
The Next Big Idea The Science of Change
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Feb 19, 2026 Maya Shankar, cognitive scientist and former White House advisor who studies how people rebuild after disruption. She recounts personal identity loss from a violin injury. Conversations cover moral elevation and small acts that expand imagined futures, fiction as a safe identity lab, self-affirmation after loss, and why real transformation takes sustained work.
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Career-Ending Pinky Injury
- Maya lost her violin career at 15 after overstretching her pinky during a Paganini piece and never recovered full function despite treatments.
- The injury erased her planned future and forced a painful identity re-evaluation.
Anchor Identity To Your Why
- Anchor identity to your underlying why rather than to what you do to reduce precarity when roles vanish.
- Maya found that underlying motives, like seeking human connection, persisted after losing the violin.
Explore Without A Fixed Goal
- Cultivate an exploratory mindset after a loss by exposing yourself to diverse fields without a fixed goal.
- Maya's father advised removing tunnel vision so she could discover cognitive science by chance.






