
Deepak Chopra Talks About How Gaming Can Help Mental Health
Gaming can have way more than a pair of health benefits, especially if it can activate your parasympathetic system. That was one of the big takeaways from my recent conversation with author and mind-body medicine pioneer Deepak Chopra, MD, at the 2025 edition of the annual Games for Change or G4C Festival in New York City. He and Poonacha Machaiah, CEO of The Chopra Foundation, had given a keynote at the festival, talking about how intentional game design and AI-driven tools can foster emotional resilience, empathy, and mental wellness within gaming communities. In fact, they themselves have been getting into the game of gaming with the quest game Deepak Chopra: Meditation Oasis.
Chopra Warns About Being In Sympathetic Overdrive
You could say that Chopra and Machaiah are sympathetic to what's going on in society right now. 'Many people are in sympathetic overdrive with too much adrenaline,' explained Chopra. 'This weakens the immune system.' Sympathetic overdrive means that your sympathetic nervous system is firing way too often and way too much. And that's not a good thing
Your sympathetic nervous system is the part of your autonomic nervous system that's designed to help you deal with dangerous or otherwise stressful situation. So, say a tiger or someone trying to give you a fruitcake as a gift is chasing after you. This is where you could benefit from having your 'fight-or-flight' response activated. Such a response can include firing the nerves that enlarge your pupils to help you see better, increase your heart rate and blood pressure to more get blood and oxygen to your muscles, open up your airways to bring more oxygen into your lungs, trigger your liver to release more glucose to provide more energy and rev up your immune to enact repairs when needed.
At the same time, your sympathetic nervous system can suppress less urgent functions that may otherwise distract from your fight or flight and consume needed energy. So your sympathetic response may slow your digestion, keep you from urinating and pooping and hold any sexual excitement at bay. After all, you probably don't want to be eating a pizza, pooping and feeling all hot and bothered while for example your boss is yelling at you.
Although your sympathetic system can provide kind of important benefits such as, oh, keeping you alive, it shouldn't be activated and firing all the time. That would be like running the fire alarm and sprinkler system in your building constantly. Over time, things like your immune system and various parts of your body can get worn down and out, leading to damage and malfunctions. This is why a therapist won't typically say, 'You really should be worried about everything all the time.'
FEATURED | Frase ByForbes™
Unscramble The Anagram To Reveal The Phrase
Pinpoint By Linkedin
Guess The Category
Queens By Linkedin
Crown Each Region
Crossclimb By Linkedin
Unlock A Trivia Ladder
The trouble is so many things in our society these days are potentially activating your sympathetic nervous system each and every moment. The constant stream of advertising. The loud noises at the ballpark and at bars. The politicians and other talking heads telling you repeatedly about how such-and-such people are a threat. The constantly chatter on social media. And your smartphone. Your pay-attention-to-me-all-the-time smartphone. All of these may be keeping you in sympathetic overdrive.
Who knows then how much sympathetic overdrive may be contributing to many of the mind and body ailments that are pervasive in society these days. I've already written in Forbes about how the U.S. and other countries are steeped in mental health crises. Machaiah quoted the World Health Organization statistic that every 40 seconds someone dies from suicide and emphasized, 'There are not enough therapists to deal with all the mental health issues.' All of this may be contributing further to the rising social divisiveness and physical ailments such as obesity seen in the U.S. and other countries.
Chopra Suggests Activating Your Parasympathetic System More
You do have a natural counter to your sympathetic nervous system. And that's your parasympathetic nervous system, which is another part of your autonomic nervous system that serves the 'rest and digest' or 'feed and breed' functions.
It basically does the opposite of what the sympathetic nervous system does. For example, it can activate the nerves to constrict your pupils to reduce the amount of light entering your eyes, stimulate your mouth to provide more saliva, tighten your airway muscles so that your lungs don't have to work as hard to breath while your rest, lower how fast and hard your heart pumps to conserve energy and release insulin to then decrease your blood sugar levels.
Meanwhile, your parasympathetic nervous system can focus more on helping you do fun stuff like digest food, pee and poop. Speaking of fun, let's talk about sex. You can thank your parasympathetic system for the erections that your penis gets or when your vagina gets all naturally lubricated, depending of which you happen to have.
'To deal with sympathetic overdrive, you want to activate the parasympathetic nervous system more,' Chopra emphasized. 'You want to keep people more in a parasympathetic state to optimize the endocrine system.' He mentioned different neurotransmitters and hormones that are integrated with these nervous systems such as acetylcholine, cholecystokinin, somatostatin and one that you may have heard lately, glucagon-like peptide-1 or GLP-1, that regulate all sorts of bodily functions including appetite and hunger. Therefore, when the sympathetic versus parasympathetic balance is off, all sorts of things in your mind and body can be adversely affected.
Chopra Emphasizes More Interoceptive Awareness
How then do you stay more in a parasympathetic state with all this sympathetic activation stuff around you? Chopra spoke of having 'more mindful awareness' and more 'interoceptive awareness.' Interoceptive awareness is perceiving the sensations from within your body like knowing what your mind and body are doing. For example, you are aware of how you are feeling, what your emotions are at the time, how hungry you may be, what your heart rate is doing, how different parts of your body are functioning and when you need to use the bathroom. While you may typically be aware of when you need to use the bathroom since the consequences of not knowing are, shall we say, obvious, you may not be quite as attuned to the other stuff.
Chopra pointed out how interoceptive awareness is one of the eight limbs of yoga that were originally laid out by Pantanjali, the first author of yoga. 'The first two limbs are social and emotional intelligence," Chopra explained. "The third is postures, the fourth breathing, the fifth interoceptive awareness, the sixth focused awareness, the seventh meditation and the eight transcendence.' He added that having interoceptive awareness is important because if you can perceive what's happening inside your mind and body, you will then know how to control your mind and body such as the autonomic nervous system. Yoga is just one example of a mindfulness practice that can help achieve interoceptive awareness. Chopra is well known for spending much of his career developing, teaching, writing about and disseminating such practices.
Chopra Sees Gaming As An Opportunity To Counter Sympathetic Overdrive
Poonacha Machaiah (L), the CEO of The Chopra Foundation, seen here with Dr. Deepak Chopra on October ... More 8, 2024, mentioned the term 'Metaceuticals,' which describes the use of gaming and the metaverse, such as virtual reality, to help achieve well-being. (Photo by Jed Cullen/for Jugad By Foodhak)
Gaming could be a game-changer when it comes to disseminating ways for people to achieve more interoceptive awareness and spend more time in the parasympathetic state. 'You can achieve more mindful awareness through imagination,' said Chopra. 'How to activate the parasympathetic nervous system for more homeostasis and optimize neuroendocrine function can be a focus of gaming.' Machaiah spoke of how people can feel more relaxed when in a 'gaming state,' sort of how athletes can feel more relaxed and in a state of flow while playing a a sport, artists while painting, writers while writing and anyone else while they are doing something that they truly enjoy.
Of course, a try-to-shoot-as-many-things-as-possible-while-you-dodge-zombie-MMA-fighters game may not necessarily be the best way to activate your parasympathetic system. Chopra distinguished between games that create stress and games that expand the mind. Both Chopra and Machaiah urged the importance of taking the design of a game and making it more conscious. In other words, it can help for game designers to be more deliberate about creating or adapting games so that they can better help people, which is the big focus of the Games for Change or G4C initiative that Susanna Pollack has been leading since 2015 as its President.
I've covered previous G4C festivals such as the one in 2023 and talked to Pollack on a number of occasions about the difference between perception and reality when it comes to gaming and the gaming community. Pollack indicated how gaming has had the rather unfair stereotype amongst those not in the know of being 'a waste of time.' G4C and its annual festivals have been working to change that perception. She's pointed out the many positive aspects of gaming and the gaming community such as how the community is 'more open to sharing than many other communities' and in many cases has come together to help each other and others. So with a need for more mental health interventions, gaming could play a major role.
One way gaming may have 'meta' such needs and can do more to meet such needs is through what Machaiah called 'Metaceuticals.' He described this as the use of gaming and the metaverse, such as virtual reality, to help achieve well-being. With VR, you can place yourself in tailored surroundings or even a new world that can allow you to relax and more safely explore your feelings and sensations and in turn better understand and control how you feel.
Deepak Chopra: Meditation Oasis Is One Example Of Such A Game
Chopra has already worked on a game called Deepak Chopra: Meditation Oasis. In fact, he literally works on the game. His voice is part of the game, including its signature cadence and balance. Machaiah described how this can put the gamer in a more relaxed state. He also covered how they 'used other aspects of acoustic design and changed the lights, colors and flicker rate' to help keep users more 'in a parasympathetic state.'
The game has users go through different meditaion quests, each of which may last different durations, typically one minute, three minutes or five minutes. 'There's already been over 100,000 quests completed,' said Machaiah. He pointed to the possibility of such games reaching more people quicker than mental health professionals and mindfulness experts can on there own.
Gaming Has Tremendous Potential For Further Positive Change
Amir Dossal, the President & CEO of the Global Partnerships Forum who was with the United Nations ... More for 25 years, sees gaming as a way to help address the UN's third sustainable development goal: to ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages. (Photo by)
All of this is just the tip of the virtual iceberg. Amir Dossal, the founder and president of the Global Partnerships Forum who spent 25 years at the United Nations where he previously led the UN Office for Partnerships, is excited about the possibilities. He sees gaming as a way to help address the UN's third sustainable development goal: to ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages.
'The question is how to bring peace in difficult times,' Dossal said. 'Well, mental health is a precursor.' He went on to say, 'Gaming is the most intimate experience' and talked about how 'games can bring people together to address mental health' as well as the coalitions and working groups that are already trying to do this. 'We've been looking for and working with early adopters who see the value.' Dossal added, 'Gaming is not about a game where the focus is winning or losing. Instead it's about play.'
This is a key distinction. Many people out there continue to push the zero-sum game idea that life is about competition and either being a winner or a loser. Or being part of some 'winning group' rather than some other 'losing groups.' That if you don't quickly claim something as yours other people will claim it as theirs. That other people's success is your failure and vice-versa. Well, not being more sympathetic and empathetic to others could leave your sympathetic nervous system further on overdrive. And that may not be a good game to play for you and your health.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
14 minutes ago
- Yahoo
BrightSpring Health Services Second Quarter 2025 Earnings: Revenues Beat Expectations, EPS Lags
BrightSpring Health Services (NASDAQ:BTSG) Second Quarter 2025 Results Key Financial Results Revenue: US$3.15b (up 15% from 2Q 2024). Net income: US$9.21m (down 54% from 2Q 2024). Profit margin: 0.3% (down from 0.7% in 2Q 2024). EPS: US$0.046 (down from US$0.10 in 2Q 2024). Trump has pledged to "unleash" American oil and gas and these 15 US stocks have developments that are poised to benefit. All figures shown in the chart above are for the trailing 12 month (TTM) period BrightSpring Health Services Revenues Beat Expectations, EPS Falls Short Revenue exceeded analyst estimates by 5.3%. Earnings per share (EPS) missed analyst estimates by 9.3%. Looking ahead, revenue is forecast to grow 10.0% p.a. on average during the next 3 years, compared to a 6.0% growth forecast for the Healthcare industry in the US. Performance of the American Healthcare industry. The company's shares are down 4.3% from a week ago. Risk Analysis What about risks? Every company has them, and we've spotted 3 warning signs for BrightSpring Health Services (of which 1 is a bit unpleasant!) you should know about. Have feedback on this article? Concerned about the content? Get in touch with us directly. Alternatively, email editorial-team (at) article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
44 minutes ago
- Yahoo
3 Reasons to Buy Medtronic Stock
Key Points Medtronic is separating out its lower-margin diabetes care segment. It's also pouncing on a massive opportunity in robotic-assisted surgery. The healthcare leader has a terrific dividend-growth track record. 10 stocks we like better than Medtronic › Medical device specialist Medtronic (NYSE: MDT) has not been the best of investments over the past five years. The stock has significantly lagged the market over this period, thanks to weak business fundamentals, including slow revenue growth. The healthcare giant now faces additional obstacles, such as the threat of steeper tariffs due to President Donald Trump's aggressive trade policies. Even amid all that, Medtronic has plenty of redeeming qualities and could still be a solid investment for long-term investors. Here are three reasons why. 1. Medtronic is spinning off its diabetes care unit Medtronic recently announced that it will be spinning off its diabetes care unit, which will become a stand-alone, publicly traded company. Although sales of diabetes products have been growing faster than the rest of Medtronic's business, they have also been a drag on margins. During the company's fiscal year 2025, which ended on April 25, diabetes care accounted for 8% of revenue but only 4% of operating profits. Medtronic's other segments are not growing their sales as quickly, but they have more profitable margins. In an environment where the company may face higher manufacturing costs due to tariffs, management has chosen to focus on higher-margin opportunities. Diabetes care was also the healthcare specialist's only consumer-facing business; the others offer products to healthcare providers. The move could help Medtronic navigate the macroeconomic landscape better if Trump's tariffs remain in place. That's especially the case if the company can find other lucrative revenue growth opportunities. 2. A significant opportunity in robotic-assisted surgery Medtronic has been developing its robotic-assisted surgery (RAS) system, Hugo, for years. It has been in use in other countries, though it's yet to get the regulatory nod in the United States. The medical device specialist decided to pursue this opportunity because the RAS market is severely underpenetrated. Intuitive Surgical's da Vinci system dominates the field and faces little competition for the range of procedures for which it's approved. Yet a couple of years ago, Medtronic pointed out that of all the procedures that could be performed robotically, fewer than 5% were. And over the long run, the demand for these kinds of surgeries will increase along with the world's aging population, since seniors are far more likely to face health issues that call for these kinds of interventions. The good news is that Medtronic's Hugo system recently completed clinical trials in the U.S. for urologic procedures. The company has requested clearance from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for that indication. It should be the first of many. The Hugo system could eventually become a crucial part of Medtronic's growth strategy and help improve its financial results over the long term, given the significant white space available in the industry. 3. A soon-to-be Dividend King Despite Medtronic's recent challenges, the company has continued to pay and raise its dividends. In fact, the company has raised dividends for 48 consecutive years. Most businesses don't survive nearly five decades, let alone pay dividends for that long. Medtronic's ability to do so speaks volumes about its underlying business. It's a well-established leader in its niche of the healthcare market, with significant footprint in the industry and a long and successful history of navigating this deeply regulated sector. All of those factors make Medtronic an excellent pick for income-seeking investors. It should continue rewarding shareholders with payout increases for a long time -- and in two years, it should become a Dividend King. Medtronic may not be one of the most exciting artificial intelligence (AI) leaders capturing Wall Street's attention, although the company is implementing AI across its business in ways that could pay off in the long run. Regardless, its recent moves in shedding its diabetes care segment and seeking clearance for its Hugo system, along with its consistent dividend streak, make Medtronic a reliable company to invest in for the long haul. Do the experts think Medtronic is a buy right now? The Motley Fool's expert analyst team, drawing on years of investing experience and deep analysis of thousands of stocks, leverages our proprietary Moneyball AI investing database to uncover top opportunities. They've just revealed their to buy now — did Medtronic make the list? When our Stock Advisor analyst team has a stock recommendation, it can pay to listen. After all, Stock Advisor's total average return is up 1,019% vs. just 178% for the S&P — that is beating the market by 841.12%!* Imagine if you were a Stock Advisor member when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $624,823!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $1,064,820!* The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years. Don't miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join Stock Advisor. See the 10 stocks » *Stock Advisor returns as of July 29, 2025 Prosper Junior Bakiny has positions in Intuitive Surgical. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Intuitive Surgical. The Motley Fool recommends Medtronic and recommends the following options: long January 2026 $75 calls on Medtronic and short January 2026 $85 calls on Medtronic. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. 3 Reasons to Buy Medtronic Stock was originally published by The Motley Fool
Yahoo
44 minutes ago
- Yahoo
63 million adults are moonlighting as caregivers, with little support
Two years ago, Anita Robinson took early retirement from her position as a senior partner at a tech firm in Atlanta. She was 57 and had been at the company for more than three decades. 'It wasn't my intent, but special circumstances called me to duty as a daughter,' Robinson told me. Her 83-year-old mom is blind, has dementia, four different types of cancer, and requires full-time care. 'I just couldn't in good conscience leave her,' she said. There are millions of Americans facing similar heart-wrenching and financially difficult decisions as America's caregiving crisis is worsening. An astonishing 63 million Americans — nearly 1 in 4 adults — now provide care to an adult with health or functional needs, or to a child with a serious medical condition or disability — a record high, according to a new report from AARP and the National Alliance for Caregiving. That's up from 53 million in 2020 and 43.5 million a decade ago. 'What's even more troubling is what caregiving costs people,' AARP CEO Myechia Minter-Jordan, told Yahoo Finance. Nearly half of caregivers are struggling with significant financial factors. More than 2 in 10 have taken on more debt, about a third have used up short-term savings, 3 in 10 have stopped saving, and roughly 20% are leaving bills unpaid or paying them late, according to the data. At the same time, they are grappling with work and career fall out. More than 60% of caregivers are balancing their caregiving responsibilities while still employed, the report shows. And half report they reduced hours, have taken unpaid leave, or even quit their job entirely as Robinson did. 'There are a number of factors driving the financial strain. It's increasingly challenging for caregivers to access affordable, quality supports and services that are needed to provide adequate care — things such as respite care and access to paid leave from their employers,' Minter-Jordan said. Robinson was initially able to step away from her job temporarily through the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) to see if she might be able to find a way to do both jobs. The FMLA provides 12 weeks a year of unpaid, job-protected leave for specified family and medical reasons with continuation of group health insurance coverage. 'Afterwards, my company wasn't flexible with options and started requiring everybody back into the office,' she said. 'There were not many exceptions granted for working from home. It was just not an environment conducive for me to continue to work.' She's getting by on savings but trying not to tap all of her nest egg. 'I've been living off savings and withdrew a small pension that I had access to, " Robinson said. 'That incremental piece has been a big help with no income coming in.' Unretirement after caregiving Robinson is too young to actually retire for myriad reasons. 'I do know that I will have to return to work at some point to keep up with healthcare costs and increasing cost-of-living,' she said. 'I don't want to deplete my retirement savings. But for now caring for mom is a labor of love. It's just what you do.' To prepare for that future unretirement, she is strategically doing pro bono projects and accepted an unpaid board position on a nonprofit that she can handle remotely — all things that help her skills stay relevant. 'I'm still active so that it won't look to a potential employer that I just went off into vacation mode for a few years and didn't do anything,' she said. The average caregiver is 51 years old and lives with the person they care for, according to the report. Women account for the majority (61%) of caregivers. 'Women face several obstacles that jeopardize their retirement security — they live longer and they need more income,' Cindy Hounsell, founder and president of the Women's Institute for a Secure Retirement (WISER), told Yahoo Finance. 'The impact of caregiving responsibilities causes them to save less, which means recovering financially is unlikely for many of them in this situation.'The workplace dilemma It's not a secret or surprise that caregiving responsibilities hinder career advancement. The work is unpredictable and not responsive to the demands of a 9 to 5 job. As a result, many workers find themselves forced to make career changes. Working caregivers say they are willing to change jobs for better caregiving support — even if it requires a career shift, doing less meaningful work, or relocating, according to a recent SHRM report. Caregivers are often hesitant to even disclose their caregiver status, fearing stigma or negative repercussions in the workplace. 'Caregiving has emerged as one of the most defining challenges facing families, and one of the most disruptive forces shaping the modern workforce,' said Lindsay Jurist-Rosner, CEO and founder of Wellthy, a firm that provides caregiving support through its partnerships with employers, health plans and insurance carriers. I can relate. When I was self-employed a few years ago, I cared for my 91-year-old mother with dementia in my home. I hung by a thread trying to get work done before she awoke for the day. The stress and responsibility were overwhelming. I never told my clients what I was dealing with on a daily basis. I just put my head down and did my work. 'The cost, complexity, and emotional weight of care has only grown, with employees navigating longer lifespans for loved ones, rising care expenses, and increasingly intense responsibilities,' Jusrist-Rosner said. 'Its impact is deeply personal, yet profoundly structural, and it's becoming universal for nearly every employee and every family.' Kerry Hannon is a Senior Columnist at Yahoo Finance. She is a career and retirement strategist and the author of 14 books, including the forthcoming "Retirement Bites: A Gen X Guide to Securing Your Financial Future," "In Control at 50+: How to Succeed in the New World of Work," and "Never Too Old to Get Rich." Follow her on Bluesky. Sign up for the Mind Your Money newsletter Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data