Why Your Brain Craves Revenge and How to Break Free

Why Your Brain Craves Revenge and How to Brea...

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Dylan Mulvaney | Turning Your Worst Days Into Your Greatest Strength

Show them you can THRIVE. Hey Better Babes! It’s my birthday week, and I’m sitting down with my of my BEST friends in the whole wide world - Dylan Mulvaney! Dylan opens up about thriving under pressure, Broadway’s SIX, and navigating fame, criticism, and identity in the public ey ...  Show more

Afroman, Broadway Spelling Bee, Wisconsin Beagle Rescue Mission

This week, we’re talking: JVN’s birthday, Inner Child Work, weekend milestones, hack-a-rella sickness, what WE’RE getting better at this week, Afroman on TikTok, Broadway-Themed Spelling Bee, covering up hickeys, Alexandra Paul & Animal Rights Activists, and Dunkin Donuts Banana ...  Show more

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Are You a Grudge Holder or a Revenge Seeker? Here's How It's Hurting You – And How To Get Over It | James Kimmel, Jr.
10% Happier with Dan Harris

The psychology and neuroscience of revenge.

 

James Kimmel, Jr. is a lecturer in psychiatry at the Yale School of Medicine, an expert on revenge, a lawyer, and the founder and co-di ...

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James Kimmel Jr. (revenge and forgiveness expert)
Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard

James Kimmel Jr. (The Science of Revenge: Understanding the World's Deadliest Addiction) is a lecturer at Yale University on forgiveness and revenge. James joins the Armchair Expert to discuss plotting his revenge against the other Jimmy Kimmel for months, wanting to grow up t ...

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#989 - James Kimmel Jr. - Why Violence & Revenge Fantasies Feel Good
Modern Wisdom

James Kimmel Jr. is a professor at Yale, a psychiatrist, and an author. Why are we drawn to revenge? From playground grudges to epic betrayals, the urge to strike back is universal. But is it a survival mechanism, or an ancient drive that no longer fits the modern age? Expect to ...  Show more

The Price of Revenge
Hidden Brain

Revenge often feels sweet, but what price do we pay for seeking it out? Researcher James Kimmel, Jr. proposes a radical theory: our desire for vengeance operates like an addiction in the brain. This week, how “reven ...

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