Your Bad Mood Might Be Inflammation episode artwork

EPISODE · Jul 17, 2026 · 44 MIN

Your Bad Mood Might Be Inflammation

from The Urban Monk podcast with Dr. Pedram Shojai · host Pedram Shojai

🎙️ Your bad mood might not be psychological. It might be inflammation. Dr. Pedram Shojai unpacks psychoneuroimmunology, the decades-old field showing the brain and immune system are in constant two-way communication, and explains how chronic low-grade inflammation produces sickness behavior: a state that looks and feels exactly like depression, fatigue, and social withdrawal but is actually the brain doing precisely what it's wired to do. He introduces his three fires framework and closes with a guided cooling breath practice to begin addressing all three simultaneously. 🎯 What You'll Learn: How pro-inflammatory cytokines like IL-6 and TNF-alpha hijack tryptophan away from serotonin production and flood the brain with neurotoxic byproducts, physically shrinking the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus over time Why a subset of depression patients don't respond to antidepressants because their root cause is inflammation, not serotonin, and why Ed Bullmore argues the neurotransmitter focus was a fifty-year detour The three fires driving chronic neuroinflammation: the gut fire (intestinal permeability letting LPS into circulation), the signal fire (chronic stress and unresolved threat perception), and the metabolic fire (visceral fat secreting pro-inflammatory compounds) Why ventral vagal activation through slow breathing calms all three fires simultaneously and why psychological work becomes far more effective once underlying inflammation is addressed first 🔑 Key Insights: "A significant portion of what we call mental illness may be a predictable output of chronic immune inflammation, not a failure of psychological resilience." "Cytokines don't just make you physically sick. They make you behaviorally sick. The flatness, the friction, the irritability: that's your brain responding to an immune signal." "Psychological work is valuable but difficult on an inflamed brain. The prefrontal cortex must be functional before deeper insight work can happen." 💡 Action Steps: Identify your dominant fire this week: gut (food sensitivities, dysbiosis), signal (chronic stress, loneliness, unresolved threat), or metabolic (poor sleep, processed food, inactivity). Name what feeds it and eliminate one inflammatory driver for seven days Practice the cooling breath daily: four count inhale, eight count exhale, paired with a visualization of signaling the immune system that the threat has passed 🎧 Perfect for: Anyone with treatment-resistant depression or mood issues that don't respond to standard approaches, people with chronic fatigue or brain fog, or those ready to address the inflammatory roots of mental health from the body up. 📚 Mentioned Resources: Robert Dantzer, University of Texas MD Anderson (sickness behavior research) Andrew Miller, Emory University (inflammation and depression, 2009) Ed Bullmore, The Inflamed Mind (2018) Charles Raison, University of Wisconsin (social threat and inflammatory gene expression) Lights On Program, Module Two 🌐 Connect with Dr. Shojai: Website: theurbanmonk.com Books: The Urban Monk, Inner Alchemy, The Art of Stopping Time, Focus Documentaries: Interconnected, Gateway to Health, Trauma, Conscious Parenting #Inflammation #MentalHealth #Depression #NervousSystem #GutHealth #Breathwork #Wellness #UrbanMonk #HealthPodcast

Episode metadata supplied by the publisher feed · Published Jul 17, 2026

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Your Bad Mood Might Be Inflammation

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This episode is 44 minutes long.

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This episode was published on July 17, 2026.

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🎙️ Your bad mood might not be psychological. It might be inflammation. Dr. Pedram Shojai unpacks psychoneuroimmunology, the decades-old field showing the brain and immune system are in constant two-way communication, and explains how chronic...

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