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Rachel Yehuda — How Trauma and Resilience Cross Generations
Episode 554

Rachel Yehuda — How Trauma and Resilience Cross Generations

The new field of epigenetics sees that genes can be turned on and off and expressed differently through changes in environment and behavior. Rachel Yehuda is a pioneer in understanding how the effects of stress and trauma can transmit biologically, beyond cataclysmic events, to the next generation. She has studied the children of Holocaust survivors and of pregnant women who survived the 9/11 attacks. But her science is a form of power for flourishing beyond the traumas large and small that mark each of our lives and those of our families and communities.

On Being with Krista Tippett

November 9, 201752m 10s

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Show Notes

Rachel Yehuda — How Trauma and Resilience Cross Generations

The new field of epigenetics sees that genes can be turned on and off and expressed differently through changes in environment and behavior. Rachel Yehuda is a pioneer in understanding how the effects of stress and trauma can transmit biologically, beyond cataclysmic events, to the next generation. She has studied the children of Holocaust survivors and of pregnant women who survived the 9/11 attacks. But her science is a form of power for flourishing beyond the traumas large and small that mark each of our lives and those of our families and communities.


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Topics

holocaustneuroscienceparentingmental healthepigeneticsveteranscortisollegacystressbiology9/11ptsd