Here’s The Thing with Alec Baldwin
Music:Music Interviews
In this episode, recorded several months into the pandemic, NYC-based psychiatrist Julie Holland assures Alec it’s not just him, we’re all having a hard-time. Dr. Holland says our brains are wired for connection and isolation is causing many of us to go into “fight or flight” mode where it’s harder to feel safe and loved. But there’s hope. Put down the phone, go outside, call a friend. Connect. And, for some, drugs might help, too. Holland has been deeply curious about the brain since high school and she’s a leading researcher in using psychedelics and cannabis to treat PTSD. In controlled settings, these drugs can restore a sense of being connected with others and the larger world. Holland is the author of several books including Good Chemistry, Moody Bitches, and a memoir, Weekends at Bellevue.
Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Ramona Diaz Decodes the Motherland
Everybody Loves Stanley Tucci
Ingrid Newkirk Was a Deputy Sheriff Before She Founded PETA
Micky Dolenz on How The Monkees Went from TV Band to Real-Life Band
On a Zoom Call with Woody Allen
New York City's Post-COVID Future
In Memoriam: Wynn Handman
Brian De Palma on Scarface, Mission: Impossible, and the Movie He Made in College
Daryl Hall Invites Alec In
In Memoriam: Patricia Bosworth
Anjelica Huston on Modeling, Movie-Making, and a Life in the Spotlight
Butch Walker's Awesomely Diverse Rock Résumé
Eliza Shapiro on School Closures, the Big Picture -- and Probably Getting Coronavirus
Revealing Barry Sonnenfeld
The Luminous Kelli O'Hara
Russ Tamblyn, from DeMille to David Lynch
The Oscars Series, Day 5: For Sama, This Year's Most Powerful Documentary
The Oscars Series, Day 4: Spike Lee
The Oscars Series Day 3: Julianne Moore
The Oscars Series, Day 2: Cameron Crowe
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Stuff You Should Know
On Being with Krista Tippett
TED Radio Hour
Planet Money
The Dinner Party Download