We’ve all had moments when something suddenly clicks. A realization that doesn’t arrive gradually, but all at once. Cort remembers walking out of a movie theater on a humid summer night after seeing Schindler’s List, suddenly knowing what his life should be about. Richie recalls preparing for a talk that sparked an entirely new way of thinking about neuroplasticity and the social brain.
In this episode, we explore what those “aha” moments really are, why they feel so emotionally charged, and how they can reshape the course of our lives.
Drawing on a fascinating neuroscience study, we look at what happens in the brain when insight arises—and why these moments are remembered so vividly days later. We also reflect on how insight and wisdom once sat at the center of human flourishing—from Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle to Buddhist psychology—yet are largely absent from modern models of wellbeing. In fact, as Richie points out:
“No current model of psychological well-being that is in the psychological research literature includes insight, except for the model that we’ve developed.” Dr. Richard Davidson, Dharma Lab Ep.22, speaking about The Healthy Minds Framework
This leads to a deeper question we explore together: What if insight isn’t rare…but simply unnoticed, forgotten, or unsupported in daily life?
Episode Highlights
Why what we feed our minds matters: the raw materials of insight come from the conversations we have, what we watch and read…but only if we create space to digest
How we likely have many insights each day but lose them in distraction; and how contemplative practice acts like a glass enclosure around a candle, helping us notice, remember, and stabilize insights before they flicker out
Why psychedelics are often effective at igniting insight, but not always at helping it become a durable way of seeing
Why insight is deeply emotional, not just intellectual
The difference between a fleeting epiphany and a lasting shift in how we experience life
If you enjoy these topics, check out our new book Born to Flourish, available for pre-order (arrives March 2026).
Related Posts From the Archives:
Reference Notes:
Becker, M., Sommer, T., & Cabeza, R. (2025). Insight predicts subsequent memory via cortical representational change and hippocampal activity. Nature Communications, 16, 4341. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-59355-4
Podcast Chapter List
00:00 – We Likely Have Many Insights but Don’t Remember Them
The “candle in a hurricane” metaphor and why awareness matters
00:01 – A New Paper on Insight & Wisdom
Why this study immediately caught our attention
01:25 – Cort’s Life-Changing Epiphany After Schindler’s List
Compassion, meaning, and a sudden shift in perspective
03:18 – What an “Aha” Moment Feels Like
Suddenness, emotion, and deep certainty
04:17 – Why Insight Is Deeply Emotional
What contemplative traditions have always known
05:01 – Richie’s Scientific Epiphany at UW–Madison
Neuroplasticity, sociology, and a radical shift in thinking
09:02 – Insight as an Energizing Force
Why these moments feel alive and motivating
09:16 – Meditation & Non-Dual Awareness
The flame that illuminates itself
10:50 – Why Insight Leaves Lasting Memories
Emotion, memory, and meaning
11:30 – Insight in Ancient Philosophy
Socrates, Plato, Aristotle—and what we’ve lost today
13:47 – The Blind Spot in Modern Wellbeing Models
Why insight is missing from psychology
15:13 – Why Insight Is Hard to Study Scientifically
Suddenness, unpredictability, and experimental challenges
16:42 – The Mooney Images Experiment Explained
How scientists trigger “aha” moments in the lab
18:28 – Insight Predicts Memory Days Later
Why recognizing meaning changes the brain
20:50 – The Brain During Insight
Amygdala, hippocampus, and emotional salience
23:25 – Why We Remember What Matters
Emotion as the gateway to memory
26:21 – Meditation, Memory Reconsolidation & Insight
How inner landscapes change
28:21 – Why Insights Usually Fade
Epiphany vs. memory of epiphany
28:56 – The Glass Enclosure Around the Candle
How meditation helps insights last
30:21 – Psychedelics & Insight
Powerful sparks, fragile integration
31:50 – Can Insight Become a Trait?
From episodic moments to lasting change
33:03 – The Dog in the Mooney Image
Why once you see it, you can’t unsee it
34:24 – Awe as a Trainable State
Beyond episodic wonder
36:16 – What We Feed the Mind Matters
Why insight depends on raw materials
38:01 – Creating Space to Digest Experience
Why insight arises when attention relaxes
39:03 – Why Most Insights Go Unnoticed
Returning to the hurricane metaphor
40:09 – Curiosity as the Gateway to Insight
Becoming a student of your own mind
41:41 – Using Simple Affordances to Remember
The finger counter as an insight cue

















