Skip to content
Home » Kiss Your Brain: The Science of Gratitude – Christina Costa (Transcript)

Kiss Your Brain: The Science of Gratitude – Christina Costa (Transcript)

Here is the full transcript of Christina Costa’s talk titled “Kiss Your Brain: The Science of Gratitude” at TEDxUofM conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

When I was a middle school science teacher, I would often ask my students to kiss their brain. I got this idea from visiting my friend’s kindergarten classroom. She would ask her students to kiss their brain, and they would take their fingers, tap them to their mouth, and then to the top of their head, and it truly was as cute as you can picture it to be.

So, I decided to bring it back to my middle school classroom, which could have gone one of two ways, but it ended up being a really fun ritual for us too, and I would ask them to kiss their brain for all the work they did in class as a practice of gratitude.

After teaching middle school, I came back to grad school to get my PhD in psychology. My research is within the area of positive psychology, which is the science that investigates the strengths and factors that allow individuals and communities to thrive. I also get to teach psychology to undergrad students and high school students. I love teaching psych, and my absolute favorite unit to teach in intro psych is the brain. But while I love teaching about the brain, I thought it would be pushing it to ask my undergrads, aka adults, to kiss their brain, so three years would go by before I would remember that fun phrase.

One day after teaching, last year, I had a terrible migraine that left half of my face numb and blurred my vision. The migraines kept happening, I saw multiple doctors, and then I started experiencing dizzy spells. The neurologist ordered an MRI, and I remember being so excited because then I would be able to use my own brain pictures when I taught brain imaging to my students, but as it turns out, my MRI wasn’t too picture perfect. The doctor called me and asked me to go to the ER because there was a large mass in the right hemisphere of my brain, and that’s where I saw the image for the first time.

Facing Fear with Gratitude

I have never been more scared in my life than I was that night, and with tears dripping down my face in the hospital, I kissed my brain for the first time since I had left my middle school classroom. I made it my mantra, and I kissed my brain every single day leading up to and after surgery. Then two weeks later, after surgery, the pathology reports came back and I was diagnosed with an anaplastic astrocytoma. The weeks following were very difficult.

I tried to figure out what I was struggling with the most by looking back on all the things I had been writing about this experience. I wrote and posted this on Instagram about a week after I received that pathology report: “I will keep fighting, I will keep loving, I will keep living.” And then, about a week after that, I wrote this: “Fighter. I tried it on to see how it felt because I kept hearing those words next to my name, like a job, like an identity, like a role. Fighter. I look at myself in the mirror.”

ALSO READ:  The Science Behind How Sickness Shapes Your Mood: Keely Muscatell (Transcript)

It felt okay at first, but soon it became exhausting, too heavy to lift, too much to carry, too burdensome to bear. I took it off and left it on the floor. War was not for me. A body is not a battlefield.

Rejecting the Fight Narrative

I realized that I had been introduced to the fight narrative. When people heard my diagnosis, I became a fighter. “You’re a fighter. Keep fighting.” “Beat this tumor,” were the top comments. And then there was the internet, the place I so desperately searched for people who were doing well with their diagnosis. But the top hashtags to search for were #braintumorsuck, #cancersucks, and #cancerfighter.

I understand completely why those hashtags exist, but I was so eager to find the hashtag, “Hi, I have a brain tumor that might never go away and I’m still living and thriving,” and I guess there just isn’t a ring to that one. I hated the idea that I was going to be at war with my brain because I had spent months and years kissing it instead.

I hated the suggestion of naming my tumor something awful because the reality is that it was going to be my neighbor for the rest of my life. And I hated the guided imagery training that asked me to picture chemo as an army coming to battle the cancer cells because I didn’t want to spend over a year of my life at war with my own body. I can see how these elements of the fight narrative can be empowering for people, but for me, I knew it wasn’t going to work.

Embracing Well-being Practices

So, I started to reference well-being practices that I had learned from my own studies. Doctors always laughed with me when they find out that I’m a biopsych and neuroscience major and psych PhD student. Then, when they ask what I’m studying and I tell them I study resilience and well-being, they either laugh again, say something like, “Oh, that’s irrelevant,” or go, “Aw.” The irony was never lost on me.

I have read so many stories and studies of resilience, but I never pictured the day that I would have to personally experience it. I read and taught about gratitude practices specifically as a well-being strategy. And even though I knew the positive effects, I had never seriously practiced them myself. I started to incorporate some of these exercises into my life.

Gratitude in the Face of Adversity

I tried to stop focusing on what my body had done wrong and focus on the gratitude I had for my body instead.