Lorwen C Nagle, PhD Profile picture
Aug 17 18 tweets 6 min read Read on X
Lucian Freud didn’t just paint people.

He entered their psyche.

Here’s the untold story of Freud’s great-grandson...

And, what he reveals about your anxiety...🧵 Image
Image
Born in 1922, Lucian Freud inherited

Sigmund Freud's passion for emotions and the unconscious.

But he chose NOT to study people in the consulting room.

He chose to paint them in his studio. Image
His paintings revealed unspoken feelings that dripped off the canvas.

They revealed loneliness and an inner preoccupation.

Profound psychological disturbance is visible in the body.

The result: viewers were both riveted and repelled by his work. Image
Image
In contrast, prominent painters of his time pursued clean abstraction and polite realism.

Not Freud.

He told the raw truth:

1. sagging skin
2. tired eyes
3. tangled limbs
4. disfigured mouths
1. The sorrow of missed opportunities.
2. Sadness of forgotten promises.
3. Or, the anguish of an unfulfilled life.

--all written in the bodies of his models. Image
Image
Standing for hours in front of his easel.

Layering paint thickly on the canvas...

Every brushstroke carried the weight of skin, gravity, and breath. Image
This is why his paintings buzz.

Not because they look perfect...

but because they carry the nervous system’s blueprint:

1. tension
2. release
3. stillness
4. vulnerability
Neuroscience now shows what Freud seemed to know intuitively:

Human connection—whether in therapy, art, or conversation—activates three core brain networks:

• The Default Mode Network (DMN)
• The Executive Control Network (ECN)
• The Salience Network (SN)
The Default Mode Network (DMN) is the imagination space.

Memory, daydream, narrative.

In Freud’s paintings, the DMN hums:

You start wondering about the sitter’s past…

The quiet tension in the room…

The relationship between artist and subject.
The Executive Control Network (ECN) is about decision-making and precision.

Freud’s ECN was relentless—his long sittings, his surgical adjustments to composition, his editing until the piece felt inevitable.
The Salience Network (SN) detects what’s emotionally and bodily relevant.

•The sheen of sweat
•The slump of posture
•The micro-expression of guardedness

Your body says:

Pay attention. Image
Image
When these three networks are in harmony—SN, ECN, DMN—we feel present, focused, and deeply connected.

This integration is achieved through deep meditation.

It's the feeling of being embodied, relational, imaginative, and present.

The result: a nervous system that can hold complexity without panic.
Here’s the leap:

Freud’s paintings are neural training grounds.

They ask us to notice the body (SN), sustain attention (ECN), and imagine the inner life (DMN) of the person—ALL at the same time.
This is exactly the principle behind my Anxiety Relief Transformation (ART) method.

In ART, we use creative expression along with psychoanalysis and walking without devices to activate and integrate these 3 neural networks. Image
Why?

Because anxiety often happens when the networks are out of sync.

1. The SN is overfiring (“danger!”)
2. The DMN floods with catastrophic imagery
3. And, the ECN can’t hold a steady focus.
Lucian Freud’s art was never just about oil painting.

And maybe, like him, the real work of our lives isn’t just about our jobs or looking good.

It's about:

1. Being seen.
2. Being present.
3. Feeling grounded. Image
Image
If you're feeling helpless because you know what to do, but can't access the support to do it, book a free discovery call with me.
calendly.com/lorwen_consult…
If this resonated, here’s a related thread I wrote earlier this year ⬇️

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More from @LORWEN108

Aug 15
You don't have a "change is hard" problem.

You have a comfort problem.

As a Harvard-trained psychologist, I've found most people would rather stay miserable than feel temporarily uncomfortable.

Here's the science behind why you're stuck (and how to break free): Image
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Your brain is literally wired to keep you stuck.

Status Quo Bias makes you overestimate the pain of change and underestimate your ability to adapt.

Researchers Samuelson & Zeckhauser found we'll choose familiar misery over unfamiliar possibility every single time.
Here's what's really happening:

Loss aversion kicks in. Your brain focuses on what you might lose (comfort, predictability) rather than what you could gain.

Kahneman & Tversky's research shows we feel losses 2x stronger than equivalent gains. Image
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Aug 11
I'm a Harvard-trained psychologist

When I finished my Ph.D, I traveled to Tibet to fulfill my dream of crossing the Himalaya

After years of working with the Tibetan and Dalai Lama, I've collected some timeless wisdom the West has forgotten.

These 5 ideas will change your life: Image
I worked for the Dalai Lama, advocating for Tibetans through Amnesty International.

I also met my husband at Tibet House NYC, and a Rinpoche blessed our union in our backyard.

The Tibetans have a special place in my heart.

Here're 5 valuable lessons they've taught me: Image
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• FOMO
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• Instant gratification

Yet, these issues rarely surface among Tibetans, making their culture a case study for happiness.
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Aug 11
I'm a 63-year-old Harvard psychologist who studied consciousness with the Dalai Lama.

After 40 years treating patients, I finally understood something profound:

Your imagination is the ultimate solution to your anxiety, stress and depression.

THREAD 🧵 Image
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"Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world."

— Albert Einstein
1/ Every week, I speak with brilliant, ultra successful people about how they are paralyzed by overthinking.

CEOs. Artists. High Performers.

Their minds race 24/7, but they can't act.

After decades of research, I found the real cause—and it's not what therapy tells you.
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Aug 10
As a Harvard psychologist who worked with the Dalai Lama, I learned…

Why, despite horrendous traumas, the Tibetans are immune to anxiety, chronic stress, and the depression epidemics...

Here's the ancient wisdom Western medicine is hiding from you:

THREAD Image
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Mental illness is a silent killer in Western society:

• 78% report daily anxiety.
• 1 in 3 are chronically lonely.
• Depression tripled since 2020.

These trends are mostly in young adults (18-29) and the elderly (65+).

They are staggering.
I spent 4 years as Harvard's lead psychologist studying Tibetan refugees, working directly with the Dalai Lama.

Here's what we found: Image
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Aug 10
The most glorified and encouraged mental illness millions are suffering:

Chronic Lying.

It's literally destroying your brain, relationships, and even causing Alzheimer's.

Here's the science behind humanity's favorite addiction: 🧵
First, let's be clear what lying actually is.

A lie isn't just an untruth.

For centuries, people taught their children the earth was the center of the universe. That wasn't a lie—they believed it.

For something to be a lie, you must KNOW it's false. Image
In the 5th century B.C., Herodotus revealed something profound about the Persians. They taught their children only 3 things:

• Ride a horse
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Why? Here's Herodotus' exact words...
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Aug 9
The most dangerous, oddly glorified, yet overlooked problem in the world:

Chronic Procrastination.

It's why you're stressed, anxious, depressed, and your immune system is in chaos.

Here's Andrew Huberman's 7-step protocol to escape the prison of procrastination: 🧵
First, let's understand what's really happening in your brain.

Procrastination isn't laziness or weakness.

It's a dopamine problem.

Huberman discovered that without sufficient baseline dopamine, you literally CAN'T feel motivated—no matter how hard you try. Image
Think of dopamine like water in a wave pool.

• No water = no waves.
• Low baseline dopamine = no motivation peaks.

You can't generate drive from an empty tank. And chronic procrastination empties that tank daily through stress and avoidance cycles.
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