Navigated to #216 How to Architect Longevity: Your Environment is Your Longevity Lab – Unleash Your Brain's Superpowers, Hack Your Mind to Master Your Life, & The Female Biorhythm with Claudia von Boeselager - Transcript

#216 How to Architect Longevity: Your Environment is Your Longevity Lab – Unleash Your Brain's Superpowers, Hack Your Mind to Master Your Life, & The Female Biorhythm with Claudia von Boeselager

Episode Transcript

[SPEAKER_02]: Hey there, I'm Claudia Fumbrzilaga, a former investment banker turned entrepreneur, longevity coach, biohacker and mother of two.

[SPEAKER_02]: Once burnt out and overwhelmed with chronic health issues, I've transformed my life and helped thousands of people do the same.

[SPEAKER_02]: I've even reduced my biological age by seventeen years.

[SPEAKER_02]: Yes, I'm twenty-six again.

[SPEAKER_02]: Now I'm here to share the tools, strategies, and inspiration to help you live healthier, happier and longer.

[SPEAKER_02]: On this podcast, I interview world leading experts in health, biohacking, mindset and performance, and share personal stories and learnings to bring you the latest insights and tips.

[SPEAKER_02]: Think of this as your go-to space for real talk about all things health and optimizing your life.

[SPEAKER_02]: Ready to unlock your best self?

[SPEAKER_02]: Let's dive in.

[SPEAKER_02]: This is the longevity and lifestyle podcast.

[SPEAKER_03]: Hello, dearest ladies and gentlemen, I'm your host, Claudia von Brzelega here.

[SPEAKER_03]: You know, I love bringing you the best insights for a longer, healthier, more vibrant life.

[SPEAKER_03]: That's why I'm thrilled to share a recent conversation I had on the Gladden longevity podcast with the brilliant Dr.

Jeffrey Gladden.

[SPEAKER_03]: Now available here on the longevity and lifestyle podcast.

[SPEAKER_03]: We went deep into some seriously hot topics, and I know you'll want to hear them.

[SPEAKER_03]: One was around how your environment is your longevity lab.

[SPEAKER_03]: Discover how optimizing everything from air quality to the colors around you can profoundly impact your health.

[SPEAKER_03]: To unleash your brain's superpowers, we explored cutting edge methods for cognitive enhancement, including novel molecules, psychedelic assisted therapies, [SPEAKER_03]: An advanced brain training.

[SPEAKER_03]: We also covered how to hack your mind and master your life.

[SPEAKER_03]: Learn how emotional healing, things like EFT tapping, mindset shifts and understanding your unique biological rhythms can unlock your full potential.

[SPEAKER_03]: We also touched on AI at topic close to my heart, which I very much love and I'm excited about.

[SPEAKER_03]: Your ultimate longevity assistant, see how artificial intelligence isn't just for sci-fi, but a powerful tool to optimize your health.

[SPEAKER_03]: and boost your creativity.

[SPEAKER_03]: And if you enjoyed this episode, I'd absolutely love to hear from you.

[SPEAKER_03]: So please leave a review on this app with your favorite insights or takeaways.

[SPEAKER_03]: It would mean the world to me and allows me to bring even more amazing guests to you.

[SPEAKER_03]: Please enjoy this episode.

[SPEAKER_00]: Welcome to the glad and longevity podcast with Dr.

Jeffrey Gladden, where our passion is helping you to become an eight-chacker.

[SPEAKER_00]: On this show, we want to help you optimize your life energy, longevity, health, and human performance with impactful and actionable information by answering four questions.

[SPEAKER_00]: How good can we be?

[SPEAKER_00]: How do we make one hundred the new thirty?

[SPEAKER_00]: How do we live well beyond one twenty and how do we live young for a lifetime?

[SPEAKER_00]: Now, here's today's episode of the glad and longevity podcast.

[SPEAKER_04]: Welcome everybody to this edition of the Gladner of Jeopardy podcast.

[SPEAKER_04]: I'm your host, Dr.

Jeffrey Gladner.

[SPEAKER_04]: And as always, we're here answering the biggest questions we can think of, which is how good can we be?

[SPEAKER_04]: How do we make a hundred to new thirty?

[SPEAKER_04]: How do we live well beyond one twenty?

[SPEAKER_04]: How do we live young for a lifetime?

[SPEAKER_04]: And how do we actually create a three hundred splash three thousand year old pond?

[SPEAKER_04]: And today, I'm going to be interviewing Claudia Vaughn Bosenleiter.

[SPEAKER_04]: I know that's a mouthful.

[SPEAKER_04]: She's going to be speaking to us from London, England.

[SPEAKER_04]: She has a really interesting background in finance and its transition into the longevity space.

[SPEAKER_04]: She's a multiple business owner.

[SPEAKER_04]: And it's really, really, really passionate about creating environments that facilitate people living well.

[SPEAKER_04]: And I think you're really going to enjoy this conversation.

[SPEAKER_04]: I really did.

[SPEAKER_04]: We go down several different radicals that I think you're going to find really interesting.

[SPEAKER_04]: So enjoy this podcast.

[SPEAKER_04]: really has to do with architecting the environments we reside into actually help support the mission of longevity.

[SPEAKER_04]: Crosses over to several different things, but we have Claudia Vaughn Bosenleger.

[SPEAKER_04]: I hope I didn't rest it up too badly.

[SPEAKER_04]: She's working with a company called Lamara that we're excited to hear more about.

[SPEAKER_04]: So Claudia, welcome to the show.

[SPEAKER_03]: Thank you so much, Jeffrey, for having me back on such a pleasure and excited to dig into all things longevity and health.

[SPEAKER_04]: So yeah, absolutely.

[SPEAKER_04]: So bring us up to speed a little bit on what you've been, what you've been up to with Lumerra.

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, amazing.

[SPEAKER_03]: So I think that and you'll know yourself that this industry is just exponentially booming and you know myself being in the space and and through also my podcast that I have as well you get to meet so many amazing wonderful people and speaking at different conferences etc.

[SPEAKER_03]: You get approached by so many people that are keen to either, you know, if they have a clinic to upgrade the clinic or real estate developers, what to have, you know, wellness offering that's more longevity, biohacking focus to hotels, etc.

[SPEAKER_03]: And I've decided to, or we decided with my business partners to come together.

[SPEAKER_03]: And so we have a longevity clinician on board, Ashley Madsen, who, you know, Stanford train multiple trainings across different things and then [SPEAKER_03]: Alexander, who is a biohacking equipment, experts through personal challenges with Hashimoto's disease, et cetera.

[SPEAKER_03]: And so yeah, with Lamar Collective, we really wanted to help clients who have potentially gotten burnt in the past to know what to do and by burned, I mean the following that [SPEAKER_03]: People, there's so much happening in this space that, you know, someone will put on Amazon, a red light panel and be like, this is the red light panel to have and it's their disappointed when it falls apart that, you know, they spend all this money on it that it doesn't work, et cetera.

[SPEAKER_03]: And so we want to really help clients to have the best of what's available and that includes from the longevity cutting edge protocols.

[SPEAKER_03]: to the biohacking equipment and stacks and marrying the two essentially, complementing each other if they have the staff training with that.

[SPEAKER_03]: And even looking around things like the environment, how do you create these regenerative environments from copper flooring to NASA tested plans to air purification, et cetera?

[SPEAKER_03]: So that's kind of in a nutshell.

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, no, it's fantastic.

[SPEAKER_04]: In our world, [SPEAKER_04]: We understand that the environments that we reside in are really key factors.

[SPEAKER_04]: It's important to try to have as much goodness as possible as little badness there as possible.

[SPEAKER_04]: And it kind of crosses over not only into air and water, but like you're talking about construction materials and even humidity levels and things like that.

[SPEAKER_04]: So a lot of things that I think people don't think about as actually [SPEAKER_04]: really have an impact on their global health and therefore longevity.

[SPEAKER_04]: I think also even the colors that are in the environment as well as the sounds that are in the environment being able to tune and nervous system into [SPEAKER_04]: different states of relaxation or attention and focus.

[SPEAKER_04]: All those things become really, really important when you think about how do we optimize the human experience, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: So yeah, great fun playground.

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, it's a fun sandbox and globally and you know, I think it's also combining ancient practices because if you look at the, you know, concept of Feng Shui, you know, this was a thing about and, you know, getting the right energy and the right flow and things like that too and, you know, it's an interesting anecdote.

[SPEAKER_03]: friends recently the whole family discovered they were all neurodivergent they didn't realize that and the kids through their diagnosis were like you know actually I'm now I understand myself a little bit better the coloring of our living room I don't like I really struggle with repainted it and then the whole family just is actually using the whole living room space again as well so these are little [SPEAKER_03]: nuances, but when we get to understand the impact or direct environment, particularly our home or our office where we spend a lot of time can have on us.

[SPEAKER_03]: Making refinements, maybe going down the rabbit hole, understanding what is possible is so important.

[SPEAKER_03]: And looking at non-toxic paints, right, or even the key products we use.

[SPEAKER_03]: You know, people are optimizing everything, and then they're using super poisonous cleaning products on their desk, and then they're sanding, they're inhaling all the toxins for the next hours.

[SPEAKER_03]: That's right.

[SPEAKER_03]: These little things that we forget about, but are so essential to our overall well-being and then they're wondering, you know, later I've got such a headache or, you know, they have the door open and there's heavy traffic outside while all the exhaust from the cars are coming in and they're handling it as well.

[SPEAKER_03]: So without overwhelming people, it's trying to help, you know, what are the steps that could be taken to start optimizing that environment?

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_04]: You know, I was seeing some really interesting data on forest bathing, which essentially means going out and spending some time in the forest.

[SPEAKER_04]: And I think it was in Japan they were doing this and it was people were going out for like three or four hours at a time and was having a dramatic impact on their heart rate variability, their sense of stress, their sense of life satisfaction for the next week, actually.

[SPEAKER_04]: which is really interesting too so it's really I think important to think about the fact that each of us lives in multiple environments right we live at home we live with the office but then we also live on business travel we live on vacation and we also live in sort of a recreational space right when we get out and we do the thing that we enjoy doing outside and I think being able to kind of be intentional about each of those [SPEAKER_04]: and understanding the interplay between them can be super helpful.

[SPEAKER_04]: There was an interesting study also that I saw that there were measuring stem cell release in monks that were meditating.

[SPEAKER_04]: And they would put themselves into a theta state, right, a theta brain wave state, which is a deep meditative state.

[SPEAKER_04]: It's just above delta, which would be sleep.

[SPEAKER_04]: So it's in that hypnagogic state or pre-sleep state, but it's a very deep and profound meditative state.

[SPEAKER_04]: And they were noticing that there was a forty percent increase in stem cell release into the body correct right to heal whatever was going on right so when we're talking about you know we we talk about what we're going to go to stem cell therapy and exosomes and all these other kinds of things in many ways [SPEAKER_04]: we sort of need those things because the environment we put ourselves into is very toxic and it can be toxic in many ways.

[SPEAKER_04]: So anyway, it's kind of cool.

[SPEAKER_04]: I think the more you can bring, in some sense, the outside inside, you know, I think the better people feel the fresher the air is, the more crank will the paints are, the smells that are there, all that kind of thing.

[SPEAKER_04]: So I don't know if I'm sure that's something your guys are factoring in.

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, exactly, but I love what you picked up there and I think that's so important for people to realize, like, and in the Western society, we've been brainwashed to believe that we need something external.

[SPEAKER_03]: We need a pill or we need, you know, some external help to solve a problem, right, that we have or whatever it might be.

[SPEAKER_03]: And that exactly goes to show that instead, it's like, why not train or, you know, incorporate a practice where you are training your delta brainwave states, right?

[SPEAKER_03]: And theta brainwave states, you know, even going to alpha is super important as well.

[SPEAKER_03]: And instead of looking for external modalities and why not sort of looking at your schedule and knowing, okay, I need to be in the office this amount of hours and I have then the EMF exposure and all the things going on.

[SPEAKER_03]: But let me carve out maybe, you know, if you live near a beach, maybe on the way home, I'll just walk for ten, fifteen minutes on the beach and then, you know, rebalance myself and get that beautiful, you know, magnesium in the air and that calming effect of being by the sea.

[SPEAKER_03]: And so it's trying to figure out, you know, how can you incorporate these little nuggets of goodness to recalibrate and allow your system to be in a beautiful homeostasis state that it wants to be unless affected by all the different insults essentially all the different factors that are happening on a regular basis to it.

[SPEAKER_03]: So yeah.

[SPEAKER_04]: It makes you wonder if we [SPEAKER_04]: could move predominantly from Oasis to Oasis, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: Like we're here on the office to create this as an Oasis, you know, with plants and oxygen being released and CO-T being taken out, things like that.

[SPEAKER_04]: You get in your car, maybe there's a way to architect a car that's more of an Oasis, right?

[SPEAKER_01]: Or can you get home in this?

[SPEAKER_04]: well yeah right and probably not not an electric vehicle with all the AMF right so there are many many interesting things here but then you go into your home then you go you know go into your garage for that matter right and and kind of looking at it all through the lens of how would we optimize this with kind of an oasis mindset [SPEAKER_04]: And then there are places where you do want to be excited.

[SPEAKER_04]: Do you do want to be, you know, whatever, it's not about being calm.

[SPEAKER_04]: It's about being, you know, whatever, being able to step into those as well.

[SPEAKER_04]: So there's almost a journey that each of us goes on in the course of a day.

[SPEAKER_04]: It could almost be mapped out as a road map of what does anybody go through in the course of a day, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: And how do you architect each of those things, including the bedroom, your sleep, your [SPEAKER_03]: When your optimal time is to, you know, set yourself up like have some sort of morning practice, right, which we know is so essential to when are you able to access best flow state for that creative work, so you can really be in your zone of genius and make something amazing versus the more [SPEAKER_03]: administrative the phone calls and and the emails and whatever else you need to do in the other part of the day.

[SPEAKER_03]: And so I think the more we're able to structure that it's phenomenal and one area most of very passionate about is, you know, how do you kind of buy a hack around the female buyer with them and helping women actually.

[SPEAKER_03]: You know, we're not little men and, you know, men are the twenty-four hour testosterone cycle.

[SPEAKER_03]: Women have a twenty-eight on average day cycle and we're four different people in the space of a month.

[SPEAKER_03]: And so if you know what superpowers you have at different phases of the month, utilizing them versus trying to fit in.

[SPEAKER_03]: You know, I'm speaking to someone who began a Korean investment banking at Goldman Sachs, where it's very male-dominated environment, and sometimes you could, you know, keep up and perform another time as you're just like, oh my god, I'm so overwhelmed.

[SPEAKER_03]: It's for in the morning, and I still haven't finished what's going on, you know, so I've learned a lot since then.

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, absolutely.

[SPEAKER_04]: I think that's a really wonderful thing to bring forward because [SPEAKER_04]: You know, women, you could say they go through four different personalities and course of a month, harmonally based, men go through changes as well, not as predictable in some ways, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: And so, but the point is, I think if you have the ability to architect your cycle, so where you know the things that are going to be supportive to you at this portion of the cycle, or things that you're going to want to expand into at this portion of your cycle, [SPEAKER_04]: That's a really cool thing.

[SPEAKER_04]: I don't know if anybody's actually sitting down and mapping that out with women, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: I think that would be like a really cool consultative idea.

[SPEAKER_03]: I have a podcast episode on it.

[SPEAKER_03]: If women are there want to check it out, feel free to reach out to me and very happy to dive in, especially someone who's been in the corporate world.

[SPEAKER_03]: I'd love more team leaders to be more aware of this and how they can use it to their advantage as well.

[SPEAKER_03]: But I also think looking at it a bit more of a meta level.

[SPEAKER_03]: So for men and women is also like, how do you want to map out your year and looking at almost at that phase, right?

[SPEAKER_03]: So like, what are I deal down time?

[SPEAKER_03]: So maybe if you've kids, you know that you've got your summer vacation or certain like vacation periods.

[SPEAKER_03]: And maybe those are times to be more present to reset, maybe to plan, maybe you want to spend time writing a book or something where you want it to take out from that sort of day to day.

[SPEAKER_03]: And then other times when you're full force, maybe you come back after your vacation and you're like, all your ideas you want to get going.

[SPEAKER_03]: looking at that sort of longer period of time over a twelve-month period of how do you map out your year to have the things to look forward to when those different rhythms in there so that you can go and then you can have the you know rest in relaxation but also creativity times as well and so that's a concept that I've been you know thinking more and more about and how could that be [SPEAKER_03]: used for people to structure a life of their dreams that they're being at their best self, and also want an annual basis essentially.

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, I think that's a great, I think that's a great insight.

[SPEAKER_04]: I think it's hard for people to think probably beyond a year, like to do a five-year plan.

[SPEAKER_04]: It's a little tricky to do that.

[SPEAKER_04]: I mean, you can have some sort of global aspirations, but I think you can get recently granular in a year, right, in terms of dates and holidays and family invocations or whatever.

[SPEAKER_04]: I think one of the things that pulls at all of us is the need to be reactive, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: On other words, things come up.

[SPEAKER_04]: You don't expect it comes up, calls for our attention.

[SPEAKER_04]: And even though we have a plan to do something, then we're called to react to something as opposed to living in a place of simply being proactive all the time, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: So it's like being able to have a mechanism to go from [SPEAKER_04]: that reactive state where we get a little more not necessarily activated but we can get a little more activator at least we get pulled out of that one place of being to be able to get back to that place of you know stillness so to speak or creative space you have any tricks around that [SPEAKER_03]: I do, and I walk my coaching clients through these as well.

[SPEAKER_03]: So, first of all, I help people get very clear on their why, right?

[SPEAKER_03]: That true North Blueprints, because I feel like many of us say yes to so many things, because we're not a hundred percent sure exactly what it is that we're trying to get to and what our purpose is.

[SPEAKER_03]: And so, obviously, first piece is the mindset, but then looking at that true North Blueprint, and then as the next step, it's also looking at [SPEAKER_03]: What is the way to say no to the things that are not in our alignment?

[SPEAKER_03]: And there's a few different analogies that I love, right?

[SPEAKER_03]: So, you know, things will always come up, right?

[SPEAKER_03]: But if you look at something, and this is besides an emergency, a child sick child or something like this, but [SPEAKER_03]: last minute thing or like, hey, you know, we're going here, do you want to come, you know, or come to the events, et cetera.

[SPEAKER_03]: And so, you know, for one of them is like, if there's there isn't a seven out of ten, you only have an eight nine and ten out of ten or a six and below.

[SPEAKER_03]: If it isn't an eight nine or ten out of ten, it's a no, right?

[SPEAKER_03]: So you need to prioritize your time and know that you only want the things that are like, wow, I'd love to be there if it's an okay.

[SPEAKER_03]: It's a no because you're deprotorizing yourself, your time, your creativity, your family or whatever it is as well.

[SPEAKER_03]: Or also if you get an invitation six months out and I think myself included but also clients are like, oh but if it's in half a year it's so hard to judge and I'm like, oh of course I'll have time then but what I love to say is that you know how busy you're going to be next week.

[SPEAKER_03]: So look at next week Tuesday and if you would be able to schedule in next week Tuesday and you still then you can say yes for six months out but if you know that there's absolutely no way that you you'll have time next week Tuesday then it's a no.

[SPEAKER_03]: And so by freeing up that time and having just those core components as much as possible in your calendar, when these curveballs sometimes do come up, you have a little bit more wiggle room to shuffle things around versus having that jam-pack schedule.

[SPEAKER_03]: And Jeffrey, like I'm coming from the person who said yes to everything in my twenties and with sometimes even, you know, embarrassing me to be at three events in one evening and [SPEAKER_03]: everyone's angry at me because I came late to one and then I was leaving early and all the rest of it too just because I couldn't say no because I was saying yes to everything and to the detriment of things now and you know if I go to events now like my favorite thing is to connect deeply with one maybe two people.

[SPEAKER_03]: The previous me would be I need to say hi to everybody and connect as well.

[SPEAKER_03]: I'm exhausted.

[SPEAKER_03]: I haven't had any deep meaning for conversations and [SPEAKER_03]: I think with the agent wisdom, it's sort of changed perspective as well.

[SPEAKER_03]: So I think having that clarity and taking the time to figure out what is that true North blueprint for you makes it easier to say no to things and have more time in your schedule.

[SPEAKER_03]: So then when things do come up, you then have the tools to say, [SPEAKER_03]: is this something okay emergency side right but is this something that I want to do or not and if it's aligned with my mission and what I want to do then yeah I'll schedule it in and I'll make time for it.

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah I think that's I think that's really wise and I think [SPEAKER_04]: I think some of the greatest life satisfaction comes in the deepest connections, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: So whenever there's an opportunity to make a deep connection as opposed to a superficial connection, that's probably a bit of a bell weather as well, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: I think the other thing is I was thinking as you were speaking was six months out, sometimes there are things that come up that you might not be able to fit into next Tuesday, but they align with a bigger [SPEAKER_04]: direction that you're trying to go.

[SPEAKER_04]: And it's like, you make the commitment to that because it's like, I don't exactly see how that's going to work right now, but it feels like I'm aligned with the direction that that's taking me and I'm going to commit to that.

[SPEAKER_04]: Right.

[SPEAKER_04]: Kind of like so.

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_03]: No, hundred percent.

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_03]: No, and at the end of the day, and this is something I've been working on over the last few days to be very cerebral and not very connected to intuition and gut gut instinct.

[SPEAKER_03]: If it feels right, then trust that and you never know all unfold as well, but it's a little bit more than analytical.

[SPEAKER_03]: Like does this hundred percent make sense?

[SPEAKER_03]: It's like, no, it feels right.

[SPEAKER_03]: It's something that would bring me joy.

[SPEAKER_03]: So I'm going to say yes to it and let's see what happens.

[SPEAKER_04]: I think that's another really key piece, as I think we've all, particularly people that have come through any professional track, if he's kind of intellectualized life, because it's a skill set that we use at work.

[SPEAKER_04]: And so we tend to think that it's transferable into every area of life, whether it's a relationship or an athletic event or with a lot of participator and whatever.

[SPEAKER_04]: I think the idea though of feeling into things and certain personality types, I guess if you look at Myers-Briggs or more feeling into things than others.

[SPEAKER_04]: But nonetheless, I think feeling into things and almost using your body's response and your nervous system response to something [SPEAKER_04]: Because you can think you want to do something, but if they're still little, not in your stomach, then it's not excitement, but it's actually dread.

[SPEAKER_04]: And being able to sniff that out, you know, can save you a lot of a lot of hard burn.

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, a lot of sense.

[SPEAKER_03]: And I'm like, if people are asking, you know, how do you tune into that as well?

[SPEAKER_03]: And I think one is just pausing, first of all, because girls, like, go, go, go.

[SPEAKER_03]: It's just pausing a second, breathing into it and thinking, [SPEAKER_03]: Do I feel energized from the idea?

[SPEAKER_03]: Or do I feel like heavy?

[SPEAKER_03]: A lot, you know, and just even just checking into that.

[SPEAKER_03]: And the more you check in, the more you get used to checking into it as well.

[SPEAKER_03]: And then just trusting the outcome, right?

[SPEAKER_03]: You can overanalyze and never really know.

[SPEAKER_03]: But yeah, I think that's a tool.

[SPEAKER_04]: It's interesting to me that my intuition is almost never wrong.

[SPEAKER_04]: It's almost never wrong.

[SPEAKER_04]: Sometimes I'll override it.

[SPEAKER_04]: And then at the end of something, I realized I had it right in the first place.

[SPEAKER_03]: What is your an example, Jeffrey, with the audience?

[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, well, you know, there've been a lot of people I've dated in the course of my life where it's like, there was a premonition that this wasn't the right thing, but it's like, ah, there's so many nice things here or whatever, but in the end, it was always the thing that I knew right up front it, kind of, right?

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, but I guess those are life experiences as well, right?

[SPEAKER_03]: And I've also learned personally a bit more like, you know, compassion and forgiveness of self, like we're not perfect.

[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, for sure.

[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, for sure.

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, there is no self-flagellation here.

[SPEAKER_04]: I think I got over that a long time ago.

[SPEAKER_04]: It used to be really hard on myself until I kind of developed a couple of things.

[SPEAKER_04]: One was realizing, you know, when you're in a competitive thing, right, going to medical school, things like that, whatever career you go down.

[SPEAKER_04]: You know, you tend to beat yourself up.

[SPEAKER_04]: It's like, well, if I only remember that or if I only knew this or if I only this or whatever and you're never sort of enough or you're never good enough.

[SPEAKER_01]: Exactly.

[SPEAKER_04]: And at one point I had the realization.

[SPEAKER_04]: that I'm not a smart person in the world, I realize that, that's okay.

[SPEAKER_04]: But I'm actually smart enough to do anything I want to do.

[SPEAKER_04]: I'm smart enough to do anything that I really want to do.

[SPEAKER_04]: It's like, well, that's good enough for me.

[SPEAKER_04]: I mean, God bless me, and I'm smart enough to do that.

[SPEAKER_04]: But it's great.

[SPEAKER_04]: I can do anything I want.

[SPEAKER_04]: So it's like, okay, I don't have to worry about that anymore.

[SPEAKER_04]: And I could just kind of lay that to rest.

[SPEAKER_04]: And then I think the other thing was when my son was born and I felt unconditional love for another human being, [SPEAKER_04]: It's like, oh my gosh, okay, so then I would give that to myself.

[SPEAKER_04]: And then it was like, wow, okay, this feels really good too.

[SPEAKER_04]: So when you, so there is no self-flatulation, there's really only love.

[SPEAKER_04]: And I think a lot of people, part of the stress is that they feel like they're trying to measure up.

[SPEAKER_04]: They're trying to be something that they feel they're not yet.

[SPEAKER_04]: And yet, getting to the point, maybe you've had your own journey around this would be interesting to share.

[SPEAKER_04]: But getting to that point where you have unconditional love for yourself, [SPEAKER_04]: And if you do something that doesn't work out, for me there's no mistakes, there's no failure, there's only learning situations, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: So it's just like, oh, it's just learning.

[SPEAKER_04]: It's fun.

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_03]: And that's that beautiful reframing, right, as well.

[SPEAKER_03]: And so if you look at this and I've been on a very long journey in constantly learning and I'm an eternal student forever learning every day.

[SPEAKER_03]: But a lot of the stories, those negative stories, particularly, we tell ourselves, are from childhood.

[SPEAKER_03]: And it's a child's interpretation of an event that happens.

[SPEAKER_03]: And it made themselves, it means a certain way about themselves.

[SPEAKER_03]: I'm not good enough.

[SPEAKER_03]: I'm not lovable.

[SPEAKER_03]: I'm not smart enough.

[SPEAKER_03]: I'm not tall enough.

[SPEAKER_03]: I'm whatever it might be.

[SPEAKER_03]: And it might have been something an adult mentioned knowingly or unknowingly that the child then just interprets.

[SPEAKER_03]: And so I think for people who still struggle with [SPEAKER_03]: negative self-talk and you know trying to break that cycle.

[SPEAKER_03]: It's almost doing you know there's different modalities of course around it from that inner child work of looking like what was the first time you experienced that and often people can be like oh yeah well when I was three and you know I missed kicking the soccer ball or whatever it was as well my dad shouted at me and from then on I was convinced you know I'm I'm bad at sports or whatever it might be and so [SPEAKER_03]: understanding that was a scenario and that you were not that person and I think it's really separating the the ego from the self and and being able to do that and it is a longer journey and multiple modalities and I've gone down many rabbit holes in this space.

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, it's really interesting to your point.

[SPEAKER_04]: I think it's really critical in this process to do the deep dive and go back and understand kind of what happened, who said what, what did I do, who's responsible for what, all of that.

[SPEAKER_04]: Because without that, I think it's impossible to heal it.

[SPEAKER_04]: But I think the other interesting thing is that those activities and events [SPEAKER_04]: Even though we've intellectually made peace with them, they can still live in our nervous systems, kind of in our body, so to speak.

[SPEAKER_04]: And they're still, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: It's almost like in the subconscious.

[SPEAKER_04]: And what I've been working with is the idea that those were basically imprinted by experiences.

[SPEAKER_04]: And we can do the intellectual work, the deep dive and understanding.

[SPEAKER_04]: That's a good tee up or set up.

[SPEAKER_04]: But it's really the only way to overwrite experience is to overwrite the software with a different experience.

[SPEAKER_04]: Because when you've actually felt a different experience, then you can live that experience.

[SPEAKER_04]: It's like, no, this experience now replaces that experience.

[SPEAKER_04]: Then it's like, now it's really solid.

[SPEAKER_04]: So you can never take this away.

[SPEAKER_03]: I'd be curious to hear about how you do that.

[SPEAKER_03]: For me, one tool I find really powerful is the EFT tapping.

[SPEAKER_03]: I don't know if you know that, so we know what it is.

[SPEAKER_03]: It's a real, really amazing way to shift it.

[SPEAKER_03]: Another way I found very powerful as well is like looking at back and as to the audience, what are you talking about that tapping?

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, so it's emotional freedom technique, EFT tapping.

[SPEAKER_03]: I'm not trained in it, but thankfully, a dear friend of mine is, and she's absolutely amazing.

[SPEAKER_03]: The first time I did it, I was like, you know, you just kind of tap along certain meridian points while you start off at the beginning you have a session and you basically name the challenges or the beliefs and the feelings you have around it.

[SPEAKER_03]: And then as you tap through with ideally a practitioner, obviously if you do this many times, you can do it separately.

[SPEAKER_03]: But you then start reframing like well, maybe it's possible to see this from a different perspective and you kind of open yourself up to an opportunity and [SPEAKER_03]: Just through this tapping modality of these different places on your body, it literally frees and shifts the whole emotional energy and visceral energy, I would say, because you don't feel that same.

[SPEAKER_03]: And after, if it's done successfully and sometimes it takes sixty minutes, sometimes it takes ninety minutes, sometimes it's maybe ten, fifteen minutes, whatever, you know, you need in that moment.

[SPEAKER_03]: It releases that [SPEAKER_03]: body keeping on to in your field, in your fashion, wherever it might be stored, those memories, those experiences.

[SPEAKER_03]: And you just don't feel that PTSD, that trauma, that experience, in the same way, it's really powerful.

[SPEAKER_03]: But I've even done like hypnotherapy, I've done last life regression.

[SPEAKER_03]: You've never done it.

[SPEAKER_03]: It's like delicate stuff as well.

[SPEAKER_03]: So I tried different modalities and [SPEAKER_03]: I'm super curious, as I've mentioned, and super keen, and especially when there's amazing science behind some of these modalities, I think it's so empowering for people suffering from this disease to try it.

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, no, I think it's true.

[SPEAKER_04]: I think that the tapping can be very powerful.

[SPEAKER_04]: I've done some of that in the past as well around a little bit because it came up.

[SPEAKER_04]: And just so the audience understands, we're talking about sort of tapping on your forehead, tapping, you know, above your eyes below your eyes on top of your head.

[SPEAKER_04]: I'll on the side.

[SPEAKER_04]: There's different touch points that you touch on your face and you can touch on your body as well.

[SPEAKER_04]: Things like that.

[SPEAKER_04]: But it's something about the tapping [SPEAKER_04]: It sort of opens up the nervous system to enable it to be reprogrammed.

[SPEAKER_04]: I think this is so key if you're wrestling with something and you're listening to this.

[SPEAKER_04]: It's super important to do the deep dive and understand it, but what you're really going for in the end is to be able to reprogram it so that you can then transcend it.

[SPEAKER_04]: And when you transcend it, then you became thankful for everything that ever happened, because now you have more insight, empathy, love, more connection with people around, whatever they're dealing with.

[SPEAKER_04]: But you're not living in reaction to it on any level, not just intellectually, but even carrying that in your nervous system or in your body's, you know, fascia for that matter, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: So it's pretty interesting.

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_03]: Hundred percent.

[SPEAKER_03]: And you start realizing that life happens for you, not to you.

[SPEAKER_03]: And that's it.

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_03]: And when you were able to see it from that mental level is like, well, actually, I did suffer there.

[SPEAKER_03]: But thanks to that experience, it gave me this and this gift and it brought me down this road and whatever it might have brought to you.

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, sometimes it doesn't feel very good.

[SPEAKER_03]: I can admit that is all along the way, but that's true.

[SPEAKER_03]: It then it's amazing.

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, and for somebody that's eternally curious as you are.

[SPEAKER_04]: What happens is when something new happens, you simply become curious about it.

[SPEAKER_04]: I wonder what I'm going to learn here.

[SPEAKER_04]: I wonder why this is happening.

[SPEAKER_04]: Instead of going immediately to judgment and judging the situation, when then puts you at odds with it, because it's not right.

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, or victim mentality.

[SPEAKER_03]: Why is this happening to me and asking very disempowering questions?

[SPEAKER_03]: And there's also a phrase, and I find it really powerful, that the quality of your life is a direct reflection of the questions that you ask.

[SPEAKER_04]: I think about that all the time here.

[SPEAKER_04]: You know, the questions are everything, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: So, yeah, yeah.

[SPEAKER_04]: Very, very cool.

[SPEAKER_03]: And so, reframing it and asking better questions.

[SPEAKER_03]: So, like, why is this happening to me?

[SPEAKER_03]: No, like, what am I supposed to learn here?

[SPEAKER_03]: Or what is the gift in this situation?

[SPEAKER_01]: That's right.

[SPEAKER_03]: That's right.

[SPEAKER_03]: Which is already the mind and the field.

[SPEAKER_04]: So, what are the questions you're asking currently?

[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, good question.

[SPEAKER_04]: They're fun and standard.

[SPEAKER_03]: I think for me, you know, the Joseph Campbell's Heroes journey, and I don't know if your audience is familiar with this, right?

[SPEAKER_03]: But I believe that within our lifetime, it's like a virtuous circle of continuously going through this heroes journey and getting to different levels and or depths, whichever way you want to call it.

[SPEAKER_03]: And so I think now is, I noticed there's so many shifts happening, and I think everyone notices this as well.

[SPEAKER_03]: But there's so much good there too, right?

[SPEAKER_03]: So yes, that is always available, but the good is there too.

[SPEAKER_03]: And so for me now, it's really understanding [SPEAKER_03]: You know, where do I have my biggest purpose?

[SPEAKER_03]: Where can I help as many people as possible?

[SPEAKER_03]: And I'm really excited personally about AI and what it can do.

[SPEAKER_03]: And as someone who's also neurodivergent, I finally feel like, oh my brain that loves to do many different projects at the same time.

[SPEAKER_03]: I can have the AI trains and I'm different.

[SPEAKER_03]: aspects of it and keep up the speed and allow me to have multiple companies.

[SPEAKER_03]: I also have an AI company that we're developing for neurodivision kids with some business partners as well.

[SPEAKER_03]: So thanks to AI.

[SPEAKER_03]: I can do so many multiple things at the same time, which I just absolutely love.

[SPEAKER_03]: So I guess the questions I'm asking is, you know, what is the biggest impact?

[SPEAKER_03]: How can I help as many people as possible while at the same time?

[SPEAKER_03]: being present, being true to myself, not getting into that two cerebral go-go go-go, but remembering to pause, remembering to be present with my kids, because they're growing up so fast.

[SPEAKER_03]: And you know, enjoying those little things in life and stopping this mother, the flowers along the way.

[SPEAKER_03]: So yeah, sometimes I'm better than others.

[SPEAKER_03]: I don't know about you, Jeffrey.

[SPEAKER_03]: What are your questions at the moment?

[SPEAKER_04]: Well, I like your reference to the hero's journey, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: I don't know if you're listening to this and you haven't seen the movie Finding Joe.

[SPEAKER_04]: I would go on YouTube and look for this movie.

[SPEAKER_04]: It's called Finding Joe.

[SPEAKER_04]: I watched it.

[SPEAKER_04]: I tend to watch everything at like two X, but I watched the movie at a fairly fast pace, but [SPEAKER_04]: It was really transformative to see that really all of us are on heroes journey.

[SPEAKER_04]: And the question is, what heroes journey are you on?

[SPEAKER_04]: And I think the premise for me has become really to become the unencumbered full expression of Jeff Gladden, the unencumbered full expression of Jeff Gladden.

[SPEAKER_04]: So what's the unencumbering?

[SPEAKER_04]: Well, it's really unencumbering myself from things that I've been living in reaction to.

[SPEAKER_04]: right so that I've healed and transcended those right and so that's part of the hero's journey and then the full express portion is actually once you're unencumbered then it's like oh well okay well maybe we'll do this or maybe we'll do that I've always had an interest in this or that right and some of the realizations I've had recently spiritually have been that [SPEAKER_04]: when you get to a place where you feel unencumbered, right, and you feel empowered.

[SPEAKER_04]: And if you've been following some of the quantum chips, which if you're in the AI device, you've probably been following work with a my Roger chip and the willow chip and what they're just covering about the nature of the universe, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: I mean, it's unbelievable.

[SPEAKER_04]: Like there's a, there's a code behind the code.

[SPEAKER_03]: It's a recursive code for people who haven't heard about this yet.

[SPEAKER_03]: So basically, you know, [SPEAKER_04]: Right.

[SPEAKER_04]: In quantum physics, basically, we talk about that you can never sort of stop energy completely.

[SPEAKER_04]: Even at absolute zero, there's still in the quantum field.

[SPEAKER_04]: There are particles that are coming in and out of existence, so there's an energy at that field.

[SPEAKER_04]: And when you also realize that things are not really defined until they're quote unquote observed or until their collapse into an actual reality, then you start to realize, oh, [SPEAKER_04]: And when you've had spiritual experiences, when you realize that consciousness is pure love, and now physics is telling us that consciousness actually predates the universe as opposed to the universe giving rise to consciousness, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, that's coming.

[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, that's me.

[SPEAKER_04]: If you want to go down the rabbit hole on this, it's all there.

[SPEAKER_04]: Really, it's very, very cool.

[SPEAKER_04]: So now when you realize that it's pure love that you're connecting to, and the universe is completely malleable, because [SPEAKER_04]: It only consolidates once you set the intention and put it in motion.

[SPEAKER_04]: Then it's like, well, okay, we just woke up today.

[SPEAKER_04]: The whole universe is our sandbox or playground.

[SPEAKER_04]: It's like playing with your best friend.

[SPEAKER_04]: It's like, well, what do we want to do today?

[SPEAKER_04]: It changes your life completely.

[SPEAKER_04]: All of a sudden, you realize you're here really from my place, from a loving place to create joy.

[SPEAKER_04]: And that's my, that's my purpose in life.

[SPEAKER_04]: Because I think that's actually the meaning of life is from a, you know, what does love love to do?

[SPEAKER_04]: It loves to create.

[SPEAKER_04]: And what's the feedback loop on creation?

[SPEAKER_04]: It's joy.

[SPEAKER_04]: So when you walk into every situation, [SPEAKER_04]: Like when I was meditating this morning, it's like, what do I want to do?

[SPEAKER_04]: Well, I want to have loving conversations that create joy all day long with everybody I come in contact with, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_04]: So when you do that, then you realize that you have the ability to create in every moment, whether it's ordering a sandwich or whether it's having a podcast or whether it's talking to a client or whatever it is, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: So anyway, that's kind of how I think about it.

[SPEAKER_03]: I love it, yeah.

[SPEAKER_03]: And I think that that also coming back to that AI analogy is what people are fearful of AI.

[SPEAKER_03]: But if you see it as a tool to enable creativity, to enable you to step into your best self, yes, there are challenges, etc.

[SPEAKER_03]: I'm not denying all of that, but I think what you know, figuring out what you need to be that best version of yourself, to be in that creative flow, your zone of genius, more often than not during your days is magical.

[SPEAKER_04]: That's right, I agree, I agree.

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, I've come to CAI really as an incredible, well, it's incredible tool.

[SPEAKER_04]: I tend to characterize it as my unbelievably smart assistant, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: Like if I want to go down a rabbit hole, it's like, well, tell me more about this, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: And you tell it what you want, and you learn how to prompt accordingly, and then it's like, oh my gosh, yeah, that's great.

[SPEAKER_03]: And I have a funny analogy for you though, Jeff, that essentially it starts at as your super smart colleague that has like really good points and that's good as well.

[SPEAKER_03]: But if you start working on like larger documents or larger context and things like that too, [SPEAKER_03]: It becomes like you're calling with ADHD because it's like randomly throwing stuff in and it's like, where did this come from?

[SPEAKER_03]: Oh yeah, you're right.

[SPEAKER_03]: And forgetting other things as well.

[SPEAKER_03]: And then at some point, it becomes a person with dementia because it's like completely leaving out like in chapter or a major part as well.

[SPEAKER_03]: So it's like these transitions of it too.

[SPEAKER_03]: So it still is not perfect.

[SPEAKER_04]: No, it's not perfect.

[SPEAKER_04]: No, that's right.

[SPEAKER_04]: I tend to use it for shorter sequenced scenarios.

[SPEAKER_04]: I was not trying to put together a whole system with it yet.

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_03]: And then one thing I love is a little tip is using one AI.

[SPEAKER_03]: You can see other.

[SPEAKER_03]: It's really funny.

[SPEAKER_03]: Because then I ask another AI model.

[SPEAKER_03]: Like, what do you think of this and get feedback and feed the other?

[SPEAKER_03]: And I go, wow, that's amazing feedback.

[SPEAKER_03]: And then I'll ask another one as well.

[SPEAKER_03]: And so just kind of bounce around as well.

[SPEAKER_03]: And it's interesting.

[SPEAKER_03]: Also speaking with friends who have college student aged kids.

[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_03]: And where there's a little bit more of a risk, because I feel like we've lived pre-AI, right?

[SPEAKER_03]: And having the sovereignty to think of things, think of ideas, work through concepts, and understand that AI is a tool to bounce off our ideas.

[SPEAKER_03]: But speaking to these friends, my daughter feels that it's her idea that she puts into GPT, but GPT writes everything, and that's fine, because it was her prompt.

[SPEAKER_03]: So that was enough to qualify it.

[SPEAKER_03]: And so that's a little bit scary because I feel like we still have that ability to gauge does this actually make sense?

[SPEAKER_03]: No, this is total marks and sexually let's tweak it again or reiterate.

[SPEAKER_03]: Whereas I think there's going to be a generation that is just blindly going to believe that whatever is said and it's done for you.

[SPEAKER_04]: That's a good point.

[SPEAKER_04]: I was said dinner the other night with some people that started a company actually to train this generation critical thinking skills because they felt as AI was on the rise, critical thinking skills were actually going down to the point.

[SPEAKER_04]: People were not able to evaluate it and actually realize that this may not be correct, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, it's fascinating.

[SPEAKER_04]: I think the other thing that's interesting is in this sort of place into what we're talking about is the future of the world when AI is starting to replace more and more jobs, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: And people end up with a question of meaning.

[SPEAKER_04]: And so some of the conversations we're having about not living in reaction to these traumas that we've experienced going back and being able to heal those [SPEAKER_04]: I think becomes a critical part of adapting to a world where AI is able to do many things because I think we'll have a clearer sense of purpose even in that scenario, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: Whereas if we're kind of on tilt and we're thinking we have to do this and if we don't do that, we don't have value and we're not lovable in all these kinds of things, if we're actually free to know we are lovable and we are valuable, it doesn't really matter what's going on.

[SPEAKER_04]: You see, it gives us more latitude to be able to adapt.

[SPEAKER_03]: I agree with you a thousand percent and I think that's a really, really important point, Jeff, that people really need to understand the importance of doing the so-called shadow work, right?

[SPEAKER_03]: Like dealing with those limiting beliefs that maybe trauma that from the past, like we cannot run away from that because it is keeping you trapped essentially.

[SPEAKER_03]: And if you can work through that as painful as that can be, you can then step into a higher version of yourself, or typically you will be free to live your purpose, to generally be able to want to make a bigger impact in the world, helping other people.

[SPEAKER_03]: So your Y is more than just about you.

[SPEAKER_03]: It's about a bigger sense of purpose and community.

[SPEAKER_03]: And then you're in that creative genius space where the AI is just a tool for you.

[SPEAKER_03]: But you're inventing and you're creating, et cetera, versus being in that more limited way of thinking and being.

[SPEAKER_03]: So yeah, I think that's a really important point.

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, I think it gives me great optimism for the future, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: Because it's something that nobody can take away from you, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: It's something that's yours.

[SPEAKER_04]: It's you.

[SPEAKER_04]: Very, very cool.

[SPEAKER_04]: So what are the questions that you're asking with the company right now?

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, I think it's trying to help people understand the benefits and realizing how much [SPEAKER_03]: Obviously, we're drinking the same cool aid.

[SPEAKER_03]: We're in the health optimization, longevity space.

[SPEAKER_03]: We know it.

[SPEAKER_03]: We've read the science.

[SPEAKER_03]: We know that this is, you know, has legs to it, whereas, you know, speaking to some people who want to get into longevity medicine that want to have clinics.

[SPEAKER_03]: They're like, you know, but is this really true?

[SPEAKER_03]: Is this really going to make a difference?

[SPEAKER_03]: And so, realizing that some people are just so far outside of it still and it's that education piece and trying to communicate in a way that [SPEAKER_03]: people can really understand.

[SPEAKER_03]: That's more from a business perspective, but from an individual person perspective as well, I think it's giving people back hope.

[SPEAKER_03]: They hear about Brian Johnson spends two million dollars a year and they're just like, there's no way that I can ever do something like that.

[SPEAKER_03]: So what my future is chronic disease and going blind with diabetes or whatever it might be as well.

[SPEAKER_03]: I think what's so important is for people to realize that even with small iterations, small changes, like you talked about forest bathing, right?

[SPEAKER_03]: I mean, you might have a forest near you, but some sort of nature, hopefully near you, spending time in nature, getting morning sunlight.

[SPEAKER_03]: Sleeping well, hopefully not with two men, you know, noise and toxins in your environment, feeding yourself well, being really aware of what you're putting into your body.

[SPEAKER_03]: It's essentially the medicine you feed yourself every day, breathing, meditation, et cetera.

[SPEAKER_03]: Like a lot of modalities are free.

[SPEAKER_03]: Obviously food is not, but you know, finding people that bring you joy and spending more time with them and filtering out maybe people that stress you out a bit too much.

[SPEAKER_03]: as much as possible.

[SPEAKER_03]: So I think that's really important point as well, just to reach a wider audience of people to realize there's so much that we can do to step into that highest version of ourselves that doesn't need to cost millions of dollars, essentially.

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, I think that's right.

[SPEAKER_04]: I think that's exactly right.

[SPEAKER_04]: It's interesting to us that we do end up doing a personality profile on everybody that we work with.

[SPEAKER_04]: That's amazing.

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, it's called a culture index.

[SPEAKER_04]: And it basically gives us an idea of who that person's personality is kind of in its best native state as it consolidated about age twelve, combination of nature and nurture.

[SPEAKER_04]: Like who is this person?

[SPEAKER_04]: And then the second portion of it is actually looking to see who they're asking themselves to be at their work or in their job or as whatever they perceive as their lives tasks.

[SPEAKER_04]: And we also know measure psychic energy units in terms of how much psychic energy do you have to flex out of your sweet spot, so to speak, into being something other than your sweet spot.

[SPEAKER_04]: And it's really interesting because [SPEAKER_04]: There's can be a tremendous amount of inherent stress in trying to flex out too far.

[SPEAKER_04]: And different people have different amounts of psychic energy that they can spend and other people have very little.

[SPEAKER_04]: And we've had people sell companies who have had people change jobs, higher assistance, you know, leave companies, do all kinds of stuff based on what the findings are, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: And it's really, it's really interesting, I think, [SPEAKER_04]: When you think about toxicity in your life, one of the toxins that we have is this concept of trying to force ourselves into a job or into a situation that's not really a good fit.

[SPEAKER_04]: So if you're listening to this, we had a client from Canada who came down.

[SPEAKER_04]: She had a issue with mold in her home.

[SPEAKER_04]: It was having symptoms or kids were having symptoms.

[SPEAKER_04]: Her husband loved the house.

[SPEAKER_04]: He wasn't an impact.

[SPEAKER_04]: So he wasn't too excited about moving.

[SPEAKER_04]: But anyway, when she came down, she ended up working for an oral company in Canada.

[SPEAKER_04]: And we looked at her profiles and it was like, you know, this job is not serving you well.

[SPEAKER_04]: You know, you really have much more creativity than you're allowed to show here.

[SPEAKER_04]: And there are things you have leadership capabilities that are being kind of squelched in your current position.

[SPEAKER_04]: And she said, yeah, yeah, I know, but you know, they pay me twice as much as I could get anywhere else.

[SPEAKER_04]: And so there's, right, people get caught.

[SPEAKER_04]: But she said, but she said, my boss is talking to me about a promotion.

[SPEAKER_04]: I said, well, that's what you want to do.

[SPEAKER_04]: When you have that conversation based on what I'm showing you here, tell them that these are the things that are really going to allow you to, you know, not always cry, but shine for the company, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: And so she did that.

[SPEAKER_04]: They put her in a new position.

[SPEAKER_04]: And she's loving it.

[SPEAKER_04]: Right?

[SPEAKER_04]: So, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: So, there are, in other words, there are toxins that come in through so many different areas, but our relationship to ourselves, our relationship to our jobs, and then the people that we surround ourselves with a massive part of this.

[SPEAKER_04]: So.

[SPEAKER_03]: Oh, yeah.

[SPEAKER_03]: I mean, they say you're the average of the five people you spend the most time with, right?

[SPEAKER_03]: So, definitely, too.

[SPEAKER_03]: I'm curious, what came up for you, Jeff?

[SPEAKER_04]: In my personality?

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_04]: It came up that, um, [SPEAKER_04]: I'm, you know, a more of a visionary, of course, I'm always three mountain ranges over kind of seeing what's over there.

[SPEAKER_04]: I know the feeling, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: It's hardly curious.

[SPEAKER_04]: a little bit more of an introvert, recently fast paced from thing to thing, although I can concentrate.

[SPEAKER_04]: And I'm not wanting to color inside the box, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: I'm always coloring outside the box.

[SPEAKER_04]: And so the disconnect from me between my native personality and what I was being asked to do at work was I had to color inside the box more.

[SPEAKER_04]: Right, because of medicine, because of licensure, because of different things that you have to take in consideration.

[SPEAKER_04]: So it was manageable, but that was the piece that was a little incongruous for me.

[SPEAKER_04]: So if I have the ability to kind of...

[SPEAKER_04]: do things that are more free wheeling even than what I do, not free wheeling, not in a cowboy kind of way, but in a way of just being able to iterate off of inventive ideas that I have, then that's where I kind of shine, right?

[SPEAKER_03]: Beautiful.

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah, you're zone of genius and have you incorporated them and do you have that?

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, I found I found places to to be able to do that, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: So yeah, so we're building some stuff and doing some stuff and whatever else that gives me kind of the ability to kind of just say, Oh, well, let's just throw the boxes out.

[SPEAKER_04]: Let's start.

[SPEAKER_03]: I'm sure as you mentioned at the beginning, there's a new research that's come out and some new projects you want to share.

[SPEAKER_03]: I don't know if you've shared with your audience, but I [SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, so, you know, we're going down the path with brain health, of course.

[SPEAKER_04]: It's really, really important.

[SPEAKER_04]: And there's really two sides to brain health.

[SPEAKER_04]: One is cognitive impairment or cognitive ability.

[SPEAKER_04]: And so with that, [SPEAKER_04]: You know, we've gotten a hold of a new molecule called TBW six, which is an anti-collectin three antibody.

[SPEAKER_04]: It's a monoclonal antibody that binds up collecting in the brain, which is kind of a prone flammatory mediator in the brain, and seems to be present in almost all neurodegenerative disorders, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: So being able to bind that up [SPEAKER_04]: Particularly if you do it in conjunction with other modalities that we have available to, it's like hormone optimization, thyroid, genetics understanding, reprogramming the brain with trans-creening magnetic simulation, different neurotrophics, peptides, stem cells, you know, all the different things that can go into actually rebuilding a brain.

[SPEAKER_04]: But when you use this molecule, [SPEAKER_04]: You know, even for people with early cognitive decline, you can get like a two hundred fifty percent increase in cognitive ability over what they would have had.

[SPEAKER_04]: Right.

[SPEAKER_04]: So yeah, so that's it's pretty dramatic.

[SPEAKER_04]: And so we're super excited about that.

[SPEAKER_04]: I mean, I think all of us are interested to maintain our our brains.

[SPEAKER_04]: And a percent the other part of it that's really interesting is [SPEAKER_04]: You know, the whole idea of psychedelic assisted therapies as being ways to go in and help reprogram, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: So tapping we talked about that is one modality.

[SPEAKER_04]: There are other people with severe PTSD and others, people coming out of the military, people coming out of fairly horrific life experiences.

[SPEAKER_04]: And sometimes using the psychedelic assisted therapies, whether the DMT-based or psilocybin-based or MDMA-based can actually really have a transformative impact for people where they can rewrite the software.

[SPEAKER_04]: You know, matter of five hours, they can do what, fifteen years of therapy wouldn't do, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: And so, that's good for exciting too, because when you think about freeing people up to be there on and comfort selves, and then you think about giving them cognitive ability, it's very exciting.

[SPEAKER_03]: Well, I love it.

[SPEAKER_03]: I mean, these are speaking to my, to my hearts, a hundred percent as you may recall, my mother suffers with dementia.

[SPEAKER_03]: And obviously, no, now what I know, we missed early signs that could have got her back on the right track.

[SPEAKER_03]: And in January, when she had a very bad fall, major head trauma bleeding in the brain, et cetera.

[SPEAKER_03]: And now she's late stage dementia.

[SPEAKER_03]: She can't walk anymore, she hardly speaks, but every now and then a moment of clarity, which obviously brings us joy.

[SPEAKER_01]: Sure.

[SPEAKER_03]: Pretty, you know, my, my big why, and I've gone down many around the whole with understanding different neuroscience methodologies as well.

[SPEAKER_03]: So I'm super big fan of brain training.

[SPEAKER_03]: I don't know if you've come across the neurovisor, which is the pulsating light.

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, I've seen it.

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, we've been using brain tap for a number of years, which is photo biomodulation and auditory things.

[SPEAKER_04]: And I know there are new, new ones out there.

[SPEAKER_04]: I've tried one.

[SPEAKER_04]: It was actually a little too much for me, though, it was programmed, but you can adjust the light, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, exactly.

[SPEAKER_04]: I hear a try this.

[SPEAKER_04]: I was like, okay, but I know it's quite intense.

[SPEAKER_03]: I did the first one I did was was full as well, but what's really fascinating is that at the MIT last year was research around pulsating light that it was actually known to cure amolode plaque.

[SPEAKER_03]: And it's that brain fitness training.

[SPEAKER_03]: So I also have a brain to have device, but there you train one [SPEAKER_03]: brainwave state like the alpha or the theta, whereas the pulsating life, because it's random, it's constantly forcing your brain to train itself, so it's real like a mental exercise.

[SPEAKER_03]: And I don't know if you've come across the founder, garnet, he's been garnet to prove in the seventy-six years old I believe, and like sharp as a laser.

[SPEAKER_03]: He's unbelievable, so I was like, okay, that's a good sign.

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, so for the audience, what's the name of the device again?

[SPEAKER_03]: It's called the neurovisor, and visor as V-I-Z-R, neurovisor.

[SPEAKER_03]: And essentially, you have just a headband on.

[SPEAKER_03]: It has a panel that's a certain distance from you.

[SPEAKER_03]: It's magnetic.

[SPEAKER_03]: So you can flip it off if you're, you know, find it too much.

[SPEAKER_03]: I've had my mother with her dementia, my eighty-six year old father's headed on.

[SPEAKER_03]: I obviously put down the lights.

[SPEAKER_03]: I like to go a bit hardcore.

[SPEAKER_03]: You can stack it with multiple, like, am I training in different brainwaves, training as well?

[SPEAKER_04]: and then you have obviously the the sound that goes with it and compasses it to and you could even stack it with a bibro acoustic chair so you have the vibration through the button as well if you want to pull it out with the two yeah now that's very cool yeah so the binaural beats also in train the brain into different states as well so that's very cool yeah I love all this and there's also sound frequencies that were shown to decrease amoloid I forget the exact frequency it is but um [SPEAKER_04]: I think I want to say it's a low frequency like about forty hertz.

[SPEAKER_03]: Forty hertz.

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_03]: Forty hertz.

[SPEAKER_03]: I believe this research out of Korea.

[SPEAKER_03]: I was writing about that actually recently.

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_04]: So people can sit in these chairs with with the vibration of forty hertz.

[SPEAKER_04]: It's sound is more than just what you hear right.

[SPEAKER_04]: So they were sitting in these chairs with [SPEAKER_04]: Forty Hertz and hearing it and also feeling it and having improvements.

[SPEAKER_04]: So yeah, I love the idea of stacking all these things together, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: So now you're doing it with no tropics, you're doing it with peptides, you're doing it with, you know, other things.

[SPEAKER_04]: And it's been such an accident.

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, exactly.

[SPEAKER_04]: That's right.

[SPEAKER_04]: And your boost is your energy levels ahead of time.

[SPEAKER_03]: Exactly.

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_03]: Well, I commend Texas for their recent funding for the Ibo gain research.

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_03]: Which I think is phenomenal.

[SPEAKER_03]: I've had Talia Eisenberg on my podcast, who has the Beyond Ibo gain clinic in Mexico, which seems like tons and tons of veterans.

[SPEAKER_00]: Thank you.

[SPEAKER_03]: That comes through there.

[SPEAKER_03]: But, you know, such amazing scientific research out of Stanford and John Hopkins around this Benjamin Button effect that within one [SPEAKER_03]: dosage that people are reversing their brain aging by one and a half years biologically and which is just absolutely amazing because the neuroplasticity effect.

[SPEAKER_03]: So I think I've again is a very interesting molecule which has been around hundreds of years but not studied from Western scientific point of view as well.

[SPEAKER_03]: So yeah, I think it's it's really powerful.

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, these things are very powerful.

[SPEAKER_04]: The increase in beating an F seems to be [SPEAKER_04]: pretty characteristic of this whole space, you know, the psilocybin does a similar thing, DMT, the impact this way.

[SPEAKER_04]: brain drive neurotrophic factors a way that you basically build new synapses, make your neurons more robust, et cetera.

[SPEAKER_04]: So it is interesting to think about, I've always wondered, how smart would we be if we actually got fully optimized, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: And how much fun would that be, right?

[SPEAKER_04]: So we all get along, but I think we could all get along a little better as kind of how I feel about it.

[SPEAKER_03]: I wonder though, about that, that if you just become so hyper able and capable, could you sit down with your old friends at a table and just listen to them banter on about some.

[SPEAKER_04]: I can't do that now.

[SPEAKER_04]: But I can sit down, I can sit down with them and engage with them.

[SPEAKER_04]: It's not so much about that.

[SPEAKER_04]: I think part of the beauty of this journey, this hero's journey, becoming unencumbered and fully expressed is that you lose judgment.

[SPEAKER_04]: You just end up with compassion for everyone.

[SPEAKER_04]: And so you just want to connect with everyone.

[SPEAKER_04]: There isn't really judgment.

[SPEAKER_04]: But being able to go either into a circle of people where you're able to communicate at that level, or just create on your own is super cool.

[SPEAKER_04]: But it's fun to find people you can actually kind of go like this way.

[SPEAKER_03]: Connection.

[SPEAKER_04]: I agree.

[SPEAKER_03]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_04]: Cool.

[SPEAKER_04]: Awesome.

[SPEAKER_04]: Well Claudia's been wonderful chatting with you.

[SPEAKER_03]: Thank you so much for having me.

[SPEAKER_04]: Absolutely.

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, we should do it more often.

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, show them.

[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.

[SPEAKER_04]: Beautiful.

[SPEAKER_04]: All right.

[SPEAKER_04]: Amazing.

[SPEAKER_04]: Thank you so much.

[SPEAKER_00]: Thank you for listening to this week's episode of the Platinum longevity podcast.

[SPEAKER_00]: If you would like more information on what we've discussed or other topics, please reference the show notes or go to GladenlongevityPodcast.com.

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[SPEAKER_00]: Thank you for listening.

[SPEAKER_00]: We'll be back next week with another exciting episode.

[SPEAKER_00]: Flat longevity podcast is provided for informational purposes only.

[SPEAKER_00]: It does not constitute medical advice.

[SPEAKER_00]: This content is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice diagnosis or treatments.

[SPEAKER_00]: All we seek the advice of a physician or other qualified health provider.

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