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Essentials: How to Control Your Sense of Pain & Pleasure

Huberman Lab

2025/06/19
Huberman Lab

Huberman Lab

2025/06/19

Shownote

In this Huberman Lab Essentials episode, I explore the sensations of pain and pleasure, explaining how they are sensed in the body and interpreted by the brain as well as methods to control their intensity. I discuss both the hardwired mechanisms and subjective factors that shape an individual’s perception of pain and pleasure. I also explain why pain thresholds vary from person to person and discuss various treatments for pain management such as acupuncture and supplements. Finally, I explain the role of key neurochemicals like dopamine and serotonin in mediating our experience of pain and pleasure. Read the episode show notes at hubermanlab.com. Thank you to our sponsors AG1: https://drinkag1.com/huberman LMNT: https://drinklmnt.com/huberman Eight Sleep: https://eightsleep.com/huberman Timestamps 00:00:00 Pain & Pleasure 00:00:39 Skin, Appetitive vs Aversive Behaviors 00:02:10 Skin, Neurons & Brain 00:04:46 Brain Interpretation, Homunculus, Two-Point Discrimination Test 00:07:43 Pain & Pleasure, Subjective Interpretation 00:09:53 Sponsor: AG1 00:11:30 Tool: Pain & Expectation 00:13:08 Pain Threshold 00:14:46 Heat & Cold, Tool: Moving into Cold or Hot Environments 00:16:37 Subjective Pain, Psychosomatic, Fibromyalgia, Whole Body Pain, Acetyl-L-carnitine 00:20:54 Acupuncture, Electroacupuncture, Pain Management 00:23:44 Sponsors: LMNT & Eight Sleep 00:26:36 Red Heads & Pain Threshold, Endorphins 00:28:32 Improving Pain Threshold, Dopamine 00:30:00 Pleasure, Dopamine, Serotonin; Depression, Anti-depressants 00:34:12 Pleasure & Pain Balance, Dopamine, Addiction 00:36:08 Recap & Key Takeaways Disclaimer & Disclosures Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Highlights

This podcast delves into the intricate relationship between pain and pleasure, exploring how these sensations are processed by the body and brain. It examines both the biological mechanisms that govern these experiences and the subjective factors that influence perception, offering insights into managing pain and enhancing pleasure.
00:39
The skin is the body's largest and multifaceted organ.
02:10
The skin's neurons send electrical signals to the brain for interpreting stimuli.
04:46
The brain's somatosensory cortex uses a body map called the homunculus.
07:49
Expectation and anxiety strongly influence pleasure and pain.
11:35
Warnings 20-40 seconds before pain are optimal for reducing pain.
13:10
Pain threshold has two dimensions: stimulation amount and pain persistence.
14:46
Cold sensors respond to relative temperature drops.
16:51
All pain, whether psychosomatic or due to injury, is neural.
21:01
Some people get great pain relief from acupuncture while others don't.
26:36
Redheads produce more endogenous endorphins, reducing pain perception.
28:43
Dopamine enhances resilience by activating brainstem neurons.
33:40
Antidepressants may reduce motivation to seek food
34:15
High dopamine activates the pain system symmetrically to protect the reward system.
36:14
Focus on dopamine and serotonin systems for pleasure and pain modulation

Chapters

Pain & Pleasure
00:00
Skin, Appetitive vs Aversive Behaviors
00:39
Skin, Neurons & Brain
02:10
Brain Interpretation, Homunculus, Two-Point Discrimination Test
04:46
Pain & Pleasure, Subjective Interpretation
07:43
Sponsor: AG1
09:53
Tool: Pain & Expectation
11:30
Pain Threshold
13:08
Heat & Cold, Tool: Moving into Cold or Hot Environments
14:46
Subjective Pain, Psychosomatic, Fibromyalgia, Whole Body Pain, Acetyl-L-carnitine
16:37
Acupuncture, Electroacupuncture, Pain Management
20:54
Sponsors: LMNT & Eight Sleep
23:44
Red Heads & Pain Threshold, Endorphins
26:36
Improving Pain Threshold, Dopamine
28:32
Pleasure, Dopamine, Serotonin; Depression, Anti-depressants
30:00
Pleasure & Pain Balance, Dopamine, Addiction
34:12
Recap & Key Takeaways
36:08

Transcript

Andrew Huberman: Welcome to Huberman Lab Essentials, where we revisit past episodes for the most potent and actionable science-based tools for mental health, physical health, and performance. I'm Andrew Huberman, and I'm a professor of neurobiology and oph...