Change Your Brain Every Day - What Current Health Trends Can You Trust? with Dr. David Perlmutter

Episode Date: January 29, 2020

Current health trends often focus on cleanses you can do to clear toxins out of your body. But, as Dr. David Perlmutter states, we must also clear toxins from our mind. In this episode of The Brain Wa...rrior’s Way Podcast, Dr. Daniel Amen, Tana Amen, and Dr. Perlmutter describe how ‘digital rabbit holes’ manipulate us to feel inadequate, and how we can train our brains to avoid them.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 We are going to start your new year, your new decade off with a bang. Tan and I are going to do a six-week live class. So starting January 21st, every Tuesday, we're going to be with you for an hour. And at the end, we're going to give away over $20,000 in prizes. We look forward to helping you kick off this new year by becoming brain health revolutionaries. 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
Starting point is 00:00:51 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 amonclinics.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. We are here with our friend, integrative neurologist, David Perlmutter.
Starting point is 00:01:25 His brand new book, Brainwash, is out everywhere to help you make better decisions, how to really implement what you've learned from his other books and from our books, how to put it in your life day to day. And in this podcast, we're going to talk about detoxifying your mind. So just like when you go on a detox diet to flush out the toxins in your body and cleanse your organs, it's also helpful to flush out the toxins from your mind and for me it just triggered toxic people because people are contagious toxic digital news the news and you know the news is not just the news it's clickbait what i mean i was watching a bunch of soundbites the news this morning because there's all sorts of stuff going on in the world and every headline was breaking news
Starting point is 00:02:27 because they're wanting to hook your amygdala. You had mentioned that in our first podcast. They want to get your fear center to put you into action before your prefrontal cortex
Starting point is 00:02:41 can rein it in. And half the time the story isn't what they say it's going to be and I'm one of those people who starts yelling at the TV. So I realized early on, I need to not watch the news. I grab the headlines, I turn it off. I can't imagine what that looks like. She yells at the TV, yes. Better the TV than me. Network. But talk to us, David, about detoxifying your mind.
Starting point is 00:03:05 There's a lot of discussion about toxins in our environment, be they heavy metals or glyphosate in our food and antibiotics and all the various things, particulate matter, for example, that we're exposed to happens to be associated with increased risk of Alzheimer's. But I think the major toxins that don't get the attention that they absolutely deserve are ones that you just alluded to, and that is these toxins that infiltrate our impulsivity, in narcissism, in short-sighted thinking, and really an area that fosters an us versus them mentality. And we don't need that anymore. We need to recognize that the them are on the same ride that we are on and we need to embrace the them, whoever the them might be. So we need to distance ourselves from this type of thinking and as such reconnect to
Starting point is 00:04:14 higher order brain thinking as we talk about prefrontal cortex. And that is bringing the prefrontal cortex back online, reestablishing connection, offsetting what we talk about in brainwash, disconnection syndrome. What these toxins are, for example, are digital experiences. We know that, by and large, we are subjected to hacking every moment that we are online by ads that pop up, by the next YouTube video that happens to interestingly be quite similar to what we just watched that have been manipulated through artificial intelligence to gain our attention through the clickbait, Dan, that you had mentioned, etc.
Starting point is 00:04:55 Things that take us down a rabbit hole of mindlessness. Yeah. And we developed in Brainwash an acronym. I know you guys love acronyms. We call it the test of time, T-I-M-E. T, how much time are you willing to dedicate for whatever the online adventure you want to pursue? You're writing a book, whatever you want to do, trying to reconnect with your friends from high school. How much time today am I going to spend doing that test?
Starting point is 00:05:24 I, is it intentional? What is my goal? today am I going to spend doing that task? I. Is it intentional? What is my goal? What am I trying to accomplish? M. Am I mindful during the experience? Am I aware of what's going on or am I suddenly drawn away by misleading thought or something that captivates me? Much as what happens during meditation, for example. We know when we meditate, we try to stay in a certain place, but we have intrusive thoughts and we gently and lovingly bring ourselves back. That same sort of mindfulness needs to be brought to our digital experiences. And finally, E, T-I-M-E, is it enriching? Are you net positive when it's all said and done? Or when it's all said and done, was that wasted time? Were you taken away to be manipulated, basically? And,
Starting point is 00:06:12 you know, to be clear, we're not anti-technology. I write my books based upon an unlimited access to information. The internet has been a powerful tool to democratize knowledge globally, pretty much for people who have access to it. So we're absolutely not anti-technology, but it's to use technology as a powerful resource, not to, as was said in 1921 by Christian Lange, Nobel Prize winner, technology is a useful servant but a dangerous master. So we've got to use technology and not be abused by it,
Starting point is 00:06:54 not let technology and those people who are taking care of it be the master puppeteers of our attention and ultimately where we spend our money and spend our time. It's so interesting. We had just done a podcast about the dangers of social media and the internet for children, and it was a really great podcast. I think we have this tendency to think, well, as adults, especially if you're adults who know the problems that this can cause,
Starting point is 00:07:21 know the adverse effects, we won't be subjected to that. And I have to tell you how sneaky it is. It was not even a week after that, that I was on, I was doing Christmas shopping. I hate shopping. So I was doing Christmas shopping online and all of a sudden something caught my attention and I end up on Instagram and within five minutes I'm going, wait, why does that woman who's my age look like that? And I don't like, and I go down this complete rabbit hole of nonsense, complete useless waste of my time. Now, fortunately, because of what we do- That is a powerful tool right there. What you just characterized is a very powerful tool
Starting point is 00:07:55 that creates problem and solution. Problem is generally you don't measure up. You're not thin enough, pretty enough. I'm not strong enough, rich enough, tall enough, you name it. Right. And here's the solution. Right. And I thought I was immune to it. Exactly right. So, yeah.
Starting point is 00:08:14 And that's a powerful tool, always has been in marketing, problem and solution based. And it's just one of the many tools that is used in our digital worlds and beyond to make us fear that we're deficient in some area. And here is the quick way to fix that. And, you know, it's seductive and it's addictive. And we talk about addictions and generally people think that, you know, to be compromised by an addiction, you have to have a needle hanging out of your arm. Well, people can be absolutely compromised by their addiction to internet time, their addiction to online shopping. There are a lot of things these days that can ultimately form addictions
Starting point is 00:08:53 that can be profoundly maladaptive to an individual in terms of his or her happiness, his or her availability to participate in life, and ultimately fostering discontent right and the way that they that we are hacked into is these are quick avenues for us to think that we're going to be content but content means having enough and if you're constantly trying to feed that um you know chase the dragon of uh to feel content by buying these things and doing these things that you're seeing, for example, online, you are by definition not content, nor will you ever be content. And you're locking yourself into the amygdala because you are locking
Starting point is 00:09:38 yourself into impulsivity. And to get back to the original question, that's a powerful, powerful, immediate toxin that is rewiring our brains. And that was one of our major goals in Brainwash is to call it out as a toxin and then to provide the tools for detox. Right. I want to just go back to I'm not enough because I think that is driving the epidemic rise in teenage suicide, especially among girls, is because of social media and exactly the path that you described. Now, with your intelligence and your experience, you could override it. More life experience. You could override it. More life experience than anything. You could override it. But imagine this happening to a developing brain that is vulnerable and lonely.
Starting point is 00:10:34 According to a new study in the United Kingdom, 90% of the young adults said that they had loneliness issues they actually created a minister of loneliness um it's if they're lonely and then they feel less than they're more likely to feel hopeless and helpless well and you have to know like i love your your description of the evil ruler because you have to understand like you can be doing something as innocent as last minute Christmas shopping. And the next thing you know, that clickbait is there. They know what they're doing. This is. And they have your history.
Starting point is 00:11:14 Right. So they know. They have your entire history. That you may be vulnerable. Right. To that issue. And the next thing you know, that pops up on your. So this is.
Starting point is 00:11:21 It's not. It's not like an innocent thing that's happening. It's an intentional thing that's happening it's an intentional thing that's happening so we have to be equally aggressive and it is the the evil ruler and right you know a couple things you said well i and i think you meant me i am able to override it that was the words that you used and override means what it means bringing online the prefrontal cortex to bring the adult back into the room to make a better decision. Well, plenty of adults cannot override because they suffer from
Starting point is 00:11:50 disconnection syndrome. They suffer from disconnection of the prefrontal cortex's ability to do exactly that, to override. And they're basically functioning from an amygdala level. That functionality is enhanced by not enough restorative sleep, not enough nature exposure, not eating the low inflammation foods that you've talked about for years, and by the things that happen on our digital experience. And as you well point out, young girls are suffering from what has now been called Snapchat dysmorphia, meaning that their perceptions of their looks are profoundly influenced by the ideal characterizations that they are seeing based upon what they see on Snapchat or Instagram or whatever the platform is, extent that there's been this incredible upsurge in plastic surgery to make people look like they want to look on social media or what they think they should look like on social media. And, you know, what does that say? We talk about contentment. That is a glaring example of being
Starting point is 00:12:58 discontent, of discontent. You're not content with your looks. And we've got to really do what we can, A, to call it out and B, to provide those tools then to allow people to regain a sense of contentment, to stop the comparisons, to realize that whomever you're looking at on social media, that truly when you get down to it, their lives are not what they are portrayed. And they don't look like that. I told my daughter, supermodels don't look like supermodels. They're all Photoshopped. When we come back, we're going to talk about eating your way to better brain health. David has been studying this for a very long time. Stay with us. If you're enjoying the Brain Warriors Way podcast,
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