Blogs from Amy Banks - ĆŢÓŃÉçÇř /WCW-Blog-Bloggers/Authors/Abanks Fri, 02 May 2025 21:02:39 -0400 Joomla! - Open Source Content Management en-gb Fighting Time to End Systemic Racism /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/entry/Fighting-time-to-end-systemic-racism /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/entry/Fighting-time-to-end-systemic-racism The following is an excerpt of a blog post written by Amy Banks, M.D., that appeared on her Psychology Today blog, Wired for Love. To say that race relations were not on my radar growing up would be an understatement. In fact, in high school I was just coming out to myself as a lesbian and was preoccupied with the injustices in the LGBTQ community in the late 1970s. However, for my family, that changed in the spring of 1979 when my father traveled on business to New Orleans. On his first day in NOLA, after eating dinner in the French Quarter, he and a colleague walked back to the Hyatt Regency. At the entry to the hotel, they were held up by two young men, and my father was shot and killed. Within hours, my family was told that “two Black men” had tried to rob my father and his...

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Women Change Worlds Mon, 01 Nov 2021 11:29:47 -0400
Social vs. Physical Distancing: Why It Matters /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Social-vs-physical-distancing-why-it-matters /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Social-vs-physical-distancing-why-it-matters This article was originally posted by Amy Banks, M.D., on April 12, 2020, on her Wired for Love blog on Psychology Today. To protect ourselves, our families, and our communities from the devastation of the coronavirus health experts are strongly encouraging everyone to “socially distance” — to stay 6-10 feet away from other people. I am concerned — not by the strategy but by the way people are enacting it. The few times I have ventured out to a grocery store or for a walk around my neighborhood, I've seen people not only keeping distant from one another but also seeming afraid. They pass each other on the street or in a store without looking at each other or exchanging greetings. It’s as if we were each locked in a personal bubble that no one can enter. The threat of COVID-19 and the stress it induces can understandably cause individuals to...

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Women Change Worlds Tue, 14 Apr 2020 13:19:26 -0400
Building a Culture of Bullies: Chronic judging builds a culture of "us" and "them" and a world of pain. /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Building-a-culture-of-bullies /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Building-a-culture-of-bullies This article was posted by Amy Banks, M.D., on September 18, 2018 in her Wired for Love blog on Psychology Today. A number of years ago, a 15 year-old child hung herself after repeated, prolonged bullying by a group of peers. Phoebe Prince was different, but not that different. She had recently moved from a small town in Ireland to a small town in Massachusetts. In Phoebe’s case, her difference alone may not have made her a target for bullying. She also dated a popular, senior football player when she was just a freshman. She had unknowingly crossed a social line. Accounts of the abuse Phoebe endured are painful to read, but nevertheless essential in comprehending the magnitude of the social tragedy unfolding in many communities. The perpetrators did not fit the typical stereotype of the loner from an abusive home lashing out at a vulnerable child on the playground. In...

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Women Change Worlds Wed, 19 Sep 2018 15:57:55 -0400
Separating Parents from Children: A Policy of Abuse? Research tells us the negative consequences are lifelong. /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Separating-parents-from-children-a-policy-of-abuse-research-tells-us-the-negative-consequences-are-lifelong /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Separating-parents-from-children-a-policy-of-abuse-research-tells-us-the-negative-consequences-are-lifelong This article was posted by Amy Banks, M.D., on June 19, 2018 in her Wired for Love blog on Psychology Today. Like many, I have been watching in horror the images of children taken from their parents, housed in caged containers, huddled under silver blankets. As the intellectual debate about whether this is sound border patrol policy or outright child abuse wages on, it feels urgent to share my perspective as a psychiatrist with twenty-five years of experience treating individuals with post-traumatic stress disorder from related childhood abuses. When you look through the lens of neuroscience there is no debate – ripping children from parents is extraordinarily traumatizing. In fact, the pain and impact of the separation is likely setting off the same biological alarm system that would be activated if they were being beaten in these cages. Let me explain. When mammals evolved from reptiles millions of years ago something...

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Women Change Worlds Wed, 20 Jun 2018 10:45:22 -0400
#MeToo—Changing Brains, Relationships and Power Dynamics /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Metoo-changing-brains-relationships-and-power-dynamics /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Metoo-changing-brains-relationships-and-power-dynamics

This blog was originally posted on Psychology Today and is reproduced with the permission of the author. The #MeToo movement is giving a viral voice to women (and men) who have been the targets of violence and harassment. It is a social change campaign that I never thought would happen in my lifetime. Honestly, when it first started to spread on Facebook I thought it might be cathartic for the people who joined, but I didn’t anticipate it having wider social change potential. My bad—because I temporarily forgot about relational neuroscience and the power that can be unleashed when groups of individuals come together and support one another. What does the #MeToo movement look like through the lens of relational neuroscience? A few studies come to mind that might help shed some light on interpersonal dynamics across power differences. Check-out "The Cookie Monster Study" as described by Dacher Keltner and his...

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Women Change Worlds Mon, 22 Jan 2018 12:53:16 -0500
"E" Is for Energy /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/E-is-for-energy /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/E-is-for-energy

The Dopamine Reward System—Friend or Foe? Dopamine is trending as the most popular neurotransmitter. And why not? There are days I think it rules the world or at least the day–to-day activities of my friends and family. The craving you have when you smell the coffee brewing in the morning—thank dopamine. That elation you feel throughout your body when you fall hopelessly and deeply in love? Again, dopamine. The thrill of a shopping spree at the mall, the desire for the second and third glass of wine at dinner. You guessed it, dopamine. Dopamine seems to be everywhere giving people a little rush of pleasure and energy when we need it most. So what’s the harm? It’s a natural, biologically based chemical that provides energy and motivation. The harm is best understood by remembering the infamous rats in Skinner boxes back in the 1950s. Scientists put electrodes into the limbic system...

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Women Change Worlds Fri, 30 Jan 2015 11:25:24 -0500
"R" is for Resonance /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/R-is-for-resonance /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/R-is-for-resonance

The Four R’s – Reading, ’Riting, ’Rithmetic, and Resonance Do you have someone in your life that “gets” you? I do. My friend Angel and I see each other every six weeks or so but each time we get together I am struck by the resonance we share, the ability to jump back into a conversation as if no time has passed. How does that happen? When I heard about the discovery of mirror neurons I thought I had found the answer. First discovered by accident in 1998 by scientists studying arm movements in monkeys, mirror neurons were originally described as individual, specialized brain cells with the sole purpose to help us “get” or read other people. They were thought to be unique among brain cells because of their ability to multitask—registering actions, feelings and sensations all in a single specialized cell. I loved this! My heart already believed that relationships...

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Women Change Worlds Thu, 22 Jan 2015 12:08:00 -0500
"A" Is for Accepted /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/A-is-for-accepted /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/A-is-for-accepted

I was many things at ten years old, but one thing I wasn't was accepted. My family moved to a new town that summer—it was 1972—and on the first day of school when the school bell rang I stood in the middle of the girls’ line anxiously waiting to meet my new classmates. As I was studying my shoes I heard the laughter and the whispering, “What is that new boy doing in the girls line!” They were talking about me, well-dressed in boys clothing. I was humiliated, filled with shame, desperate to go back to my old school where people knew and accepted me. It was a long year of pain, accentuated by my teacher who routinely tried to force me to join the Girl Scouts. This memory popped back into my mind when I first discovered social pain overlap theory (SPOT) by Eisenberger and Lieberman at UCLA. These researchers...

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Women Change Worlds Thu, 15 Jan 2015 12:00:31 -0500
"C" Is for Calm--Four Ways to Click /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/C-is-for-calm-four-ways-to-click /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/C-is-for-calm-four-ways-to-click

Twenty-five years ago, when I was studying the human nervous system in medical school, I learned that the body has an automatic system running in the back ground 24/7—the autonomic nervous system—like the system that runs in the back ground of your computer updating time and date without needing to be asked. I was taught that the autonomic nervous system had two branches with opposite functions. The sympathetic nervous system (SNS) keeps you awake, alert, and engaged in life when it is running at a steady level, while the parasympathetic nervous system (PNS) helps you relax and rejuvenate yourself after a period of activity. In popular science the SNS and the PNS are associated with their most dramatic functions—the fight, flight, or freeze responses that are activated when a person is threatened. If a bear charges you on a hike or your boss yells at you at work, bam, your SNS...

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Women Change Worlds Mon, 05 Jan 2015 15:12:46 -0500
Supportive Human Relationships: Often Overlooked in Our Search for Quick Fixes /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Supportive-human-relationships-often-overlooked-in-our-search-for-quick-fixes /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Supportive-human-relationships-often-overlooked-in-our-search-for-quick-fixes

October 10th is Mental Health Awareness Day. We live in a time of easy access and quick fixes. People expect to be able to stream a video in less than 60 seconds, to have the entire written history of the world at their fingertips, even to have a complete dinner delivered in under 30 minutes. Given the mind-numbing pace of life, perhaps I shouldn’t be surprised by my clients’ impatience and disappointment when I offer an antidepressant to treat disabling anxiety or severe depression that takes three to six weeks to kick in. Just 100 years ago they would be resigned to a life of tormenting melancholia. Sure, there are new treatments on the horizon that promise quicker response times. Maybe ketamine will be the Netflix of mental health treatment. Most people overlook the one thing that unequivocally helps our emotional and physical health--supportive human relationships. The fact that healthy human...

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Women Change Worlds Fri, 03 Oct 2014 09:56:53 -0400
Interdependency and Mental Health /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Interdependency-and-mental-health /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Interdependency-and-mental-health

May is National Mental Health Awareness month, a fitting time to be mindful of the suffering caused by mental illness. Even though I am a psychiatrist, working daily with people diagnosed with mental illness, I am stunned by the statistics on the incidence of mental illness. According to the National Institute of Mental Health in any 12 month period, 26.2 percent of adults are diagnosed with a mental illness. That is one in four adults who are experiencing disturbing and often debilitating symptoms--the constant distress of an anxiety disorder, the aching despair of a major depression, the terror of psychosis. The lifetime incidence of mental illness is over 50 percent. These statistics tell us that if you have not been diagnosed with some form of mental illness, someone you know and love has. When you go to work today or even out with friends in the evening, see if you can...

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Women Change Worlds Wed, 15 May 2013 13:46:45 -0400