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Title: Brain Expert: “Don’t let your toddler have screen time” w/ Dr. Daniel Amen
Duration: 01:12:39
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Social media companies are purposefully
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pissing you off. If you're anxious, you
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stay on longer. The only thing they want
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is your attention. When I'm looking at
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my kids, if they're using some sort of
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technology that's supervised that's
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educating them, I view it as a net
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positive. Do you disagree with that? Do
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you think that's
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>> I do. I think you have to be so careful.
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When did autism spike? As a child
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psychiatrist, I rarely [music]
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saw it. Tylenol all of a sudden became
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the star pain reliever. Then we also saw
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an explosion of autism.
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>> We sat down with Dr. Daniel Aean, a
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worldrenowned psychiatrist, brain
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expert, and 12 time New York Times
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bestselling author. Aean has scanned
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over 200,000 people's brains, including
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those of NFL players and celebrities.
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I know there's a lot of like hot topics
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in the media right now, especially when
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it comes to Tylenol, how that affects,
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you know, children, especially when a
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mother is taking that while pregnant.
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So, I kind of wanted to start off with
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that topic if that's it's all right.
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>> Well, let's just go for it right away.
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>> Okay. [laughter]
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Um, so those of us that think of
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ourselves as integrative or functional
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medicine doctors, and I think of myself
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as an integrative psychiatrist,
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have known for a long time that Tylenol
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is potentially a problem. And why? What
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does it do? It disrupts liver function.
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And so you can't properly detoxify the
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poisons that are in your body. There has
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been an association. So when did autism
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really spike? Yeah. And the American
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Psychiatric Association will lead you to
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believe when they changed the diagnostic
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criteria. That's absolutely wrong. I
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mean, yes, maybe more people got
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diagnosed, but as a child psychiatrist,
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I rarely saw it in the 1980s when I was
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doing my training. I rarely saw it in
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the early 90s. About the mid 90s, it
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exploded.
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>> So, what happened?
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>> Yeah.
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>> And in the 80s, when a mom had a fever,
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she'd use aspirin. But there were a
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couple of cases of something called rise
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syndrome where babies had allergic
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reactions to aspirin and the
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pediatrician said, "Oh, don't give them
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aspirin anymore. Let's start using
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Tylenol." So Tylenol, which was not big,
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all of a sudden became the star pain
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reliever and star relieving fever. And
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then we also saw an explosion of autism.
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Now, I don't think it's the only thing,
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okay?
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>> But it's a thing. And I believe autism
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comes from a gene, genetically
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vulnerable people, environmental toxin.
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And I think Tylenol is one of them.
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>> I also think BPAs, bisphenol A, that's
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often in plastics. that Coca-Cola they
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have BPAs in their cans and they say it
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on their website proudly which sort of a
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little it's bad marketing in my mind. Um
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aspartame we'll talk about aspartame a
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little bit that's in diet
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>> soda and there's a brand new study on
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phalates. So phalates one of the
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chemicals in
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>> um personal products like makeup.
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>> Yeah. or deodorant or your sunscreen. Um
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they put it as a preservative. And moms
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who they they looked at cord blood, the
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blood from the umbilical cord, so mom to
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baby, those who had high levels of
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phalate in their cord blood had a 500%
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increased risk of having an autistic
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child. Okay?
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>> So think about this with me
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[clears throat]
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because it's not a genetic issue. Uh
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because genetic issues don't all of a
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sudden go from 1 in 10,000 to 1 in 31
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that it's an environmental vulnerability
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put in something happened and it was an
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environmental toxin. Ultimately if you
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want the healthiest baby you have to get
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healthy yourself. You mentioned how
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Tylenol and I think you say this in your
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in your new book that Tylenol is so
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helpful for someone going through grief
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and how you know I
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>> a breakup. Yeah.
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>> Yeah. Yeah. I guess like a Yeah. for
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healing a broken heart. That's I for get
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the exact quote that you said but yeah
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you were talking about Tylenol when it
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comes to a broken heart as well as
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ibuprofen but for some reason with
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ibuprofen it it works for women but not
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men. Talk talk to me more about that.
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>> So in change your brain change your
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pain. Um, I thought the the idea behind
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the book is that both physical and
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emotional pain work on the same circuits
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in the brain. And so when they figured
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out that Tylenol actually helped with
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the emotional pray pain of a breakup,
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it's like, well, why is that? Because it
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calms a area of the brain called the
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medial toward the middle pain suffering
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circuit.
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That was just so interesting. And why
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ibuprofen would work for women but not
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for men, I'm not quite sure. But I found
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that, you know, this genderbased
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difference is just fascinating. But with
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things like headaches, you want always
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want to ask yourself, why do I have it?
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Right? You you always want to be
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curious,
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not furious. So, what did I eat? What
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did I drink? What's the level of stress
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that I'm under? And how can I manage
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these things in a better way? And we
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often talk about how pain is repressed
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rage. So, if you're really angry, but
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you're such a nice person, you could
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never say it. Um,
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it often comes out in back pain or head
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pain. and Tana, my wife often calls me
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polyiana because I'm a very positive
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person. Um, but I realized in writing
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change your brain, change your pain that
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I have to befriend Hannibal Lectar
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because you have to be able to find a
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way to get the rage out. Now,
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appropriately, right? We're not going to
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become a serial killer. Um, [laughter]
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but too often
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>> John Sarno, who wrote wonderful books on
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pain, talked about the goodest, the
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people that have to be good in order to
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be okay with themselves, that they
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suffer a lot more with pain. And he
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actually said it was repressed rage. M I
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also find it very interesting the
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connection that you drew between pain
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that you're like experiencing and then
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also and like grief specifically and
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muscle pain knots in your back. We are
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we're currently grieving very fresh
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grief. We lost a baby at 17 weeks just
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very recently.
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>> I'm so sorry.
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>> Still shaky still shaky about it. But um
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seeing that you drew that connection, I
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was I just turned to Matt immediately
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was like that's crazy because I have
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started developing knots like tweaking
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my neck, knots in my back and like like
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I went and got Matt you scheduled me
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like a tension point. What's it called?
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Attention point massage. Abby tweaked
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her neck and so I scheduled her massage
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and it really helped cuz she had all
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these knots.
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>> Was like, "You have so many knots in
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your back." And then when I saw you drew
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that connection between grief and
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muscles, knots, all this stuff, I was
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like, "Wow, that's crazy." That like
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that turned a light on for me.
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>> Well, and hypnosis can be very helpful.
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Or EMDR. EMDR is a specific
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psychological treatment for trauma. what
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happened to you was clearly traumatic,
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right? It's not a little T,
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>> it's a big T.
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>> And there's another technique I like a
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lot called havening. Do you know what
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that is?
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>> No, I'm not familiar.
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>> So, it's bilateral hemisphere
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stimulation. So, I talk about all of
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these in the new book, but whenever you
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feel sad, do um bilateral hemisphere
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stimulation. So, it's either this
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or this.
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>> I like this the best.
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>> Okay.
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>> And what I would have you do is go in to
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the sadness
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while you're doing this and go into it
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for like 30 seconds. I mean, really feel
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it, but then keep doing it and distract
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yourself. like go to Disneyland in your
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head or the mountains or the desert or
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the beach or wherever you love and then
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keep doing that for a couple of more
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minutes
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>> and then go how do you feel? So
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initially if you do it with a havening
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therapist they'll go okay on a scale of
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0 to 10 when you think about it how
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upsetting is it? And you're like it's a
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10
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>> right? And then you haven then
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and you do that
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for like three minutes and then rate it.
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And often my patients will go it's a
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four
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>> and I'm like well let's do it again.
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Think about it for 30 seconds. Distract
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yourself. Go to the beach and then it's
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a two.
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>> And then if you do it three or four
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times it's like you're still sad but
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you're not triggered.
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And Ron Ruden, who discovered this,
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found it was really good for panic
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disorder. It was really good for
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phobias. Is it?
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>> Ah, that's music to my ears. I love a
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good lollipop at the end of the day.
(00:10:08)
Honestly, lollipop is such a staple in
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our household.
(00:10:11)
>> We started drinking Lollipop a couple
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years ago because it's soda without all
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the added sugar that most soda brands
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have.
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>> We literally all fight over our favorite
(00:10:19)
flavors. There's so many good ones,
(00:10:21)
though. Even our kids love it.
(00:10:22)
>> They taste so good. and you're only
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looking at about like four or five grams
(00:10:25)
of sugar depending on the lollipop that
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you drink.
(00:10:28)
>> Almost every American has some sort of
(00:10:29)
relationship with soda from their
(00:10:31)
childhood. Some people grew up drinking
(00:10:32)
it all the time and then quit and some
(00:10:34)
people are still addicted to it and
(00:10:35)
trying to quit. But Lollipop offers a
(00:10:37)
delicious alternative to traditional
(00:10:39)
soda using a functional ingredient blend
(00:10:41)
to support digestive health. 90% of
(00:10:43)
Americans consume more than the USDA's
(00:10:45)
daily recommended added sugar intake,
(00:10:47)
and sweetened beverages are the leading
(00:10:49)
source of added sugars in the American
(00:10:51)
diet. Lollipop is much much lower in
(00:10:54)
sugar than conventional sodas with only
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two to five grams of sugar from natural
(00:10:57)
sugar.
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>> And we have some exciting news for you
(00:10:59)
guys because you can get $2 off a
(00:11:02)
fourpack of Lollipop at
(00:11:03)
drinkallipop.com/unplanned.
(00:11:06)
This works on any flavor of fourpack,
(00:11:09)
including Spongebob at any retailer.
(00:11:11)
Lollipop is sold online and available in
(00:11:13)
almost 50,000 retailers nationwide,
(00:11:16)
including Costco, Walmart, Target,
(00:11:18)
Publix, Whole Foods, Kroger, and HEB. My
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dad died uh
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5 years ago, and it was like the worst
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day of my life. And a couple of days
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later, I'm over at his house and
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somebody put a picture of my dead dad in
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the mortuary in a random stack of
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papers. And I got it and it just it was
(00:11:41)
like somebody slugged me. I was so upset
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and I was angry and what idiot would do
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this and I couldn't stop thinking about
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that.
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>> And I was at my house later that day
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>> obsessing about this. And
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the little supervisor in my head goes,
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"You treat people who have this problem.
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What would you do?"
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>> And I havened. I sat in the chair and I
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thought about how angry I was and I
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thought about the picture and I did that
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>> for like 30 seconds and then I took my
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brain to the beach
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>> and I kept it
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and it went from 10 to like four and
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then I did it again. I went from 10 to
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two and then
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>> I fell in love with the picture
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>> because it was the last picture of my
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dad on earth.
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>> That's really
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>> it's so helpful and little kids can do
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this. I I found it incredibly helpful
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>> for when children are upset, stroke
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them, right? Like on their arms,
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>> have them think about what you're upset
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about
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>> and now go think about the playground or
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think about being in the pool, you know,
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whatever they love and it just settles
(00:12:55)
them. How do you think things would have
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played out differently if say you would
(00:12:58)
have turned to drinking in that time or
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went and binged a dozen donuts from
(00:13:05)
Crispy Cream or I don't know gotten
(00:13:07)
high? Like are you then prolonging the
(00:13:10)
pain into other areas and then it's it's
(00:13:12)
coming up and you don't even understand
(00:13:13)
why it's coming up like how how does
(00:13:15)
that affect?
(00:13:15)
>> Right. You just could you know you feel
(00:13:17)
better fast but doesn't last.
(00:13:20)
>> Yeah.
(00:13:20)
>> And I always want people to feel better
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fast, right? That's a fast technique,
(00:13:25)
>> but I want it to last and I want you to
(00:13:28)
work through it
(00:13:30)
>> rather than pick up an addiction that
(00:13:34)
creates more problems for you, whether
(00:13:37)
it's the donuts, alcohol, marijuana,
(00:13:40)
whatever.
(00:13:41)
>> Why is it that doctors today are so
(00:13:44)
quick to prescribe SSRIs or some sort of
(00:13:48)
medication for things like that? Um, I
(00:13:50)
actually, just to be vulner v vulnerable
(00:13:54)
here for a second, I'm actually
(00:13:55)
currently on anti-depressants and
(00:13:57)
they've been they've been super helpful,
(00:13:59)
but it did shock me how easy it was to
(00:14:01)
get prescribed them. It was like a
(00:14:03)
10-minute phone call uh just, you know,
(00:14:06)
with with a with a doctor through
(00:14:08)
through an app. Like, it was it was a
(00:14:10)
pretty simple process. And, you know, I
(00:14:12)
had been depressed for a very long time,
(00:14:14)
so I think it was probably a good thing.
(00:14:16)
And I'm doing a lot better. And it
(00:14:17)
definitely I I think it's helped me
(00:14:19)
through this horrible thing that we're
(00:14:21)
currently going through with with the
(00:14:23)
loss of our baby girl. But it was
(00:14:25)
shocking to me though how easy it was
(00:14:26)
cuz I I held off on, you know,
(00:14:31)
getting them for a very long time cuz I
(00:14:32)
was trying to fix it in all these
(00:14:34)
different ways, but I just kind of got
(00:14:35)
stuck in this in that like doom loop
(00:14:37)
that you talk about in your in your
(00:14:39)
book. Um why why is that that it's so
(00:14:42)
easy to prescribe them and just hand out
(00:14:44)
anti-depressants? 25% of the American
(00:14:47)
population is on psychiatric medication.
(00:14:49)
>> Wow.
(00:14:50)
>> It is a [snorts] huge win for the
(00:14:53)
pharmaceutical industry. It is a huge
(00:14:56)
loss for our society. Some people,
(00:15:00)
they're incredibly helpful. But
(00:15:03)
psychiatrists are the only medical
(00:15:05)
doctors who never look at the organ they
(00:15:08)
treat. So, you got prescribed 10 minutes
(00:15:11)
working through an app and nobody looked
(00:15:14)
at your brain. Nobody looked ahead of
(00:15:16)
time. Nobody looked afterwards. You have
(00:15:18)
no idea what it's really doing to your
(00:15:22)
brain. Now, maybe you had a brain
(00:15:25)
pattern where that medicine, what are
(00:15:28)
you taking?
(00:15:28)
>> I'm on Zolaf, so I take 50 milligrams
(00:15:30)
every night before bed.
(00:15:31)
>> Okay. So maybe your brain was busy and
(00:15:36)
the front part of your brain when it
(00:15:38)
works too hard, you can worry. You're a
(00:15:40)
little bit rigid. If things don't go
(00:15:41)
your way, you get upset and you can be
(00:15:43)
sad and those sad thoughts can cycle.
(00:15:46)
Something like Zoloft SSRI calms that
(00:15:49)
down. But if you take too much or you
(00:15:52)
take it for too long
(00:15:55)
that then you don't care that much. You
(00:15:58)
become a little bit less motivated. you
(00:16:00)
become a little bit more impulsive and
(00:16:04)
there's this balance between
(00:16:07)
neurotransmitters in your brain. So if
(00:16:10)
you think of serotonin, Zoloft is a
(00:16:13)
selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor.
(00:16:16)
So what it's doing when your brain
(00:16:18)
releases serotonin, it's preventing the
(00:16:21)
breakdown of it. So it leaves more of it
(00:16:23)
around, right? And so it calms things
(00:16:27)
down. But as you raise serotonin, it's
(00:16:31)
on a teeter totter or counterbalances
(00:16:34)
with dopamine. And so as serotonin goes
(00:16:38)
up, relatively dopamine goes down. And
(00:16:42)
so
(00:16:44)
say they were really out of whack to
(00:16:46)
start. So maybe it balances, but maybe
(00:16:49)
your dopamine was a little bit low
(00:16:52)
because I think we talked before it's
(00:16:54)
like, well, maybe you have ADD, right?
(00:16:56)
Unplanned.
(00:16:58)
is uh you know before I'm like I wonder
(00:17:02)
if they have ADD um which means you
(00:17:05)
already started with low dopamine and so
(00:17:08)
it might you might become a little bit
(00:17:10)
more ADD
(00:17:12)
>> with it and so how do you know that's
(00:17:15)
been my argument for 30 years unless you
(00:17:19)
look ahead of time someone just monkeyed
(00:17:23)
around with your brain with no
(00:17:26)
biological data data and that's what's
(00:17:30)
happening. And it's like you asked why.
(00:17:32)
It's because it's the only tool
(00:17:34)
psychiatrists have now. When I trained,
(00:17:37)
I trained in the early 1980s at Walter
(00:17:40)
Reed. That wasn't the only tool we had.
(00:17:43)
I was the therapist.
(00:17:45)
>> Mhm.
(00:17:45)
>> I was the medical doctor. I was the
(00:17:49)
psychiatrist. So, I had medicine. I had
(00:17:51)
therapy. I had group counseling. I had
(00:17:54)
lots of tools in my toolbox. But in the
(00:17:56)
early 90s when managed care, they go,
(00:17:59)
"Oh, psychiatrist, you're you're too
(00:18:01)
expensive. You just do the drugs and
(00:18:03)
we'll hire, you know, lower paid
(00:18:07)
psychologists, marriage and family
(00:18:09)
counselors. They do the therapy." And in
(00:18:12)
my mind, I went, "Bullshit. I'm not
(00:18:14)
going to do that. I'm treating the whole
(00:18:16)
person. I'm not going to be anybody's
(00:18:18)
prescriber.
(00:18:19)
I'm going to be their doctor." So I've
(00:18:23)
hated that model, but it took over
(00:18:26)
psychiatry in the early 90s and it's
(00:18:30)
beautiful for the pharmaceutical
(00:18:32)
industry.
(00:18:32)
>> Speak more about all these other methods
(00:18:34)
there are to treat
(00:18:35)
>> if you came to see me and I totally
(00:18:38)
would give you an option of medication
(00:18:40)
because my job isn't to tell you what to
(00:18:42)
do. My job is to give you options,
(00:18:45)
right? It's called informed consent. and
(00:18:48)
[gasps] head-to-head against Zoloft,
(00:18:50)
walking like you're late. 45 minutes,
(00:18:53)
four times a week, equally effective.
(00:18:56)
But what do you have at the end of 12
(00:18:58)
weeks of exercise? Well, you're cuter
(00:19:01)
and your brain [laughter] works a little
(00:19:02)
bit better. What do you have at the end
(00:19:04)
of 12 weeks of Zolaf? You're less
(00:19:06)
depressed, but it's harder to have an
(00:19:08)
orgasm. Uh I mean, I don't know if
(00:19:11)
that's true for you.
(00:19:11)
>> No. So, it's funny that you bring that
(00:19:13)
up because I was listening to you talk
(00:19:16)
about this very thing on a podcast and
(00:19:18)
not to be TMI, but I have a very high
(00:19:21)
libido. And so, just this past week,
(00:19:24)
I've been on Zoloft now for 4 months.
(00:19:26)
And I was like, Abby, like, I mean, it's
(00:19:29)
actually, I'm not even going to lie, a
(00:19:31)
little bit nice that I'm I'm not so
(00:19:32)
like, man, I just need some like I don't
(00:19:34)
know. But, [snorts] uh, but I was like,
(00:19:36)
Abby, like, this is weird. Like, I've
(00:19:38)
never
(00:19:38)
>> get more done in his day now.
(00:19:39)
>> Yeah. I'm not so distracted by thinking
(00:19:41)
about sex all the time. So, I mean,
(00:19:43)
[laughter]
(00:19:44)
maybe that's been helpful for me, but uh
(00:19:46)
>> well, I think for some people cuz
(00:19:48)
sometimes hyper sexuality can go along
(00:19:51)
with ADD and calming that down a little
(00:19:55)
bit can be so helpful, right, to give
(00:19:59)
you a little bit better impulse control
(00:20:01)
and not spinning
(00:20:04)
>> on the same thought over and over again.
(00:20:08)
>> Yeah. Um,
(00:20:09)
>> it is funny though,
(00:20:10)
>> but we were talking about natural
(00:20:11)
treatments. So, exercise, omega-3 fatty
(00:20:15)
acids, especially higher in EPA than
(00:20:17)
DHA. Learning how to not believe every
(00:20:20)
stupid thing you think is so important.
(00:20:24)
It's like when you're sad or you're
(00:20:26)
spinning, it's like, why are there no
(00:20:30)
classes in school on how to manage your
(00:20:32)
mind? Right? I'm friends with Paul Simon
(00:20:36)
and I love him. He has this song called
(00:20:38)
Kodakchrome which starts off with when I
(00:20:40)
think back on all the crap I learned in
(00:20:42)
high school. It's a wonder I can think
(00:20:44)
at all. I mean it's like why don't we
(00:20:46)
teach kids how to manage their
(00:20:48)
checkbooks and manage their minds,
(00:20:52)
right? We have a high school course
(00:20:54)
called brain thrive by 25 decreases drug
(00:20:57)
alcohol and tobacco use. Decreases
(00:20:58)
depression. Improves self-esteem. Why?
(00:21:01)
We teach them not to believe every
(00:21:02)
stupid thing they think. And then we
(00:21:05)
teach them to love and care for their
(00:21:07)
brain by asking themselves this question
(00:21:09)
every day. Is what I'm doing good for my
(00:21:12)
brain or bad for it? And so alcohol bad.
(00:21:16)
Marijuana bad. Hitting a soccer ball
(00:21:18)
with your head very bad. Right? So just
(00:21:21)
learning to do the right thing not
(00:21:24)
because you should. You do the right
(00:21:27)
thing because you love yourself.
(00:21:29)
>> Right? And the the thing you want to
(00:21:31)
love your brain. So three natural things
(00:21:35)
saffron 28
(00:21:38)
randomized controlled trials against
(00:21:41)
zoloft
(00:21:43)
selelexa wellbutrin emipramine prozac
(00:21:47)
equally effective saffron is pro-sexual
(00:21:51)
so maybe that would not help you um
(00:21:53)
[laughter]
(00:21:54)
it enhances enhances sexual function it
(00:21:59)
helps with mood but also helps with
(00:22:01)
memory and focus there's five studies
(00:22:03)
with ADD and saffron. And so I'm
(00:22:07)
thinking for you, I'm think I'm doing
(00:22:09)
those four things first. And fifth is
(00:22:13)
learning not to believe every stupid
(00:22:15)
thing you think. Right? Whenever you're
(00:22:17)
sad, whenever you're mad, whenever
(00:22:20)
you're nervous or out of control, just
(00:22:22)
write down what you're thinking and then
(00:22:25)
go, "Is it true?" That is a basic skill
(00:22:29)
that second graders should learn.
(00:22:31)
>> As a parent, I would say my most most
(00:22:34)
dreaded meal of the day is lunchtime.
(00:22:36)
>> Really?
(00:22:37)
>> Yes.
(00:22:37)
>> Really? Especially with the kids.
(00:22:39)
>> Yeah. It's like we just cleaned up from
(00:22:40)
breakfast. I'm thinking about making a
(00:22:42)
dinner for the whole family. Like you're
(00:22:44)
telling me you need a third meal in the
(00:22:46)
middle of the day and I feel like I've
(00:22:47)
never have a good plan for it. And that
(00:22:49)
is why I have stopped stressing over
(00:22:52)
last minute meals and started using
(00:22:54)
Little Spoon. Their recipes are made
(00:22:56)
with pediatricians, packed with hidden
(00:22:58)
veggies, and somehow my kids will still
(00:23:00)
ask for seconds, which I feel like we're
(00:23:01)
always bargaining with our kids at meal
(00:23:02)
time, especially lunchtime. But Little
(00:23:04)
Spoon has been excellent. They love they
(00:23:07)
love their meals with Little Spoon.
(00:23:08)
>> They do. The Little Spoon meals even
(00:23:10)
come with, you know, a side, an entree,
(00:23:12)
a dessert. And so what I've been doing
(00:23:14)
when I give them the Little Spoon meals
(00:23:15)
is putting the dessert like away until
(00:23:17)
they eat [clears throat] the main
(00:23:18)
portion and then I give them their
(00:23:20)
dessert.
(00:23:20)
>> Oh, and they [laughter] sure do love it.
(00:23:21)
It honestly there's something nostalgic
(00:23:23)
about Little Spoon, too. Like it reminds
(00:23:24)
me of my childhood, but a much more
(00:23:26)
wholesome and healthier version than
(00:23:28)
what we were eating as kids.
(00:23:29)
>> Oh my gosh.
(00:23:30)
>> And that's because everything's made
(00:23:31)
with real ingredients. No artificial
(00:23:33)
flavors, sweeteners, or dyes. It's the
(00:23:35)
rare combo of convenient and healthy.
(00:23:38)
And isn't that what we're always looking
(00:23:39)
for?
(00:23:39)
>> Oh, yes, Abby. And here's the exciting
(00:23:41)
part. Little Spoon is now in Target.
(00:23:44)
Plus, Target has an exclusive frozen
(00:23:46)
line. Think their cult favorite chicken
(00:23:49)
nuggets, meatballs, and sliders. Find
(00:23:52)
them in the snack and freezer aisles.
(00:23:54)
>> Little Spoon is the meal time hack
(00:23:56)
parents can't stop talking about. Try
(00:23:58)
their no prep nutrient-packed meals and
(00:24:01)
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(00:24:03)
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order at littlespoon.com/unplanned
(00:24:07)
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(00:24:09)
lit t- s p o n.com/unplanned.
(00:24:14)
And don't forget to use our shows code
(00:24:16)
for 50% off your first order. that this
(00:24:18)
generation, your generation's thought
(00:24:22)
like I I've seen some of the world's
(00:24:24)
most famous people, they have the same
(00:24:27)
thought. I'm not enough.
(00:24:29)
>> One guy sold 400 million albums. I'm not
(00:24:33)
enough. I'm like, dude, if you're not
(00:24:35)
enough, nobody is enough.
(00:24:37)
>> Who are you talking about when you when
(00:24:39)
you say that?
(00:24:39)
>> Well, I don't want to say that one, but
(00:24:41)
[laughter]
(00:24:41)
>> but you know, I mean, so many people
(00:24:45)
they go, "Oh, I'm not enough. I'm not
(00:24:47)
good enough. I'm not smart enough. I'm
(00:24:49)
not pretty enough. I'm not tall enough.
(00:24:51)
I'm not rich enough. I'm not enough. And
(00:24:54)
I'm like, is that true? Yes. Is it
(00:24:58)
absolutely true? No. How does it make
(00:25:01)
you feel? Small. How would you feel if
(00:25:04)
you didn't have the thought? Fine. Take
(00:25:07)
the original thought, turn it to its
(00:25:09)
opposite. I am enough. And then just
(00:25:12)
focus. Do you have any evidence you're
(00:25:14)
enough?
(00:25:16)
>> Married to a beautiful woman, have a job
(00:25:18)
you find fascinating.
(00:25:21)
It's where you bring your attention. So
(00:25:24)
if you naturally tend to be depressed,
(00:25:27)
we naturally tend to be negative and
(00:25:30)
negativity is bad for your brain. And so
(00:25:34)
I try to teach all of my patients
(00:25:38)
positivity
(00:25:40)
bias. What's positive about this
(00:25:42)
situation? And there's nothing positive
(00:25:45)
about having a miscarriage except you
(00:25:47)
guys are still together and you still
(00:25:48)
love each other and you can try again.
(00:25:50)
And
(00:25:52)
>> my mom had a miscarriage. She cried.
(00:25:55)
I'll never have a baby.
(00:25:58)
>> Yeah. She has seven children and 54
(00:26:03)
grandchildren, great grandchildren.
(00:26:05)
[laughter] It's like
(00:26:06)
>> don't believe every stupid thing you
(00:26:08)
think. So when you get that thought just
(00:26:12)
write it down and go is that true
(00:26:15)
>> something I love that you have shared
(00:26:17)
many times is pain shared is pain
(00:26:19)
divided and that I found so much relief
(00:26:22)
in that in this time like I have talked
(00:26:25)
more openly cried more openly like
(00:26:27)
shared so much in a time that I don't
(00:26:31)
know I felt like a little pressure like
(00:26:32)
maybe I should just be quiet and like
(00:26:35)
get myself collected before I talk about
(00:26:38)
this, but I have found so much healing
(00:26:40)
in like talking about my pain. And I
(00:26:43)
guess we can talk about that aspect of
(00:26:45)
like managing our pain, like sharing our
(00:26:48)
pain and like how that has a tangible
(00:26:51)
benefit to how we experience it.
(00:26:54)
>> It also connects you
(00:26:56)
>> and it gives some purpose to the pain
(00:26:59)
because as you shared it, other people
(00:27:01)
have shared theirs with you. Mhm.
(00:27:04)
>> Now, ultimately, you want to share how
(00:27:06)
you're getting better.
(00:27:08)
>> Mhm.
(00:27:09)
>> Right. You don't want to just share the
(00:27:12)
pain,
(00:27:13)
>> but in sharing it, other people can tell
(00:27:17)
you their experience. And that's the
(00:27:20)
connection that is healing. And we get
(00:27:24)
sick in four circles and we get well in
(00:27:26)
four circles. So, I always think about
(00:27:29)
what's the biology of that. your
(00:27:32)
hormones went through a wicked quick
(00:27:35)
transition. So there's a physical aspect
(00:27:38)
to that. There's also a psychological
(00:27:40)
aspect to it which is loss,
(00:27:43)
>> right? And grief and then there's a
(00:27:46)
social aspect to it. There may be some
(00:27:49)
tension or disappointment and there's a
(00:27:52)
spiritual aspect. It's like well why did
(00:27:54)
that happen to me? And I think getting
(00:27:57)
well is taking care of yourself
(00:27:59)
physically, not believing every stupid
(00:28:02)
thing you think or using something like
(00:28:04)
EMDR or havening to manage it,
(00:28:08)
connecting, sharing the pain, always
(00:28:12)
looking for the purpose.
(00:28:14)
>> It's it's just been on our minds
(00:28:15)
constantly, you know, it's been
(00:28:16)
something that like the automatic
(00:28:18)
negative thoughts have definitely come
(00:28:19)
up. Feeling helpless, hopeless, like
(00:28:21)
that's that's obviously been a thing as
(00:28:23)
well. And so it's just been it's been
(00:28:25)
something that's been really hard. I
(00:28:27)
think
(00:28:28)
>> the thought what's the thought
(00:28:30)
>> from my perspective? I think it h I
(00:28:33)
think being on anti-depressants has
(00:28:35)
definitely helped uh me, but it's it's
(00:28:38)
been sad to see Abby like blame herself
(00:28:42)
for all of that. Um and so just
(00:28:45)
reminding her that there's absolutely
(00:28:48)
nothing that she did wrong. seeing her
(00:28:50)
go into this like blame game of like,
(00:28:51)
"Oh, maybe I did this. Maybe I did
(00:28:53)
that." And it's like, "No, you you
(00:28:55)
didn't. There's nothing you did." It's
(00:28:56)
just sucky stuff like this happens
(00:28:59)
sometimes.
(00:29:00)
>> Well, we always try to believe we have
(00:29:02)
more power than we do. [laughter]
(00:29:05)
>> Truthful.
(00:29:06)
>> Yeah. When you go, I could have done
(00:29:07)
this or I could have, you just write
(00:29:09)
that out.
(00:29:10)
>> And then it's like, well, is that true?
(00:29:13)
>> Is it absolutely true? The flip is I did
(00:29:17)
what I knew to do and bad things happen
(00:29:21)
to good people,
(00:29:24)
>> right? And we know miscarriages often
(00:29:27)
happen when there's sometimes something
(00:29:29)
wrong with the baby.
(00:29:31)
>> And so it's nature's way of not creating
(00:29:36)
more suffering.
(00:29:38)
>> But we don't know. Mhm.
(00:29:39)
>> But when your mind goes on the attack,
(00:29:44)
that's when you need to write it down
(00:29:47)
>> and treat yourself like a good mom
(00:29:51)
>> would or a good friend or a good teacher
(00:29:54)
or good coach. It's too often we treat
(00:29:58)
ourselves in such an abusive way and
(00:30:03)
it's like, hey, would a good coach say
(00:30:05)
that to me
(00:30:07)
>> or would a good friend say that to me or
(00:30:09)
would I say this to someone I cared
(00:30:12)
about? And it's like, you wouldn't. So
(00:30:15)
then give that part of you a name. I
(00:30:18)
love it. Give your mind a name. Like I
(00:30:21)
named my mind after my pet raccoon when
(00:30:23)
I was cuz she was a trouble pet raccoon.
(00:30:26)
>> I did. No way. Loved her
(00:30:28)
>> indoor like inside your house.
(00:30:29)
>> Oh no. Slept in my bedroom.
(00:30:31)
>> What? That's scary.
(00:30:33)
>> But she pee tepeeed my mother's
(00:30:35)
bathroom. Was a very bad day. Ate all
(00:30:37)
the fish out of my sister's aquarium.
(00:30:40)
Very bad day. But that's my mind. It
(00:30:43)
just creates trouble. M
(00:30:47)
>> and so if you give your mind a name, you
(00:30:50)
just can separate
(00:30:53)
>> from it. And if you can be a little bit
(00:30:55)
dispassionate and watch it and go, "Oh,
(00:30:58)
it's a storm."
(00:31:00)
>> And the storm because of the loss and
(00:31:02)
the hormones, but you don't have to
(00:31:04)
attach to it because it's not the
(00:31:06)
thoughts you have that make you suffer.
(00:31:09)
It's the thoughts you attach to. M
(00:31:13)
>> you've talked before about how when you
(00:31:16)
look at the brain, you scan scan
(00:31:17)
someone's brain who is praying or
(00:31:20)
meditating, you see all sorts of
(00:31:23)
activity. And I I want to get into what
(00:31:25)
that looks like because I believe you
(00:31:27)
referenced on a podcast a study that
(00:31:29)
somebody did on Tibet Tibetan monks and
(00:31:32)
Francescan uh nuns. But uh where my
(00:31:35)
question is coming from is is there a
(00:31:37)
similar thing going on in the brain when
(00:31:39)
you look at someone who is reflecting on
(00:31:42)
a loved one that's passed on or a you
(00:31:46)
know someone that was close to them and
(00:31:47)
they're and they're like they live in
(00:31:49)
the in their brain with them if if that
(00:31:50)
makes sense. We all live in each other's
(00:31:53)
brains and when we lose somebody
(00:31:56)
important to us, the brain still looks
(00:31:59)
for them and that's where it becomes
(00:32:02)
more active different than in prayer and
(00:32:06)
meditation. Okay?
(00:32:07)
>> They tend to calm down an area of the
(00:32:11)
brain called the posterior singulate
(00:32:13)
gyrus. big term. Um, it's part of a
(00:32:16)
brain that's like the chatterbox in your
(00:32:19)
brain that like talks to you and
(00:32:22)
sometimes punishes you, says bad things
(00:32:25)
to you. Meditation and prayer calm those
(00:32:29)
areas down and they strengthen your
(00:32:32)
frontal loes. And there's always this
(00:32:35)
dance between your emotional brain or
(00:32:38)
the chatterbox
(00:32:40)
um and your frontal loes. So think of
(00:32:42)
your frontal loes as the break in your
(00:32:46)
brain or if you think of the writer and
(00:32:49)
the elephant. So your emotional brain is
(00:32:51)
like the elephant but it has a writer
(00:32:53)
and the writer like directs the energy.
(00:32:57)
No, it's like now we're going to do
(00:32:58)
that. We're going to do this and you
(00:33:02)
need that. But if you were in a car
(00:33:04)
accident, if you played football in high
(00:33:06)
school, if you're drinking alcohol or
(00:33:08)
smoking pot, what you're doing is you're
(00:33:10)
weakening the rider or you're weakening
(00:33:12)
the break and your emotions can get out
(00:33:16)
of control. So, we never want to do
(00:33:19)
anything to damage
(00:33:22)
uh this break part in your brain. This
(00:33:26)
also breaks pain and and change your
(00:33:28)
brain, change your pain. I talk about
(00:33:30)
three pain circuits in the brain. This
(00:33:33)
being the most important one because if
(00:33:36)
this is weak, it can't shut down pain,
(00:33:40)
physical or emotional. I don't know
(00:33:41)
about you, but sometimes keeping up with
(00:33:43)
my supplements is kind of a headache.
(00:33:45)
You know, they're expensive, they're
(00:33:47)
hard to keep up with, but everyday dose
(00:33:49)
is an affordable solution because they
(00:33:51)
cover all of your bases in just a cup of
(00:33:54)
coffee. It takes 30 seconds to make and
(00:33:56)
you get coffee plus a bunch of
(00:33:58)
supplements with vitamins, minerals, and
(00:34:00)
amino acids.
(00:34:01)
>> That's so nice because honestly, when it
(00:34:03)
comes to vitamins and supplements, I'm
(00:34:04)
always confused about what I'm supposed
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to take. This seems like such a
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brainless way to get your health and
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nutrition kickstarted for the day.
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>> We talked before last time we had you on
(00:34:52)
the show a lot about alcohol and how
(00:34:54)
damaging that is. I think there's been a
(00:34:55)
lot of research coming out recently
(00:34:57)
where people are realizing that alcohol
(00:34:59)
is essentially poison and it's not good
(00:35:01)
for you and even even drinking in
(00:35:03)
moderation isn't good. But now there's
(00:35:05)
been this big push um towards marijuana.
(00:35:09)
It's been interesting to see like we
(00:35:11)
recently moved to Arizona and
(00:35:14)
immediately I started noticing like all
(00:35:16)
these signs that were like free weed
(00:35:18)
Friday, come get your free weed, like
(00:35:20)
weed pizza, like all these there's this
(00:35:22)
big business now behind marijuana cuz
(00:35:24)
it's getting legalized all over the
(00:35:26)
country. And from the research that I've
(00:35:28)
done on it, it seems to be a lot less
(00:35:32)
harmful for your health than alcohol,
(00:35:34)
but that doesn't still mean that it's
(00:35:36)
healthy for you. So, I'm I'm curious,
(00:35:38)
what do you say to the person that, you
(00:35:42)
know, views marijuana as medicine,
(00:35:44)
medicinal, you know, helpful for chronic
(00:35:47)
pain or uh headaches? Like, what what do
(00:35:50)
you say to that person?
(00:35:51)
>> Yeah, I'm not a fan. Uh I published a
(00:35:54)
study on 62,454
(00:35:59)
patients. It's the world's largest
(00:36:01)
imaging study on how the brain ages. And
(00:36:06)
little kids have really busy brains. And
(00:36:09)
as we get older, it becomes sleepy. And
(00:36:13)
then what we looked at is what
(00:36:15)
accelerates aging. Having schizophrenia
(00:36:18)
was the worst. Your brain looked 10
(00:36:21)
years older.
(00:36:22)
>> The next worst was marijuana.
(00:36:24)
>> Really?
(00:36:25)
>> Yeah. And then I published a study on a
(00:36:26)
thousand marijuana users. Every area of
(00:36:29)
the brain was lower in blood flow. And
(00:36:31)
then there's a brand new study out
(00:36:33)
earlier this year from another group
(00:36:35)
that I have nothing to do with on a
(00:36:37)
thousand marijuana users, young ones.
(00:36:40)
The areas involved with learning and
(00:36:42)
memory were lower. It's not innocuous.
(00:36:46)
It's a lie. Teenagers who smoke or use
(00:36:50)
marijuana in their 20s have an increased
(00:36:52)
risk of anxiety, depression, suicide,
(00:36:56)
and psychosis. There's actually a gene
(00:37:00)
that if you have this gene, you have a
(00:37:02)
700% increased risk if you use marijuana
(00:37:06)
becoming psychotic. And most people
(00:37:09)
never test for the gene. So if you're
(00:37:12)
using marijuana, it's a little bit of
(00:37:13)
Russian roulette. On our podcast, change
(00:37:16)
your brain every day. We recently had
(00:37:19)
Julius Randall. So Julius is threetime
(00:37:23)
NBA allstar. is a superstar power
(00:37:28)
forward for the Minnesota Timberwolves
(00:37:30)
has smoking a lot of pot and almost got
(00:37:32)
divorced over it. He saw a scan and
(00:37:35)
Julius is very smart. He saw a scan and
(00:37:38)
saw the damage it was doing and he
(00:37:39)
stopped. Well, a year later emotionally
(00:37:43)
because he learned how to not believe
(00:37:44)
every stupid thing he thinks. He learned
(00:37:46)
how to have better habits. got his ADD
(00:37:49)
treated and he's not using marijuana and
(00:37:53)
he's so much better as his brain is
(00:37:55)
better. I'm not a fan of it especially
(00:38:00)
because it can decrease motivation. It
(00:38:03)
can decrease your coordination. Um
(00:38:06)
there's one city in Ohio where 42%
(00:38:11)
of the accidents are associated with
(00:38:13)
marijuana. So we are just changing
(00:38:17)
addictions. Okay. And now the new one is
(00:38:21)
psilocybin. It's like psilocybin for
(00:38:23)
everybody. And
(00:38:25)
>> in some cases marijuana is helpful. In
(00:38:28)
some cases under really good supervision
(00:38:31)
psilocybin probably is going to be
(00:38:33)
helpful for depression and PTSD. The
(00:38:36)
problem is this. As soon as we go, oh
(00:38:40)
this is good medicine. Now we have mass
(00:38:44)
numbers of young people
(00:38:47)
having mushroom parties.
(00:38:49)
>> Interesting.
(00:38:50)
>> And what's the incidence of mental
(00:38:52)
health problems in the young?
(00:38:55)
They've exploded. And they've exploded
(00:38:59)
in part around the societal lies that
(00:39:02)
alcohol is a health food, marijuana is
(00:39:04)
innocuous, and mushrooms are a good way
(00:39:07)
to deal with your depression. We are
(00:39:10)
worse than ever before. Suicide in young
(00:39:14)
people has gone up 746%
(00:39:19)
since the year 2000. So now we can add
(00:39:22)
in social media and cell phone use where
(00:39:27)
we we're no longer dripping dopamine,
(00:39:31)
we're dumping dopamine. And when you
(00:39:34)
wear out your dopamine stores by the
(00:39:37)
constant phone, the constant social
(00:39:39)
media, the constant comparison, alcohol,
(00:39:42)
marijuana, psilocybin,
(00:39:45)
you just feel bad all the time and then
(00:39:49)
you get on the app and get on an SSRI
(00:39:51)
and you think you're fine. But there's
(00:39:54)
new research associating SSRI use in
(00:39:58)
older people with dementia. So, if I was
(00:40:02)
you, I wouldn't think, "Oh, this is my
(00:40:04)
happy pill forever." Yeah. I would go,
(00:40:07)
>> "I'm going to figure out how to manage
(00:40:10)
my mind, get really healthy."
(00:40:12)
>> Yeah.
(00:40:13)
>> And use this
(00:40:16)
>> as a tool. Yeah. A little bit like GLP1
(00:40:19)
drugs. It's like, if you think you're
(00:40:22)
going to use that to manage your weight
(00:40:23)
for the rest of your life, you're going
(00:40:25)
to be in big trouble. Yes, you want to
(00:40:28)
turn off the food noise,
(00:40:30)
>> but you also want to manage. You want to
(00:40:32)
learn how to manage your mind and manage
(00:40:34)
your body.
(00:40:35)
>> It's funny you bring that up because
(00:40:36)
that was actually my very next question.
(00:40:38)
What should I do as somebody that is
(00:40:40)
currently on anti-depressants? I don't
(00:40:42)
want to be on this forever. I want to
(00:40:43)
get off. Even though I'm sure it'll be
(00:40:46)
frustrating to have a high higher libido
(00:40:48)
again, I'm sure I can manage that. I'm
(00:40:49)
sure I can find natural ways of dealing
(00:40:51)
with that. So, what should somebody do
(00:40:54)
that is wanting to get off of
(00:40:56)
anti-depressants? So, make sure you talk
(00:40:58)
to your doctor and love your brain. And
(00:41:02)
at some point, we'll look at it, right?
(00:41:04)
And then balance it. Eat things you love
(00:41:09)
that love you back. Like, I love donuts.
(00:41:14)
I could have six and I'd be so happy and
(00:41:17)
I would be fat and inflamed and
(00:41:19)
miserable. [laughter]
(00:41:22)
>> I was surprised to hear you say you like
(00:41:24)
When's the last time you had a donut?
(00:41:26)
[laughter] Been a long time.
(00:41:28)
>> In the past 5 years, have you had a
(00:41:29)
donut?
(00:41:30)
>> No.
(00:41:31)
>> What?
(00:41:31)
>> Cake. Ice cream. The last five years.
(00:41:33)
>> When I go to Europe, I might have a
(00:41:35)
gelato. But
(00:41:39)
>> Drew Kerry, you know the comedian Drew
(00:41:41)
Cary? He said it best. Eating crappy
(00:41:44)
food isn't a reward, it's a punishment.
(00:41:48)
[laughter]
(00:41:50)
>> Even
(00:41:50)
>> I try to love things that love me back.
(00:41:52)
Every night I make Tana brain healthy
(00:41:55)
hot chocolate. Like every night
(00:41:57)
unsweetened vanilla almond milk,
(00:42:00)
raw cacao, a little bit of chocolate,
(00:42:03)
stevia. There's a company I like called
(00:42:05)
Sweet Leaf and I love it
(00:42:08)
>> and it loves me back.
(00:42:09)
>> You seem to be a man of discipline. I it
(00:42:12)
it seems like discipline plays an
(00:42:13)
important role in your life. like you
(00:42:15)
>> love plays the biggest role in my life
(00:42:19)
and I love me and I love Tana and I love
(00:42:25)
my kids but I realize I never want to
(00:42:29)
have to live with any of them [laughter]
(00:42:32)
right I want to be clear and independent
(00:42:37)
for as long as I can
(00:42:41)
>> u I don't want to be a burden but I
(00:42:43)
don't want to live with It's like, no, I
(00:42:46)
want to be in control of me for as long
(00:42:49)
as possible,
(00:42:51)
>> right? So, I think of it as love that I
(00:42:54)
do the right thing,
(00:42:56)
not as discipline. And what I think
(00:42:59)
Lincoln said, discipline
(00:43:02)
was choosing between what you want now
(00:43:07)
versus what you want most.
(00:43:10)
>> Are you a big fan of Abraham Lincoln?
(00:43:12)
love Lincoln because he failed
(00:43:15)
repeatedly,
(00:43:17)
was depressed, was suicidal twice in his
(00:43:21)
life.
(00:43:21)
>> Really?
(00:43:22)
>> Yeah. I was just at the White House and
(00:43:24)
was really fun for me cuz got to talk to
(00:43:26)
RFK Jr. and um and right next to the
(00:43:30)
Lincoln bedroom and and I've always been
(00:43:34)
a huge fan of his and in the winter of
(00:43:37)
1840 he was depressed, suicidal. He had
(00:43:40)
a political setback and he went to his
(00:43:42)
doctor in Illinois, Springfield,
(00:43:44)
Illinois. And how did his doctor, Anson
(00:43:47)
Henry, diagnosed Lincoln with
(00:43:49)
melancholia, or what we would now call
(00:43:51)
depression? He talked to him. He looked
(00:43:54)
at him. He looked for symptom clusters
(00:43:57)
the same way your 10-minute doctor did,
(00:44:00)
right? You told him the symptoms. He
(00:44:03)
gave you the diagnosis, which was
(00:44:05)
basically a regurgitation of your
(00:44:07)
symptoms. and then he diagnosed and
(00:44:10)
treated him. That's insane that we're
(00:44:13)
still doing it the way we did it 185
(00:44:17)
years ago.
(00:44:19)
But yeah, I love everything about
(00:44:22)
Lincoln from his overcoming a traumatic
(00:44:26)
childhood. And do you know why he was
(00:44:27)
depressed? I'm guessing because of all
(00:44:29)
the really crazy stuff going on back
(00:44:31)
then with the
(00:44:32)
>> So, what a lot of people don't know is
(00:44:34)
when Lincoln was 10, he was kicked in
(00:44:37)
the head by a horse and was unconscious
(00:44:40)
all night long and he would have
(00:44:43)
visions. So, I think of them as temporal
(00:44:45)
lobe problems probably from the head
(00:44:48)
injury. Depression is a very common
(00:44:51)
cause of a consequence of concussions
(00:44:56)
>> and but if you don't look, you don't
(00:44:58)
know.
(00:44:58)
>> Our bedroom is a sanctuary. Abby and I
(00:45:02)
love getting [laughter] cozy in the
(00:45:03)
sheets. Why are you laughing right now?
(00:45:05)
We love We love reading our books
(00:45:07)
together.
(00:45:08)
>> It's where the [laughter]
(00:45:10)
>> We have very right now.
(00:45:12)
>> We've got cozy earth sheets, y'all.
(00:45:14)
Okay. They're so soft. They're so
(00:45:16)
comfortable. We've had these for over a
(00:45:17)
year and they're made with like bamboo
(00:45:20)
or something, right?
(00:45:21)
>> Yeah. Visos from bamboo. It's
(00:45:23)
temperature regulating which is really
(00:45:25)
nice because sleeping next to Matt
(00:45:26)
Howard, if you haven't done it, is like
(00:45:28)
sleeping next to a room heater.
(00:45:30)
>> A furnace.
(00:45:31)
>> A furnace. [laughter]
(00:45:32)
[gasps]
(00:45:32)
>> And so I am always running cold. So it's
(00:45:35)
nice to have that to support different
(00:45:37)
types of sleep styles and patterns. Cozy
(00:45:39)
Earth also has a cuddle blanket that I
(00:45:41)
am obsessed with. We've draped it over
(00:45:42)
our sectional in our living room. It is
(00:45:44)
so luxurious, you guys. It offers a
(00:45:46)
combination of comfort and style, and we
(00:45:49)
love cozying up to that at the night
(00:45:51)
when we're watching our show after the
(00:45:52)
kids go to bed.
(00:45:53)
>> And the great thing about Cozy Earth is
(00:45:55)
it's a risk-free purchase. There's a 100
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night sleep trial. You try them out and
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if you don't love them, return them
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hassle-free, but trust me, you want one,
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too.
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>> I am always recommending Cozy Earth
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just where you live, it's how you feel.
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Let's go home with Cozy Earth. When Abby
(00:46:35)
and I worked at a pizza restaurant
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together in college while we were saving
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up to get married, money was tight. And
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if we had earlier access to our money,
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>> Visit cash.app/legal/mpodcast
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for full disclosures. I actually got on
(00:47:44)
anti-depressants not too long after I
(00:47:46)
had my my third concussion. So, my first
(00:47:49)
concussion, I was wrestling a guy in
(00:47:51)
college. We were messing around. He
(00:47:52)
shoved me into a cabinet, whacked my
(00:47:54)
head, got a concussion. Second one was
(00:47:56)
actually a year ago this month. I was in
(00:48:00)
Aby's group fitness class. uh fell
(00:48:03)
backwards on this like soft, you know,
(00:48:05)
plush mat thinking I I was just gonna
(00:48:08)
like roll just like normal. And there
(00:48:10)
was a metal kettle bell right there that
(00:48:12)
smacked my head. It started gushing
(00:48:14)
blood. Second concussion. Third one.
(00:48:16)
Went on a surf trip to Nicaragua with
(00:48:17)
some friends. Took a a fiberglass
(00:48:20)
surfboard to the face.
(00:48:21)
>> Maybe your depression is really post
(00:48:24)
concussive.
(00:48:25)
>> Could be.
(00:48:26)
>> And
(00:48:27)
Zolaf's not the right long-term
(00:48:30)
treatment for that. hyperbaric oxygen
(00:48:32)
imaging because how do you look? How do
(00:48:34)
you know unless you look? I mean, I
(00:48:35)
can't say that over and over and over
(00:48:37)
again. We put people in a hyperbaric
(00:48:39)
chamber and put their brain in a healing
(00:48:42)
environment. So, I don't know if we
(00:48:44)
talked about it last time, but I did the
(00:48:46)
first and largest study on active and
(00:48:48)
retired NFL players. So, I've scanned
(00:48:50)
and treated 400 NFL players.
(00:48:54)
>> Unreal. 80% of our players got better
(00:48:57)
when we put them on a rehabilitation
(00:49:00)
program. Really good omega-3 fatty
(00:49:02)
acids, a really great multiple vitamin,
(00:49:05)
a brain boost that works in six
(00:49:07)
different ways, avoid bad things, do
(00:49:10)
good things, and for many of them, we
(00:49:12)
put them in a hyperbaric chamber. I
(00:49:14)
don't know if you know Joe Polish, he's
(00:49:16)
also in Arizona. He's I love marketing
(00:49:20)
and he runs something called the Genius
(00:49:22)
Network. He came to see me because he
(00:49:24)
had an addiction and he got a baseball
(00:49:27)
to his head when he was 10. You could
(00:49:29)
see the evidence of the trauma and went
(00:49:33)
in a hyperbaric chamber, took the
(00:49:34)
supplements dramatically
(00:49:37)
better.
(00:49:38)
>> Wow.
(00:49:40)
>> You are not stuck with the brain you
(00:49:43)
have. You can make it better.
(00:49:45)
>> I would love to circle the conversation
(00:49:46)
back to social media because we have
(00:49:48)
little kids and there's actually a
(00:49:50)
school in Arizona. We're going back and
(00:49:52)
forth what we want to do with schooling
(00:49:53)
with our kids. We're doing home stuff
(00:49:55)
right now and for the foreseeable
(00:49:56)
future, but we're like down the line it
(00:49:58)
might be good for them to do social
(00:50:00)
interactions at school. I think that's
(00:50:02)
very important for their development.
(00:50:03)
But there's a school near us that
(00:50:05)
actually makes it a school policy that
(00:50:08)
none of the kids can have social media.
(00:50:10)
If you attend that school, like no one
(00:50:11)
can have social media. And that reminded
(00:50:13)
me, I heard you said before talking
(00:50:16)
about applying neuroscience to public
(00:50:18)
policy. And there was a country that
(00:50:20)
banned social media for everyone.
(00:50:22)
Australia. Okay.
(00:50:23)
>> For our kids under 16.
(00:50:25)
>> Yeah. I think that's a I mean I I don't
(00:50:27)
>> there's a direct correlation to suicide
(00:50:30)
and social media and cell phones. Yeah.
(00:50:33)
>> So brand new study that kids who got
(00:50:35)
cell phone at the age of five when
(00:50:38)
they're 20 they have a 50% chance of
(00:50:42)
having suicidal ideiation. 50 one in
(00:50:45)
two. that the earlier kids get cell
(00:50:48)
phones, the more messed up they are. Why
(00:50:51)
in Silicon Valley are there nanny
(00:50:54)
contracts that go, you cannot be on your
(00:50:58)
phone around the child and you cannot
(00:51:00)
let the child have access to devices?
(00:51:03)
Why would that be from the people who
(00:51:05)
created this stuff that they go, "Oh,
(00:51:09)
it's not good for my kids." So if they
(00:51:12)
know it's not good for your kids, it's
(00:51:14)
not good for your kids.
(00:51:16)
>> It's so scary for me because we were
(00:51:18)
just in high school when I feel like
(00:51:19)
social media was first picking up and it
(00:51:21)
has since obviously changed
(00:51:23)
dramatically, gotten so much more
(00:51:25)
allconsuming. I'm curious like how you
(00:51:28)
anticipate people like in our generation
(00:51:30)
like what our brains will look like when
(00:51:33)
we're elderly because of this constant
(00:51:35)
social media consumption. So
(00:51:37)
conscientiousness, the one predictor of
(00:51:40)
longevity is going down in your
(00:51:43)
generation. Agreeableness is going down
(00:51:47)
in your generation. And we don't
(00:51:50)
recognize that social media companies,
(00:51:54)
there's this great documentary, if you
(00:51:55)
haven't seen it, you should, called the
(00:51:57)
social dilemma. um how these companies
(00:52:00)
for profit are purposefully pissing you
(00:52:04)
off that if you're mad, if you're sad,
(00:52:10)
if you're anxious, you stay on longer.
(00:52:12)
And ultimately, the only thing they want
(00:52:15)
is mind share. They want your attention
(00:52:19)
for as long as possible. And so what
(00:52:23)
they do is they take people who are like
(00:52:27)
center right, but then they'll just feed
(00:52:29)
them right content. And pretty soon that
(00:52:32)
center right person is more moderately
(00:52:36)
right, but that moderate right person is
(00:52:39)
now far right. The same thing's true.
(00:52:41)
The centerle left person is now
(00:52:44)
moderately left and the moderate left
(00:52:46)
person is now radically left. And it's
(00:52:50)
an unintended consequence for money of
(00:52:55)
dividing us into this really insane,
(00:52:59)
hateful place that we have gotten to
(00:53:03)
>> that people celebrating the
(00:53:05)
assassination of, you know, a young
(00:53:09)
right star.
(00:53:11)
>> Um,
(00:53:13)
it's just unconscionable to me, but it
(00:53:16)
happens on both sides, right? It's not a
(00:53:18)
left issue or a right issue. It's a
(00:53:21)
social media mind manipulation
(00:53:25)
so they can sell you stuff.
(00:53:27)
>> Can these devices I know we've talked
(00:53:29)
about social media and how damaging that
(00:53:31)
can be, but can these devices be used
(00:53:33)
for good as well? Because the reason I
(00:53:36)
ask um our son I'm I'm so proud of him.
(00:53:39)
He he's three. He's doing like a little
(00:53:42)
bit of school every week. He goes two
(00:53:43)
days a week to this little, you know,
(00:53:46)
uh, small home school that we set up
(00:53:48)
with our friends. And he recently,
(00:53:51)
actually, I think this was just a couple
(00:53:52)
days ago, by far best in the class when
(00:53:55)
it came to drawing all of his letters.
(00:53:57)
He just like traced every letter. And
(00:53:59)
he's three, so like most three-year-olds
(00:54:01)
can't, you know, he just turned three,
(00:54:02)
so it's it was just very impressive that
(00:54:04)
he almost perfectly traced every letter.
(00:54:07)
And the reason he was able to do that
(00:54:08)
was because about I don't know 10 days
(00:54:11)
ago, 14 days ago, I started using this
(00:54:14)
learning application um on our iPad with
(00:54:16)
him called ABC Mouse. And so it's been
(00:54:20)
interesting though because he's learned
(00:54:22)
so much from this learning program ABC
(00:54:24)
Mouse, but I've noticed how addicted he
(00:54:27)
is to the learning games. Even though
(00:54:28)
it's okay, which one is uh greater, the
(00:54:31)
the three acorns or the two pigs? and
(00:54:34)
he'll, you know, do all these games, but
(00:54:36)
he there's something about the
(00:54:38)
technology aspect that does get him, you
(00:54:41)
know, glued to the screen. So, how do
(00:54:43)
you how do you balance that as a as a
(00:54:45)
parent?
(00:54:46)
>> I would take away the screen.
(00:54:48)
>> There's a really good book uh called The
(00:54:50)
Anxious Generation by Jonathan Height.
(00:54:54)
And the the more access they have to
(00:54:58)
devices, the more it's going to wear out
(00:55:00)
the dopamine in their brain, the more
(00:55:02)
they'll get addicted to it and the more
(00:55:04)
problems they're going to feel. And as
(00:55:07)
his parents, you are going to feel,
(00:55:09)
right? Cuz when you struggle with the
(00:55:11)
kids, you feel terrible. If it was me, I
(00:55:14)
would get paper and draw the letters out
(00:55:17)
with him. And the less screen time, the
(00:55:21)
more attention he will build naturally.
(00:55:26)
>> The more screen time, the less attention
(00:55:28)
he will build.
(00:55:29)
>> You know, like looking at myself, right?
(00:55:30)
I love to learn. I think learning is so
(00:55:32)
much fun. And so when I go to learn
(00:55:35)
something, I'll go on YouTube and listen
(00:55:37)
to a three-hour podcast about a very
(00:55:39)
niche topic that I just want to nerd out
(00:55:41)
about. You know, in the same way when
(00:55:43)
I'm looking at my kids, if they're using
(00:55:45)
some sort of technology that's
(00:55:46)
supervised that's educating them, I I
(00:55:49)
view it as a net positive. And do you
(00:55:52)
disagree with that? Do you think that's
(00:55:54)
okay?
(00:55:54)
>> Yeah. I think you have to be so careful
(00:55:57)
because they're so reinforcing
(00:56:00)
that kids get addicted to it and then
(00:56:03)
they get unhappy and they go through
(00:56:04)
withdrawal without it. Your brain is
(00:56:08)
mostly finished developing.
(00:56:11)
His brain is undergoing wild development
(00:56:16)
and much better that he's outside, he's
(00:56:19)
playing or that you're teaching him off
(00:56:24)
the devices. The more you do it on the
(00:56:26)
devices, the more dependent he is going
(00:56:30)
to be for that exciting, stimulating
(00:56:35)
way of learning. I am so curious what
(00:56:38)
other types of public policy you'd like
(00:56:40)
to see put in place that has
(00:56:42)
neuroscience in mind.
(00:56:44)
>> So, California passed a law um that
(00:56:48)
school high school cannot start before
(00:56:50)
8:30 in the morning
(00:56:52)
>> because we know kids who get less sleep
(00:56:55)
have a higher incidence of anxiety,
(00:56:57)
depression, and suicide. And I love
(00:57:01)
that. It's simple, but it's smart. I
(00:57:04)
think brain health education should be
(00:57:06)
in every grade,
(00:57:08)
>> I had to learn English in every grade,
(00:57:12)
>> right? But I didn't learn one thing, how
(00:57:14)
to love and care for my brain. And I
(00:57:18)
think it's just absolutely critical. I
(00:57:20)
think looking at all of the ingredients
(00:57:24)
and products, I think we should really
(00:57:27)
take a critical look at phalates and
(00:57:30)
parabens and fragrance and aspartame.
(00:57:34)
>> Yeah. You I am so curious what you have
(00:57:37)
to say about aspartame because isn't
(00:57:38)
that what's in Diet Coke that like all
(00:57:40)
of us are like
(00:57:41)
>> sodas. Yeah. So aspartame and 5,000
(00:57:45)
products. Um, when I was 35, I had pain
(00:57:50)
in my hands and my knees, and I had
(00:57:53)
trouble getting off the floor, playing
(00:57:54)
with my smaller children. And one of my
(00:57:58)
patients, and and I think the people
(00:58:00)
who've taught me the most about what I
(00:58:02)
do are the people I serve. It's been my
(00:58:04)
patients. And I said, one woman said, "I
(00:58:07)
stopped aspartame and my pain went
(00:58:09)
away." And I'm like, "Really?" Because I
(00:58:10)
thought it was free, right? It's no
(00:58:13)
calories. Lunchtime. I there was a Jack
(00:58:17)
in the Box across the street from me and
(00:58:21)
I didn't care anything about my own
(00:58:23)
brain. So I'd have lunch at Jack in the
(00:58:25)
Box and I'd have a 32 oz diet Pepsi like
(00:58:29)
every day and [snorts] I'm in chronic
(00:58:31)
pain
(00:58:32)
>> and I'm like maybe I should stop that.
(00:58:35)
And so I did and the pain went away and
(00:58:38)
then I'm not that smart so I had to test
(00:58:40)
it and so I got another one and then the
(00:58:42)
pain immediately came back and I'm like
(00:58:44)
done with aspartame. They gave mice
(00:58:47)
aspartame that go
(00:58:49)
>> I know that's like every mom's favorite
(00:58:51)
drink
(00:58:51)
>> and they [laughter] liked it.
(00:58:52)
>> I don't know if I want to hear this.
(00:58:53)
>> Have you heard about Utah soda culture?
(00:58:56)
and they liked it, but they got really
(00:58:58)
anxious
(00:59:00)
>> and they gave them Valium, a benzo, and
(00:59:03)
it calmed them down. But the really bad
(00:59:06)
part of this study, their babies were
(00:59:09)
anxious, and the babies were never
(00:59:11)
exposed to aspartame. It had an
(00:59:13)
epigenetic change. It turned on some
(00:59:16)
switches that created anxiety in their
(00:59:18)
babies.
(00:59:20)
>> Their grandb babies were anxious.
(00:59:23)
Aspartame unleashed 1981
(00:59:27)
5,000 products. So if you just like
(00:59:29)
chewing gum, most gum has aspartame in
(00:59:32)
it. And I just think we should do
(00:59:36)
thoughtful studies rather than studies
(00:59:38)
sponsored by Coca-Cola
(00:59:41)
or sponsored by the food industry that
(00:59:45)
they have very powerful lobbyists that
(00:59:48)
are paying lots of money for the
(00:59:51)
government not to look into these
(00:59:54)
things. And I'm sort of a huge fan of
(00:59:57)
RFK Jr. and go, let's get petroleumbased
(01:00:00)
dyes out of our I mean, if you can't buy
(01:00:03)
it in Europe, why can you buy it here?
(01:00:06)
>> Yeah.
(01:00:06)
>> Right. I mean, if they're like blocking
(01:00:09)
things,
(01:00:11)
I don't think I'm not a fan of red dye.
(01:00:13)
>> You've said there's quite a few things
(01:00:15)
that you're happy with what RFK Jr.'s
(01:00:17)
doing. I'm curious though with how you
(01:00:20)
spoke about mushrooms earlier. I want to
(01:00:22)
say RFK is, you know, working to
(01:00:25)
legalize psilocybin in the country. Um,
(01:00:28)
for those, you know, war veterans,
(01:00:30)
people that have suffered from PTSD and
(01:00:33)
talk to me more about that. Like, are
(01:00:35)
there any any areas like that where you
(01:00:38)
maybe disagree with RFK?
(01:00:39)
>> Well, I'm very concerned about the
(01:00:41)
psilocybin stuff. I think it's going to
(01:00:45)
be helpful to some people and it's going
(01:00:47)
to devastate other people. There's not
(01:00:50)
enough caution in the discussion because
(01:00:54)
as the idea of the dangerousness of a
(01:00:59)
drug goes down, its use goes up because
(01:01:02)
people don't know how to manage their
(01:01:04)
minds and so they're always looking to
(01:01:07)
escape their own mind. And I'm like, why
(01:01:10)
don't just make friends with [laughter]
(01:01:12)
it? Why just, you know, give your mind a
(01:01:14)
name and don't believe every stupid
(01:01:16)
thing you think?
(01:01:17)
>> Making friends. Gosh,
(01:01:19)
>> wait. We never got the name of your
(01:01:20)
mind.
(01:01:22)
>> Hermy.
(01:01:22)
>> Hermy.
(01:01:22)
>> Hermy.
(01:01:24)
>> That was the raccoon's name.
(01:01:25)
>> That's [laughter] so cute.
(01:01:26)
>> And it was she was a girl. She actually
(01:01:28)
hussy got pregnant. Uh
(01:01:30)
>> wow.
(01:01:31)
>> But I mean I raised her with morals and
(01:01:34)
>> Oh my goodness.
(01:01:35)
>> Got out one night and then had seven
(01:01:38)
babies. But anyways, her was her
(01:01:40)
[laughter] name
(01:01:41)
>> and she I loved her
(01:01:44)
>> and she was great for picking up girls
(01:01:48)
>> because [laughter] you just take her out
(01:01:49)
on her leash and Oh, she's so
(01:01:51)
>> What kind of girls is a raccoon?
(01:01:53)
>> Oh, so many take her to the beach and
(01:01:56)
like it was great. I did want to ask
(01:01:58)
[laughter] you this because going
(01:02:00)
through grief and loss, the it feels
(01:02:03)
like the natural stage that we're in now
(01:02:05)
is like
(01:02:07)
>> maybe we get a dog. That feels like a
(01:02:10)
good Is there some connection? There's
(01:02:13)
got to be something to that.
(01:02:14)
>> Having an animal [snorts]
(01:02:17)
often is very subtling to the brain if
(01:02:21)
if you pick one that's rational and
(01:02:24)
loving. Like I have a white shepherd and
(01:02:27)
I am just so completely in love with
(01:02:30)
her, right? It took a lot of work to
(01:02:34)
train her. Um, but yeah, when I work
(01:02:39)
out, she like lays right next to me and
(01:02:42)
>> that's true.
(01:02:43)
>> Okay, we got the clear from
(01:02:44)
>> I think that can be helpful. But you
(01:02:46)
also want to make sure it's not a
(01:02:48)
reaction because it's a
(01:02:50)
>> 12
(01:02:52)
>> or 15year decision.
(01:02:54)
and uh and they can be stressful.
(01:02:58)
>> So, you just want to sort of
(01:03:01)
>> negotiate
(01:03:02)
>> judge judge your bandwidth.
(01:03:05)
And then if you're really smart and you
(01:03:07)
get a dog, make sure you have a really
(01:03:08)
good trainer and that you because the
(01:03:11)
trainer is not for the dog. The trainer
(01:03:13)
is for you.
(01:03:15)
>> Training
(01:03:15)
>> just like training your mind,
(01:03:18)
>> right? You have to be really thoughtful
(01:03:22)
with a puppy. I have kind of a dumb
(01:03:24)
question that's been nagging me ever
(01:03:26)
since the beginning when you were
(01:03:27)
talking about pain and like headaches.
(01:03:30)
So bear with me. [laughter]
(01:03:31)
>> There's no dumb question.
(01:03:32)
>> Can you think so hard that you get a
(01:03:34)
headache? Because I swear sometimes I'm
(01:03:36)
like I thought way too much today.
(01:03:38)
That's what this that's what's causing
(01:03:39)
this.
(01:03:40)
>> You can't.
(01:03:41)
>> What is thought thinking negatively or?
(01:03:44)
>> No. Like if you're like trying to learn
(01:03:46)
something or grapple with something,
(01:03:48)
negotiate like a hard concept in your
(01:03:50)
mind, can it literally cause physical
(01:03:53)
pain in your head?
(01:03:54)
>> Well, if the focus with stress will
(01:03:58)
cause the tension,
(01:04:01)
>> so it's the stress
(01:04:01)
>> to get worse. Yeah. Have you ever been
(01:04:03)
hypnotized?
(01:04:04)
>> Never.
(01:04:04)
>> So, I have an app called BrainFit Life.
(01:04:07)
It's got um six soon to be 18 hypnosis
(01:04:13)
audios. Oh wow.
(01:04:14)
>> And many of the new ones are for pain.
(01:04:17)
>> Yes, I have.
(01:04:17)
>> When you were giving birth,
(01:04:19)
>> I did a birth hypnosis.
(01:04:20)
>> Yeah. Hypno birth like
(01:04:22)
>> Yeah. meditation.
(01:04:23)
>> Meditation. It actually worked. So, what
(01:04:26)
I would do, especially if you're prone
(01:04:27)
to headaches, is every day just spend 10
(01:04:31)
to 20 minutes listening to a hypnosis
(01:04:34)
audio and training your brain how to get
(01:04:38)
into a relaxed hypnotic state because
(01:04:42)
it'll lower your cortisol levels. and
(01:04:46)
your muscles are telling you something
(01:04:49)
that your brain is sending too many
(01:04:53)
stress signals to your body.
(01:04:57)
>> And so just being in a hypnotic state
(01:05:00)
helps to settle that down. And then on
(01:05:03)
top of that, I would add diaphragmatic
(01:05:06)
breathing. So diaphragmatic breathing is
(01:05:09)
just breathing with your belly. And it's
(01:05:12)
so simple. Four seconds in, take a big
(01:05:14)
breath, but blow up your belly when you
(01:05:16)
breathe in. If you ever watch a baby
(01:05:18)
breathe or a puppy breathe, they breathe
(01:05:20)
exclusively here because it's the most
(01:05:23)
efficient way to breathe.
(01:05:25)
>> But then 8 seconds out. So take twice as
(01:05:28)
long to breathe out as you breathe in.
(01:05:32)
And um for people who have a smartwatch
(01:05:37)
>> um it often measure heart rate
(01:05:39)
variability which is a sign of heart
(01:05:42)
health.
(01:05:43)
>> And if you can increase it and you
(01:05:46)
increase it with things like hypnosis
(01:05:48)
and diaphragmatic breathing and
(01:05:50)
meditation,
(01:05:51)
you're just training your body. It's
(01:05:54)
like girl, you've been thinking too much
(01:05:57)
>> or girl you're too hard on yourself. We
(01:06:00)
need to be the good mother to ourselves,
(01:06:05)
>> right? Nurture, love, quiet your busy
(01:06:09)
brain.
(01:06:10)
>> How do you tap into a hypnosis? Like
(01:06:12)
it's easy. I think I'm thinking about my
(01:06:14)
labor experience. It like it was crazy.
(01:06:17)
I was hypnotized for like how long was
(01:06:19)
that that I was listening to that?
(01:06:21)
>> I don't even remember. maybe 45 minutes
(01:06:23)
cuz you forgot to let them know that you
(01:06:24)
needed another epidur like you need
(01:06:26)
>> like I came out of it and then they were
(01:06:28)
like okay it's time to push and I was
(01:06:29)
like well I'm in so much pain and I'm
(01:06:31)
wondering if that same thing would occur
(01:06:33)
like
(01:06:34)
>> in if I were to do this migraine or
(01:06:37)
something like during the day where if
(01:06:38)
I'm like okay yeah I was in that really
(01:06:40)
relaxed state I did that practice in the
(01:06:42)
morning here I am in the afternoon I've
(01:06:44)
my to-do list is long how do you tap
(01:06:46)
back into that without like do you just
(01:06:48)
stop everything and enter the hypnosis
(01:06:51)
again
(01:06:52)
four diaphragmatic breaths.
(01:06:55)
>> Okay?
(01:06:55)
>> Lay on your back or sit in the chair and
(01:06:58)
they're like a 15-second breath. So,
(01:07:02)
like that's a minute. Um,
(01:07:06)
and go somewhere in your mind that you
(01:07:10)
love. M
(01:07:12)
>> like I can immediately do it and go to
(01:07:15)
the beach or go to the mountains or go
(01:07:18)
to Jackson, Wyoming, which is so pretty.
(01:07:21)
>> Um
(01:07:24)
it's just I'm going to work to train my
(01:07:27)
brain to help me.
(01:07:29)
>> Mhm.
(01:07:30)
>> And if we did a lot more of that in this
(01:07:32)
society, we'd be a lot happier.
(01:07:35)
>> You tap back into that. And then don't
(01:07:37)
listen to things that piss you off.
(01:07:40)
>> Whether it's the news or
(01:07:43)
>> um social media that's meant to keep
(01:07:46)
your attention. Just watch. You know, I
(01:07:48)
think people listen. Just watch your
(01:07:51)
feed on how much of it is, oh, I really
(01:07:54)
like that versus that really makes me
(01:07:56)
mad.
(01:07:57)
>> Can you offset your vices? So, let me
(01:07:59)
give you an an example. I know of
(01:08:01)
somebody in my life. They practically
(01:08:03)
drink a beer every day, but they also
(01:08:07)
run every single day. They never miss a
(01:08:09)
day. And so it's like, okay, alcohol not
(01:08:12)
good for your brain, but then running
(01:08:13)
good for your brain.
(01:08:15)
>> So, let me answer it this way. I've seen
(01:08:17)
400 NFL players, some of them active
(01:08:19)
players. They have $80 million
(01:08:21)
contracts. They're still going to play.
(01:08:24)
It's like, if you're going to do
(01:08:25)
something bad, you need to outweigh it
(01:08:29)
with a whole bunch of good. So Tom Brady
(01:08:32)
played until he was 45. He wrote a book
(01:08:36)
called TB12, which is basically a brain
(01:08:38)
health book. Virtually everything else
(01:08:41)
he did was great. Or we're just
(01:08:43)
finishing an firefighter study after the
(01:08:48)
LA fires and was so awful. Our
(01:08:50)
foundation, we have a foundation called
(01:08:52)
the Change Your Brain Foundation that
(01:08:54)
raises money for service and research
(01:08:56)
and education. We donated a hundred
(01:09:00)
scans for firefighters because they all
(01:09:02)
have bad brains. But does that mean
(01:09:04)
they're not going to be a firefighter
(01:09:07)
because of the toxic exposure, the
(01:09:09)
emotional trauma, the head trauma? No.
(01:09:12)
We need firefighters. But what should
(01:09:14)
happen is they should love their brain
(01:09:16)
and they should always be rehabilitating
(01:09:20)
it. So, you know, if you want to keep
(01:09:23)
your vices, just see. I mean, you really
(01:09:27)
can't outrun a bad diet, right? But try
(01:09:32)
to do way more good than bad. And the
(01:09:36)
more love you have for yourself, the
(01:09:39)
less bad you'll want to do.
(01:09:41)
>> Is there something that we haven't
(01:09:44)
discussed that people need to know?
(01:09:46)
Like, just, you know, final thought.
(01:09:47)
>> I know you had a sex question you want
(01:09:49)
to ask.
(01:09:49)
>> I had a sex question I wanted to ask.
(01:09:50)
What was it? I can't
(01:09:51)
>> I don't [laughter] know. you're talking
(01:09:53)
about. I was like, I want I want to
(01:09:55)
bring this up, but I'm trying to figure
(01:09:56)
out a way. I was like, you wrote a whole
(01:09:58)
book about love and the brain. I
(01:10:01)
[laughter] feel like he's got lots of a
(01:10:02)
wealth of knowledge on that topic.
(01:10:04)
>> Oh, man. Um, [laughter] the best for
(01:10:08)
play
(01:10:09)
>> is forthought.
(01:10:12)
>> Okay.
(01:10:12)
>> No forethought equals no foreplay,
(01:10:15)
right? That's why you want to have good
(01:10:18)
frontal loes because, you know, for guys
(01:10:20)
we can get aroused almost anytime. Um,
(01:10:25)
girls are way different and they need
(01:10:29)
thoughtfulness. And so, you always want
(01:10:31)
to ask yourself this one question. What
(01:10:34)
do you want? Like with my wife, I always
(01:10:38)
want the same thing. It's always the
(01:10:40)
same thing. I want a kind, caring,
(01:10:42)
loving, supportive, passionate
(01:10:45)
relationship
(01:10:47)
100% of the time. I want that, but I
(01:10:50)
don't always feel it. Rude thoughts just
(01:10:53)
show up.
(01:10:54)
>> Mhm.
(01:10:55)
>> And I block them because it's like
(01:10:58)
that's not going to get you your goal.
(01:11:00)
And the other thing, notice what you
(01:11:02)
like more than what you don't like.
(01:11:04)
Every day you're shaping each other's
(01:11:07)
behavior by what you notice. And you
(01:11:11)
know, you can make her mad, you can make
(01:11:14)
her sad by what you say or what you do,
(01:11:17)
but that doesn't fit the goal. Cuz odds
(01:11:19)
are you guys have the same goals I have.
(01:11:21)
Most of my patients have the same goal.
(01:11:23)
Kind, caring, loving, supportive,
(01:11:25)
passionate relationship. And it just
(01:11:29)
supervise
(01:11:30)
what comes out of your mouth right now.
(01:11:32)
If you drank, those bad thoughts are
(01:11:35)
more likely to come out. If you didn't
(01:11:36)
sleep the night before, those bad
(01:11:38)
thoughts are going to come out. If
(01:11:40)
you're grieving, those bad thoughts are
(01:11:42)
more likely to come out. But if you just
(01:11:46)
focus on noticing what you like more
(01:11:49)
than what you don't, it just could
(01:11:52)
change the quality of your relationship
(01:11:55)
in a good way.
(01:11:57)
>> It all connects back.
(01:11:59)
>> Really does. Dr. Raymond, thank you so
(01:12:01)
much for coming on the show. It's been a
(01:12:02)
pleasure speaking with you. If you guys
(01:12:04)
haven't, um, definitely pre-order his
(01:12:07)
his new book, Change Your Brain. Change
(01:12:09)
Your Pain. Can they can pre-order it,
(01:12:11)
right? That's
(01:12:12)
>> they can pre-order it. And if they go to
(01:12:13)
change your brain, change your pain
(01:12:15)
book, we actually have
(01:12:18)
>> four free gifts for them. Um, even a
(01:12:22)
30-day online pain course. That is
(01:12:25)
great. And the emotional freedom
(01:12:26)
journal, which is how do you get the
(01:12:28)
rage out?
(01:12:29)
>> Um, and Omega3 fatty acid supplement.
(01:12:34)
>> Very cool. Dr. Raymond, thank you so
(01:12:36)
much.
(01:12:37)
>> So great to see you guys again.
(01:12:38)
Likewise.
