PsychCrunch

Ep 42: What makes hobbies healing?

9 snips
Aug 18, 2025
Mike Tipton, expert on cold physiology; Mark Wetherell, psychobiologist studying cold-water swimmers; Jo Williams, researcher of animal-assisted interventions; Sören Henrich, forensic psychologist exploring therapeutic role-play. They discuss climbing therapy, Dungeons & Dragons as structured roleplay, animal-assisted interventions, and cold water swimming. Conversations center on presence, social connection, and whether diverse activities share core wellbeing mechanisms.
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ANECDOTE

Trying Bouldering Therapy

  • Tabby squeezed into tight climbing shoes and tried a taster bouldering therapy session with therapist Lee Simmons.
  • The physical challenge forced present-focused attention and pushed her through discomfort during the climb.
INSIGHT

D&D Shows Promising Social Benefits

  • Sören Henrich's scoping review found Dungeons & Dragons boosts creativity, empathy and social connectedness in early studies.
  • He cautioned the evidence is preliminary, studies are small, and clinical effectiveness remains unclear.
ANECDOTE

Pets Helping With Severe Symptoms

  • Jo Williams described studies where animal-assisted interventions reduced symptoms in psychosis, depression and anxiety.
  • She noted mechanisms are unclear and might include social lubrication, routine, activity and better self-care.
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