Change Your Brain Every Day - Is Your Career Path Right for You?
Episode Date: August 22, 2019In this episode of The Brain Warrior’s Way Podcast, Dr. Daniel Amen and Tana Amen answer some more of your questions. This episode features info on employment, new learning, dopamine and psychosis, ...antidepressants, and auto-immune diseases. Visit the brainwarriorswaypodcast.com to submit your own questions!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Brain Warriors Way podcast. I'm Dr. Daniel Amen.
And I'm Tana Amen. In our podcast, we provide you with the tools you need to become a warrior
for the health of your brain and body. The Brain Warriors Way podcast is brought to you
by Amen Clinics, where we have been transforming lives for 30 years using tools like brain spec imaging to personalize treatment to your brain.
For more information, visit amenclinics.com.
The Brain Warriors Way podcast is also brought to you by BrainMD, where we produce the highest quality nutraceuticals to support the health of your brain and body.
To learn more, go to brainmd.com. Welcome back. In today's episode, we are going to answer your questions. So please keep sending us questions. You can go to brainwarriorswaypodcast.com
and visit our review page. You can leave us a review and you can also leave us questions.
And that will also enter you
in a raffle to get a free cookbook, the Brain Warriors Way cookbook. So we're going to answer
your questions today. Well, I'm so excited about it. And I was going to read a review
until I had two things happen when I went to the bathroom. Do we want to know this? I just had to share. And the first one, I don't know if you can see this.
Yeah, you can.
I got a text from my father, a screenshot.
Oh, yeah, that's so funny.
I know what that is.
Three minutes, 35 seconds.
And that's all the screenshot was.
And I know exactly what it meant.
Me too.
It meant he just finished. he's 90 years old,
a plank where he did three minutes and 35 seconds.
I knew what that was.
And yesterday I got one where he did three minutes and six seconds.
And what it is, he's bragging.
Yeah, he's competing with you.
He's competing with me.
So now I have to go home and do one and try it.
Just do a plank for three minutes and 35 seconds and see how you feel.
Right.
But the other thing, so this like warmed my heart.
And then I walk out of the bathroom and here in Costa Mesa,
there's a 12-year-old girl and she's crying.
And so I just, you know, went up to her and said, hey.
And the mom got all excited, you know, to meet me.
And she had just seen her scan.
And it was working too hard.
And she was so sad.
And I know many of you out there, you listen to us, you go,
I want to come get a scan. No, I don't really want a scan. I don't want to know. It's going
to be terrible. It'll be bad news. And I looked at her and I said, your scan is really good news
because you have what you have. It's sort of like you have a car engine in your head and
it's like a Ferrari and it works way too hard. So it's not tuned right. What we're going to do is
tune it so that you can be happier. And I said, it's not bad news. It's really good news. And your job is to be a good reporter on what Dr. Dermal does
that works for you and what doesn't work for you. So together, we'll balance your brain.
And isn't that cool? And then I said, and oh, by the way, you're normal. I said, I actually did a study of normal
and I had to screen 3000 people to find a hundred normal brains. So that's scary, right? When you
think of driving week, this is not good news. That's really cute. But isn't that fun? Yeah,
that's really cute. All right. We have questions. I like the way you described that.
Okay, so this question is from Randall. Say you find yourself in a class or at a job that is not anything you know or know you are good at, and the teacher of the class or the boss of the job
says that's where you belong. Do you argue with that boss or teacher, even the thought of it?
Why or why not?
What do you do instead?
I don't want to do something for a living that is not something that is going to cause
me not to learn anything new, even though it feels like anybody could do my job and
my brain feels like it may not be getting stimulated enough while doing it.
People who are in jobs that do not require lifelong learning,
continual learning, have a higher incidence of dementia. Now, if someone told me I needed to fix
cars for a living, that is not my aptitude. My aptitude is in writing, it's in speaking, it's in communication, it's in healing.
I would break cars. I know that. I just know me. Like if I was a surgeon, that's not my
parietal lobes. The spatial part of my brain is not as healthy as it could be,
but the language part of my brain is really healthy, right? So if I'm in a job where
I fail constantly because it's not my aptitude, I'm going to have chronic self-esteem problems
and be anxious and stress. So that's a complicated one because the boss hired you to do a job. So I
think you should probably assess that going in.
Both of you should assess going in.
I think your boss needs to be clear what he's hiring someone for.
And you should be pretty clear about whether you want to do that particular job or not.
And to be clear with yourself about what it is you do want to do.
There are classes now and tests you can take to help you figure out what your aptitude is.
Even in college, they have this.
You can learn.
You can figure out what it is that you do find stimulating, that you want to do long term or at least until you change your mind.
Because once a boss does hire you to do a job, he's hired you for that.
And it's not just about what you want.
Right.
It's about what fits.
Right.
If I wanted to be center for the Los Angeles Lakers, it doesn't matter.
It doesn't fit.
It's not happening.
Right.
So it's like relationships.
Like we fit really well together, and I'm grateful for you because of that.
I don't fit well with other people.
And there are jobs I fit with.
This is one.
And there are other jobs I completely would be unhappy with because I wouldn but you need to also mix it with your aptitude and whether or not you can mix those two things and support your family.
Because that's another important thing if, like most people, you need to earn a living.
Yeah, no, I like that.
So, yeah, I'd say be clear and make sure your boss is clear when you go in.
One thing I do when I'm interviewing people is I have a job description.
They're ready to go.
And I actually have them sign it.
So I think a lot of employers do that.
It's really important that you know what you're getting into.
Because it's important to both of you.
It's expensive for the employer to also have to find someone new.
So I think that's important.
Okay, next one.
According to conventional medicine psychiatry, too much
dopamine gives psychosis. What do you think of that? That's a very simplistic view of psychosis.
Is there actually many things that cause psychosis? Now, when you get too much dopamine say for example you become a meth addict and that
wears out your dopamine centers it dumps dopamine just like cocaine that you bet you can become
psychotic but there are other ways to become psychotic for example being exposed to Lyme disease has been associated with schizophrenia.
Having mold toxicity, having heavy metal toxicity.
So mercury poisoning and the Mad Hatter syndrome has been associated with psychosis.
So it's not as simplistic in my new book that we're working on, The End of Mental Illness.
There's a whole section on infections causing mental illness, toxins causing mental illness, sleep deprivation.
One of the most common things when I was an army psychiatrist,
I was the chief psychiatrist at Fort Irwin.
And the big deal at Fort Irwin, which is 40 miles north of Barstow,
was we trained our tank divisions to fight the Russians in the desert,
and later the Iraqis and Afghanis in the desert.
And people would play war games for days and they would be
up two days at a time. And all of a sudden they're hallucinating or they're delusional
and they don't need dopamine blockers, but they need to sleep.
Right. So I have a question on this to add to this question. What if people are taking
the antidepressants that help them to increase
dopamine or they're taking certain medications for ADD that's increasing dopamine and they want
to back down off of that and they've been getting a certain level of dopamine, but maybe they don't
feel quite right. How hard is that? So remember when we talked about cheap hits of happy and great hits of happy, it's making sure your lifestyle is helping to balance the dopamine centers in your brain.
And then if you've been used to Wellbutrin, for example, which increases dopamine in the brain, antidepressant, great antidepressant, and you've been on it for 10 years, you want to go off of it
very slowly, almost like 10% a month. And that your brain will adjust?
And at the same time, you want to be making sure you're taking care of your dopamine centers that like pumpkin seeds and green tea
and magnesium and sunlight and oregano all increase dopamine naturally in the brain.
And one of the illnesses where is a dopamine deficit is Parkinson's disease, where the
dopamine cells in an area of the basal ganglia
die, literally, and then you can't control your muscle movements because dopamine is heavily
involved in controlling smooth motor movements. Many people, the only thing they do is get on
medication to enhance dopamine, and they don't do anything else. They don't do any lifestyle
interventions. They don't change their diet. They don't exercise more. They don't get rid of
any infections, toxins. And I just think that's an insane way to practice. If your brain is
dying, you should think of it as an emergency and begin to put it in a healing environment.
Okay. So to answer my question, if they did want to back down off of those medications and they did
it slowly, the brain would begin to increase in dopamine naturally again, if they do the right
things. Hopefully. But if it doesn't, go back on well-being. Okay. So that was a good dopamine
question. I like that. And do we have time for one more? Let's do one more. Okay. So that was a good dopamine question. I like that. And do we have time for one more?
Let's do one more. Okay. Let's see.
I was curious if you've studied anyone with an autoimmune disease and if there was any
correlation to the spec scan of individuals with autoimmune disease and symptom relief
after your series of brain treatment and healing.
There's just so many different types of autoimmune diseases.
And the question's from Sarah.
So one of my favorite friends is a woman that has MS.
And her brain was a mess.
Yeah.
And now it's much better.
Right.
She reaches everything.
And she is much better.
Right.
Right.
She was headed for a wheelchair and now she runs three times a week.
So why is your immune system attacking itself?
So for us, you want to get your gut healthy.
You want to get rid of anything that could trigger the autoimmunity.
On spec scans, initially during
an autoimmune disease, we see too much activity going on in the brain. But if it's chronic and
it's been going on a long time, we usually see overall decreased activity.
So one thing that I would think would be really important is to really understand what's going on
with whatever autoimmune issue you're having. For example, Hashimoto's, you're going to feel different than if you have
rheumatoid arthritis or MS. So I would want to understand what's behind the autoimmune issue.
I don't know, do those show up differently? I would assume they show up differently in the brain
because thyroid, if you have low thyroid, that's going to be different.
You're going to have low blood flow.
Right. Then if you have something else going on, you may see something totally different.
Well, in general, the first thing we see is inflammation.
With all of them?
Increased activity, except low thyroid.
Okay.
Chronically, though, we see that it hurts the brain.
Okay.
And you and I have seen people who took the Brain Warriors Way program.
You know, if you don't know, we have an online program, 26 hours, that Tana and I taught over six months.
But if you go to amenuniversity.com, you can learn more about our online courses, including the Brain Warriors Way.
We had so many people tell us they lost their pain.
There was this 20% reduction in pain,
and fibromyalgia is an autoimmune disorder. And here's the thing. Nothing bad is going to
happen to you by doing all the right things. So it's either going to help you a lot or it's going
to help you a little, but it's not going to hurt you. It's none of the things we recommend will
ever hurt you. Right. All right the things we recommend will ever hurt you.
Right.
All right.
We're so grateful that you stayed with us for Driving Week.
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