
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