Dr. Richard Harig

The Relational Communications Journal

Health EN ↓ 6 episodes

Welcome to The Relational Communications Journal , an audio publication dedicated to the neuroscience of connection, the mechanics of addiction and recovery, and the "invisible" dynamics that govern our navigation of the human condition. Curated by Dr. Richard Harig —a clinical psychologist with nearly four decades of experience—this journal moves beyond standard self-help advice. Instead, we explore the biology beneath the behavior. We dismantle the idea that conflict is a moral failing and reveal it for what it often is: a physiological event. In this season, we open the files on: The Neurob...

Author

Dr. Richard Harig

Category

Health

Latest episode

Apr 13, 2026

Where to listen?

Podcasts in the app Replaio Radio Coming soon

Podcasts are coming to the app soon. Install now and be the first to see a whole new take on podcasts

Get it on Google Play Install for free Android 5M+ downloads · 4.8 rating iOS soon

Episodes

The Algorithmic Credit Cascade and the Erosion of Ownership 13.04.2026

The conversation delves into the threat posed by algorithmic credit control to financial security. It explores the adverse action cascade, the impact of real-time AI monitoring, and the implications of the algorithmic credit cascade on society and personal property ownership. Takeaways Algorithmic Credit Control Financial Security Chapters 00:00 The Threat to Financial Security 06:08 The Adverse A...

The Empathy Glitch 01.04.2026

The podcast delves into the challenges faced by highly analytical professionals in connecting emotionally with their partners. It explores the neurological and psychological factors that contribute to this disconnect and provides practical strategies for building empathy without sacrificing analytical prowess. Takeaways Empathy is a measurable, highly-developable skill set. Highly analytical indiv...

The Okinawa Tailor: How Your "Off-the-Rack" Life Can Change 04.03.2026

In the backstreets of Vietnam-era Okinawa, a master tailor once taught a young Marine a lesson that would resonate through forty years of clinical psychology practice. Most people are living "off-the-rack" lives—trying to squeeze their unique identities, relationships, and struggles into pre-made, mass-produced solutions that simply don't fit. When your life "chafes," the problem isn't your shape;...

Decoding Connection: Love Languages & Apology Languages 31.01.2026

Episode Title: Decoding Connection: Love Languages & Apology Languages Ever feel like you’re speaking Greek while your partner is waiting for French? It’s not just a personality clash—it’s a translation error. In this episode of the Relational Communications Journal Podcast , we dive deep into the mechanics of human connection. Have you ever wondered why thoughtful gifts leave some people cold...

Are You Paying Your Brain's Efficency Tax? 23.01.2026

The conversation explores the hidden cost of social drinking on the brain's executive function, challenging the binary model of alcohol's impact and proposing the continuity hypothesis. It discusses the methodological challenges of previous research and the 1985 dissertation's innovative approach to measuring cognitive function. The conversation delves into the physical evidence of structural brai...

Hacking Motivation; why Willpower Fails and Visualization W orks! 14.01.2026

We often think of motivation as a character trait—you either have "grit" or you don't. But neuroscience suggests that motivation is actually a calculation. In this issue of The Relational Communications Journal , Dr. Richard Harig explores the mechanics of Dopamine Prediction Error . We dismantle the myth of willpower and reveal why "trying harder" is biologically destined to fail. instead, we int...

Listen to the The Relational Communications Journal podcast in Replaio

Radio and podcasts in one app - free, with no sign-up. Install today and do not miss the launch

Get it on Google Play

Replaio is not a podcast publisher; show names, artwork and audio belong to their authors and are distributed through public RSS feeds.