Modern Wisdom - #286 - Dr Zach Bush MD - Why We Shouldn't Aim For A New Normal
Episode Date: February 22, 2021Dr Zach Bush MD is a physician and educator specialising in internal medicine, endocrinology and hospice care. The last 12 months have been a challenge. Everyone has come up against difficulties and c...an't wait to get back to some sense of normality, but by aiming for normal, are we missing out on an opportunity to become something better? Expect to learn how to deal with a loss of meaning and identity during global crises, why unity and conformity are not the same thing, how losing diversity in the global microbiome is related to our immune system and much more... Sponsors: Get 5% off products over £299 from AO - including sale items at https://ao.com/modernwisdom (use code MODERN5) *Get 5% off products over £299 at ao.com excluding Gaming and Phones. Use Code: MODERN5. Discount code valid from 22/02/2021 and to be used before midnight on 22/03/2021. One discount code per qualifying transaction. Discount code cannot be used in conjunction with any other offer or cashback promotion, including AO Price Match Promise. AO reserves the right to vary or terminate the offer at any time. Offer has no cash value and cannot be used in stores. Subject to availability. Visit ao.com for full T&Cs here and Promotions Explained here. Extra Stuff: Check out Zach's website - https://zachbushmd.com/ Follow Zach on Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/zachbushmd/ Check out Ion Biome - https://ionbiome.com/ Get my free Ultimate Life Hacks List to 10x your daily productivity → https://chriswillx.com/lifehacks/ To support me on Patreon (thank you): https://www.patreon.com/modernwisdom - Get in touch. Join the discussion with me and other like minded listeners in the episode comments on the MW YouTube Channel or message me... Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/ModernWisdomPodcast Email: https://www.chriswillx.com/contact Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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Hello friends, welcome back to the show.
My guest today is Dr. Zach Busch MD.
He's a physician and educator specializing in internal medicine, endocrinology and hospice
care.
The last 12 months have been a challenge.
Everyone has come up against difficulties and can't wait to get back to some sense of
normality, but by aiming for normal, are we missing out on an opportunity to become something
better?
So today, expect to learn how to deal with a loss of meaning and identity during a global
crisis.
Why unity and conformity are not the same thing?
How losing diversity in the global microbiome is related to our immune system and much more.
That is definitely not the sort of doctor you will be used to seeing if you take a trip to your local GP.
The guy is very deep and also has this mad global perspective, this civilization wide
view of how we should be operating.
I really enjoy speaking to people who understand the personal and the individual, but then can
map it onto the global and the civilizational.
And Zach definitely does that today.
But for now, it's time for the wise and wonderful, Dr. Zack Bush. So glad to be with you Chris, thanks for having me on.
Pleasure for you to be here, man.
What is the biggest lesson that you took from 2020?
Wow, you know, I think it's hard to dissect them all out,
but I think if I were to take a reductionist approach
to that, I'm ultimately just glad to be alive
at this moment.
What a privilege to have witnessed 2020.
It's difficult to overstate the tipping point situations
that are so multifaceted, tipping
point of human health, tipping point of socioeconomics, tipping point of sociology and psychology
of populations, just this extraordinary space to be in.
So, I am walking away with a new sense of gratitude to the moment that I showed up in. And so that's, I think, a way of looking positively at a year in which so many people lost so much,
and so many people gained so much.
And in that dichotomy, what a privilege to be alive, what a privilege to be witnessed to it all.
That's a really interesting take on it.
And one that I actually quite appreciate.
I wonder whether there is an advantage to living through history.
You know, like it is, it was uncomfortable.
You know, like I preferred 2019 in terms of an experiential adventurous world than 2020,
but you know, if you look at between sort of the 60s, there
have been people that have born and died and had a good amount of life without actually
living through a massive amount of history, you know, I wonder whether that's part of
something that can add meaning to life, going through something which is a global trauma,
species-wide, civilizational threat. I wonder whether
that's something that can add meaning and is actually worthwhile living through whether it is, as you
say, a blessing almost to have endured it. I think it is a blessing. I think if we look at the
generations that have not witnessed war or not had to be a part of war, there's a lethargy that sets it in that generation.
And there's a laziness,
there's a tendency to take things for granted
in that group.
And I think that my grandfather's generation
really struggled with the younger generations
who had not seen global conflict on that scale before,
with the fluency that we would talk about politics
or we would talk about civil liberties, people who lived through the initial civil rights movement
and watching how flippantly we've given away those civil liberties and civil rights in recent
months and years.
I think there's a real discouragement there.
And so when we find ourselves as a new generation that's in the mix of massive
catastrophic events or conflict, whether it be socioeconomic or military or otherwise,
we do have to be cognizant that we are brushing against the very thing that it means to be
aware. And so to be aware is to be threatened in some ways. Unfortunately, the neural network of the human brain is easily distracted and is easily
tempted into the softness of comfort when we're not in a fight or flight state.
And in that comfort state, we tend to dull our senses.
We can see this in the way that we celebrate, right?
We, or in the way which we, you know, we deal with bad things, you know, you, you get fired
from your job, you go to the bar, you drink with your friends, dull, dull the pain.
You get the big promotion, you go to the same bar, you drink with your friends, it's a
dollar experience.
It's just like, what the hell are we doing?
It's human's like every opportunity we have to dull the experience of being alive, we do. And so there's
something that happens in a year like we just had where where life can become
raw. And if you found yourself this year and one of those experiences where you
just were stripped of everything you thought you had, lost your job, lost your
home, life has turned into a prickly pair of experience and you're
just it's painful to take a step sideways. It's important for you to realize at that
moment you are the most conscious you have ever been. You are in some ways having the
most real experience you've ever had. And for a moment you can instead of trying to
dull that down with the alcohol or the Netflix or whatever you're distracting yourself
with, come into that moment and say, man, this pain is really profound and it's real.
And I'm real.
And I must be real for the experience of the sense, the sense of experience of feeling
all of this.
Then you can have, it would start to work from that space.
If I can feel this much, what would I like to do to transmute that pain into an
opportunity? What would I like to do to transition my perspective of there's
so many barriers to there's an open door behind me and I could turn around and
go that direction? And so those are the things that I think if we started that
into the public narrative instead of saying, ah man, so sorry you lost your job
of, dude you lost your job. You've hated that thing.
Why?
You told me last year you hated your job was killing you.
Congratulations, you lost your freaking job.
What's the next opportunity?
What do you want to transmute?
What do you want to do next?
You know, if that was the attitude to loss that we immediately saw gain, gain of function,
if you will, in this whole viaromic talk, the gain of function comes from loss, and
transition comes from challenge or friction. So there's a
real excitement that you're spot on that we should
celebrate years like 2020. Not only is it history, maybe
as human.
Dude, that strikes a chord with something I've been
thinking about for a long time, called living with the edge.
So very much life can be lived from the comfort of your couch.
And edges are a scary place to be.
You know, there's a precipice below you.
You're terrified that you're going to fall off.
But there's a reason that edges are there.
They're there to remind you that this is how far you can go and you came back and you were fine. And obviously there's some very deeply ingrained issues with regards
to trying to get people, especially in a group, to be okay with comfort, because naturally
we want to shy away from the things that make us feel bad. And even with things that make
us feel too good, we often talk about trying to keep a level head and remain,
but I do totally, totally agree.
You can go through your entire life within the middle inter-quartile range of experience,
never going up towards the absolute joy and never going down toward the complete existential loss,
and feeling alive, like what else are we really here for?
Like what's the purpose of us being on the planet?
Is it just to bounce between moderately okay to not so bad?
Like for 80 years?
Yeah, and the statistics around post-traumatic growth, which I'm sure that you'll have
seen as well, it's like two thirds of people that go through a trauma come out and say
that it was one of the most significant parts of their life. I know it has been for me, the mild traumas that I have been through,
have been the things that have made me the person that I am today. They were the orthogonal turn
that adjusted my life direction in an unambiguously more virtuous, better, more integrity-filled way.
unambiguously more virtuous, better, more integrity-filled way.
Perfectly said. Perfectly said. And I think that loss is a great example of those events that
demand shift and what a relief. And so when I lost my job at the university because of the collapse of funding at the national level
at the NIH had lost funding because of the big recession in 2008-2010.
Suddenly, our university that had been funding since 1969 loses its funding and on the human
brain level, I was devastated.
I just spent $200,000 of school debt and 17 years in academia to be part of this university, to march into the future,
to be the chair of the chair of medicine someday,
or whatever, you know, BS I wanted for myself
and all of this.
And so when I was losing that,
there was a sense of like, my God,
how much did I invest and how much am I losing
and all of this.
And yet, if I had not had that experience,
I would have stayed in the depressed state that
I was in.
I was depressed working at the University of Virginia as a chemotherapy developer.
And yet, I felt the huge sense of loss when I lost the very thing that was killing me,
the very thing that was keeping me in an isolated state and away from my own purpose.
And so the loss of that job was so beautiful and retrospective.
Man, it opened me up.
And when you have loss, I think there's a tendency force to try to cling on to the ledge that we just stepped off of.
And we kind of inch ourselves along that ledge with our fingertips until we got to find some new safe little platform to stand on.
What happened to me, and it was not voluntary because
I was in full terror.
I was in full fight or flight state losing that job, losing my faith in academia as a whole,
realizing I was going to have to go into the private sector.
All of those things, I would have let go of the ledge.
But every time I tried to hold on to the ledge, the universe was literally bring a mallet down on my fingertips and make me fall.
Then I would catch a new edge, and it would hit me again.
I went through a series of events between February of 2010 to about June of 2010, where every
single door in my life slammed shut.
I lost so much of what I had been building for 20 years previously.
And what it forced was a freefall event.
And the freefall was economic, it was social, it was professional.
Like on every level I lost my friends, I lost my colleagues, I lost my funding, I lost money, I lost, you know, nearly everything.
And over the next few years, you know, my life would would continue to push those buttons.
I would lose my marriage. I would lose all kinds of things that I had built my identity
around. And I thought my character was based upon. And the idea that I would lose my marriage
was just like catastrophic compared to losing my job. Like this was, this was my spiritual
character now being taken away from me. And so what I went through in those four or
five years was a continuous free fall experience of I have no grounding left. I have no
anchor thrown in anything left. Every anchor chain I've thrown out there has been cut
by the universe. And while I wouldn't necessarily wish that on everybody or anybody, I hope everybody gets that experience because
what it does is finally force you into that existential experience of asking who are you when
you're attached to nothing? Who are you when you've lost all sense of roles and sense of responsibility?
And you are just wondering what's going to happen next. You're waiting for the crashing death on the
bottom of the chasm that you're falling into. And then suddenly, for inexplicable reasons,
you start to feel like your descent is slowing. And you're still falling through space that
you've never been in. You're still falling in an environment that you've never witnessed, you have no anchors,
but your descent or your speed of change is slowing. And then suddenly, without hitting
anything, you come to a standstill. And that's the moment that I hope everybody got to in
2020. At some point in 2020, the world made you stand still. And maybe made your kids stand
still. They're finally not running around to 10,000 soccer things and running around to all of these other things
football. Sorry, you know, going from from moment to moment to moment, they all
finally stood still and I hope as humanity we take advantage of what happened
in 2020 and what's already unfolding in the beginning of 2021 which is we can't
really step forward yet because we don't know what the future that we want looks like.
And we're terrified of the future that's unfolding against our will.
And we don't know how to fight it yet.
And so we are in a moment of pause.
And I think we need to celebrate that pause and we need to ask each other, what are you feeling
right now when you can't move, when you're paralyzed, you don't have the job, you don't have the
money, you can't travel, you can't get on that airplane, you can't go to the restaurant,
you can't do anything you would have done a year ago.
In that pause, what are you feeling right now?
What is coming to your mind as a potential opportunity or a fear that you face?
What's coming to you?
Because it's in that slowing of the
descent where you realize you are no longer going to hit some preconceived
bottom of the of the chasm you're about to find flow and you're you're stepping
into the current of flow of the universe now instead of preconceived realities
that you were living within. So when you feel that dissent slowing, you find yourself silenced.
In some ways, that's when you panic the most.
Because now you're not even moving.
And what if you got paralyzed right here?
What if you stopped moving?
And nothing was real.
And you had no job.
And you had nothing ever.
And so as you feel the slowing happened,
there's, I think that's where we see suicide happening the most.
I think that's where we see the happening the most. I think that's
where we see the deepest depression. But if we could see the 30,000-foot view, that slowing
moment is about to be where we just stop swimming up the stream, we stop fighting the current,
we let go, and we're ready to flow into a future that we haven't seen yet. And that should
be the most hopeful and optimistic moment of our
life, and unfortunately, it can often be the opposite because we keep us clean to the previous
world, the previous reality. So I encourage each of you, if you feel frozen right now, if you feel
like you can't move, if you feel paralyzed, it means you have come to a standstill, and if you
wait for another couple beats, wait for a couple more breaths, you might
feel a little bit of momentum in a new direction that's not directed by you, not directed
by your sense of responsibility or your sense of duty. But it's actually the universe starting
to take you into a playful moment of what it would feel like if you just floated downstream
with us instead of continuously fighting the stream, fighting the current. So that's 2020 and in that show I hope for the world.
I really love that, man. I went to go and see Jordan Peterson live about three years ago
and someone from the crowd asked him a question and they said, the depth of my consciousness
causes me to suffer. Basically, it is both a blessing and a curse to feel everything so
very deeply. What can I do about it? And he said you take the thing which poisons you and you drink enough of it to girdle the world around you
you turn it into a tonic that allows you to fix the problem inside and that sort of
onward deeper into the breach type solution to me really does
feel like the only way that you can that you can find a solution with this. Another analogy that I've
been thinking about a lot, I had a special forces soldier on the show last year. He taught
me about a break point, which is when they stack up outside of the door before they're about to
breach. It's a small period of pause in between two periods of chaos and extreme action.
And I wonder whether we've globally had a global
break point here where all of the things, the flexing on Instagram, no one can flex on
Instagram if you've got a mask on. You can't do it, like you're stuck in your house, I know
you're stuck in your house, you can't show off your car, it's like you can't drive it anywhere.
And I know that you think a lot about our future as a civilization long term, it's something that I've been very, very deep into.
I'm concerned that we may have missed a great opportunity to bind together as a civilization
through this pandemic.
I'm aware it's not fully over, but we have seen still quite a lot of people coming head
to head, groups going up against each each other in a way that I would have
hoped a species wide suffering might have helped to dispel. What's your current sentiment
on where we're at at the moment and where we're going forward as a civilization? Well, there's a saying out there that there's only two true sciences and one is physics and
one is philosophy.
But since physics was based on philosophy, there's only really one true science and that's
philosophy.
And I think where we're at at the moment is the need to redefine our philosophical sense
of reality.
And this comes around some very important terms that are being utilized, I think, to,
in some ways, brainwash us into thinking that we are okay.
The worst possible outcome of 2021 would be that we go back to some sort of previous
normal,
which is exactly what my country just did.
We just put into power a president that was here eight years, you know, for eight years
already, 12 years back.
And so we literally were so craving some sort of security.
We were willing to go backwards to a previous normal that took us to the point where we had
everything unfold.
We had a Donald Trump because we had those eight years of this kind of mindset in politics.
We had the collapse of the EPA and the collapse of everything that everybody hated Trump for,
the setup for that was the eight years of the President
and Vice President that we just hired back in.
So I'm dumbfounded by the fact that we can be so short-sighted and so scared that the
only thing we can imagine is the past.
That's terrifying to me.
If we can only imagine the past as some sort of improvement to our future, we've lost the game. And so we're
at this interesting tipping point of, are we willing to let go of the past? And if we are not,
and if we continue as a globe to do what the United States just did and put old thinking back into
place, then we're going to, as you say, miss the opportunity for a new version
of community and connection and co-creation.
And we're going to step back into the concept of big government is better.
We need protection against the scary factions.
We need protection against oligarchs or big-person allies, so we need more uniformity.
And the philosophies that I think we need to start
to look at is, for example, the word ethic. The concept and philosophy of ethos or ethic
requires a human perspective to even make a judgment call on whatever ethic you hold. Your ethics are ultimately a judgment call
that are limited by your own perspective on the reality
you live in.
And so if you say this is an ethical behavior,
you are looking through a very heavily programmed viewpoint
as to what the reality and what the circumstances that
event is turning up in and what the influential factors are
and all of that.
The transition of philosophy from ethic to integrity
solves for a new future.
The word integrity requires no perspective.
Integral or integrity, meaning that there is no conflict within,
no matter which direction you look at, something it has integrity.
It means that all of its integral parts are aligned and there is no internal conflict
within it, is much different than an ethos or an ethic, which almost by its existence is
saying that somebody else disagrees with me.
There is no coherence in an ethical field.
The field of ethics is one of conflict, is one of debate, where
it's an industry or a being of integrity has no debate within it, it has no discourse
of conflict within it, because everything is in its highest truth, in its highest vibration. So I look forward to imagining a future nation, a future, you know,
statement of human rights that's built around integrity rather than ethic,
because the ethic allows for too much manipulation by political systems,
communities, individuals, and they can be manipulated to socialism or communism or whatever it is.
And so in the same way, let me use just one other example because I know this is running long
description here, but where we are right now with ethics to integrity could also be looked at
through the lens of unity versus conformity. And it's very dangerous that we believe that the manifestation at its highest
level of unity is one of conformity. And I believe that that's what the current paradigm is using
against us is saying, how dare you not wear a mask or how dare you say that we should have
ethnic differences or whatever it is, we should all be, we're all the same, we should all be the same.
When you start to hear unity, turn into a message of conformity,
you know that you're suffering the same consequence of integrity into ethic, which is you are being manipulated
away from your own self-identity, you're being manipulated away from your own truth when conformity
replaces unity. The beauty of unity, any union of two people in a marriage or two people
in a business development or whatever it is, is that you recognize the difference between
the two. That's why there's a contract. That's why it says, you are you, I am me, and we're
going to have to create a contract as something that would bring unity into this.
But at no point does a good marriage say, you have to be exactly like me, you have to
conform to who I am and what I want to do and what I do.
A successful marriage allows for flexibility and growth of the two individuals over a course
of a period of time that then creates some dynamic synergy
where the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.
Unity allows for the whole to be greater than the sum of its parts.
Conformity dissolves the potential for creativity,
co-creation, and a future of hope.
And so those are two examples of where I think we're at.
You could go through almost every word in the English language to show the differences between a
a philosophy of existence that's perspective driven and a philosophy existence that's based on elements of truth.
I think that strikes a thread I've been thinking about a lot recently. And I believe that it's a particularly
American phenomenon. It's one of the few countries that talk very openly about how much
we love our country, or at least you used to up until very recently. And it would be very
emergent, bottom up, and very dictatorial, top down, you know, the Star Spangled Banner's
flying behind the president as he's inaugurated, like I pledge my allegiance to the flat, you
know, school kid, everything. It was everywhere permeated through the culture you saw this.
And one of the things that I think you're starting to see now is a particular minority of
people who are also almost
rebelling against the love for the country, but that narrative is still there.
And what that's doing is it's basically saying, I don't trust that you are genuinely a part
of our team.
So what I'm going to do is I'm going to force you to make the mouth noises that you need
to make in order for me to believe that you're a part of my team.
And that's the difference.
You're not in unity for me to believe that you're a part of my team. And that's the difference. You're not in unity with me.
If you're in unity, I would just have faith.
And I think when you expand this out across the globe,
I wonder whether a different version of Earth of humans
would have needed so much bureaucracy to exist.
I'm aware that we've overcomplicated
to the way that we live, right?
Like I'm aware that we are maladapted to the way that we live, right? Like I'm aware that we are maladapted for the current environment that we're in.
But it does seem like an awful lot of complexity that we're going through in a desperate attempt to just
kind of keep going on.
And man, like let me just reel off some stuff that's happened over the last six months.
So we've had some of the Black Lives Matter riots, we've had the
Capitol Hill siege, we've had this Myanmar military coup, we've had the Wiga Muslims in China,
we've had the leader of the Russian opposition being jailed now for two and a half years,
that potentially may get moved up to a decade of forced labor. The leader of the Russian opposition,
remembering that he only got poisoned with a nerve agent, Novichok, six months ago, we've got the farmers strikes over in India.
Man, that is... If you're not in New Zealand or Australia, you're pretty close to some
serious shit that's going on. Do you have any conception over... Are these things linked?
What's happening here? Why is there so much chaos?
Yeah, I certainly linked and interestingly there's biologic models that will
parallel the human paradigm that you just light out there. So you mentioned
Australia being kind of untouched by this stuff, but it turns out they had the
largest force fires in in in national history in that same period of time.
And those fires were caused by a failure of ecosystem management, really.
And so in the failure of farmland management and the care of soil and water systems, they
set themselves up for that massifier,
and then within months we see the biggest fires
in California history,
and through the same process of a lack of care
and responsibility to soil, water, and air systems
in those regions.
And those played right into the spread of the pandemic,
the virus is bind to the carbon particulate
and the air from those fires
and speed spread of all kinds
of pathogens. So there's there's very close links between human biology and planetary biology.
And so as we start to talk about the sixth grade extinction, which we are you know halfway
through here, we've lost some maybe 40-50 percent of of life diversity on the planet and just a short 40, 50 years.
And we're thinking we only have 60, 65, 70, harvest left on the planet, the speed of
the degradation of arable lands.
That destination of the six extinction has an interesting influence that we've been
studying very specifically in my laboratory over the last eight years is the relationship between the microbiome and the human immune system.
When you lose the microbiome, which is an extension of your macrobium, your macricus,
and what air you breathe, what foods you touch, what soils you were, you were to create
your food, all of that big ecosystem actually translates into the diversity or the failure
of diversity within your microbiome, which is your skin, your sinuses, your gut, you know, every organ system within your body now
recognized to have another niche of a bacteria and fungi that are living within that organ.
And so we are this teaming organic garden that reflects the outer world.
And the interesting work that we've been doing is showing that when you lose the microbiome,
you actually lose the barrier between the outside world
and your immune system, and the immune system goes
into an overwhelm.
We call it leaky gut, we call it leaky brain,
all these things.
But those terms are describing this phenomena
that the world around us starts to force
a complete mobilization of all warfare,
the inflammation level of our immune system.
So we turn into this chronic inflammatory machine and
Interestingly when when you show a population and to this
devastating injury where you spray
Roundup the most common herbicide on the planet, you know four billion pounds of this stuff spray globally every year, when you spray that chemical, it functions as an antibiotic, and that whole population now starts to lose its microbiome.
Secondarily, that chemical happens to break down that barrier even faster.
It's a direct injury to the barrier system between your gut and your immune system.
And so this one chemical gets sprayed, and what you see is a rise in major depression,
anxiety, disorders, and all of this.
But you can actually see this play out in politics.
In the American politics, the stress of the environment of the individual results in
more and more biological inflammation.
And you can see this that most of our presidential candidates will suddenly go into the hospital
or go into a week of health collapse just a month or two before the election.
They grind themselves into the ground and they have a health crisis.
Leading up to the grinding into the ground and their hospitalization, if you watch their speeches,
they get more and more animosity and inflammatory rhetoric in their speech. And so what we see
happening in Myanmar, what we have, happening in all these places that you just said is extreme
human conflict, more and more divisive inflammatory words, actions, militants, behavior, in a bizarre
way, I'm suggesting that is all symptomatic.
It's not even a cause, it's not even, you know, some root cause problem.
It's literally a symptom of biologic collapse of our planet.
We can anticipate that we will literally tear each other to pieces in the coming six
decades as we watch the end of this extinction happen if we follow the same destructive microbiologic
approach to warfare.
We start killing the microbes at faster and faster efforts and we fear all the viruses
and we fear all the viruses, and
we fear all the bacteria, and we spray chlorox, all over this planet.
You will watch humans destroy themselves through war, through technology, through any mechanism
they can think of, because they're going to be scrabbling for the last few scripts of
bread on the planet, the scarcity mentality driven driving itself into the ground.
If we turn around, there's a whole world of biodiversity and nature,
health and healing, waiting to heal the ecosystems. And when we start living in those
environments, we simply behave differently. And so we need to give a sense of grace, I think,
to humanity right now. We need to forgive each other and say
You're acting like a freaking moron. You are an asshole. You're destructive. You're
combative. You're
imprisoning your opposition. You're doing whatever in Russia. You're doing whatever in Myanmar. I
Actually, you recognize that that's just a symptom of a greater collapse of biology and integrity on this planet.
And so in that moment of forgiveness, in that moment of grace, and we say, oh, we're just all acting exactly how biology would predict us to act.
We need a new biology, which would be based on a new philosophy of who we are and where we fit within a complex micro ecosystem, macro ecosystem, within a complex web of life on Earth, if we re-philosophize where we are
and what does human integrity rather than human ethic look like,
what does human unity rather than human conformity look like?
If we start stepping through that philosophy,
the behaviors that we see filling up the headlines simply disappear.
How do you feel about the development and the rollout of the COVID vaccine?
The most fascinating scientific thing that's ever happened, right? And so I've got
thousands of colleagues and hundreds of thousands of audience members and everything else
that have been following out, everything I've been doing for the last 10 years. And
and everything else that have been following everything I've been doing for the last 10 years.
And you know, we've got tens of millions of consumers in the United States that are all reaching for non-GMO products on the shelf. Everybody is starting to be afraid of GMO, non-GMO, watch out for
roundup, watch out for this. So you have consumers bending over backwards to get only organic food,
only this. And now they're lining up for a vaccine
that directly genetically modifies their children.
And that's freaking fascinating.
And so from a scientific viewpoint,
this is one of the most interesting moments
in human history because for the first time,
not we're not just saying we're in conflict with nature.
We're actually taking over the reins from nature and saying we're going conflict with nature, we're actually taking over the reins from nature
and saying we're going to create a manifest destiny of our own genomics.
And we believe that we know which genes need to be turned on, which genes need to be inserted
into the human experience so that we can produce some future health or future experience
that would be independent of nature. Whereas it's the first step towards a genetic modification
program to believe that we can be independent from nature.
I find it fascinating.
I mean, it is the most vial of scientific mistakes
on one level.
It is the most extreme hubris of human behavior
on another side of the equation.
And on the final judgment of it, it's perfect.
It's exactly the next step that we should take.
Because in doing this, we begin the journey into finding out who we really are, which is
a figment of the beautiful imagination and creativity of nature, of that imagination.
The figment of the imagination of nature is beauty.
And what we are delving into right now
is a really dark manipulation of genomics.
And it's wrapped in this altruistic mission and all of this.
But if you can't handle that news
as to its genetic modification, it's screwing with nature.
It's, that's okay because it'll take you a few years to have the
perspective on it because I don't know what it's going to look like yet.
We certainly have a lot of scientists to just why we should be very concerned
about what's about to unfold in the 12 months following mass
vaccination with a vaccine or a vaccine is actually not even a very accurate term to it.
This isn't a vaccine.
This is pure genetic modification.
The hope is that it then has an antibody response similar to what would happen if we gave
a true vaccine.
A vaccine is a debilitated form of a bacteria or a virus or something like that.
But this is the first time we're just giving a genetic signal
for us to make viral components,
so that we hope we make antibodies to it.
So it's not really a vaccine in the,
and what I think should be the pure definition of it.
But it's an extraordinary genetic modification
and we won't see the ramifications for,
unfortunately, a few months and year year after we've already done it.
And at that point, the Pandora's Box has been opened
and the response to the downsides of what's about to happen
is going to be a scramble of technology saying,
oh, well, we can patch that up with this new gene.
And this is the new gene you need this year.
And so next year, we're going to have
another multi-billion dollar scheme in place to say, well, we realize that when we missed
a little bit, the virus modified. So now you need this gene to make this protein. And
you start to see the slippery slope. We have 10 to 31 viruses in our environment. That's
10 million times more viruses than just the air than our entire universe of stars.
And so you've got this interesting moment where we're going to start the slippery
cell, but you need this one protein. Oh really, you need one protein out of the 10 of the 31
viruses that code for proteins. This is the one protein we're missing to be healthy. And of course,
we're going to miss. And I would say, well, actually it's this gene that you need next year.
And you can see the slippery cell, but we're going to all be racing for the next Apple iPhone,
yes, but just as much for the new gene that we need next year.
And so this is the beginning of an arms race in science and in pharmaceutical warfare
to find the next gene that we can create an narrative around so that humans think they
need that next gene.
And we're going to make trillions and trillions of dollars of money manifest in this march
away from nature.
And in a few scary years, we're going to find out that we engineered ourselves into an
envelope that has secured our place far from nature.
And in that, we will see our demise.
And that's the course we're on. But I love
human consciousness, sports, fickleness. We really go the same direction for very long.
And so I think we could learn an incredible lesson from that. And finally, start to redirect
everything from science to international funding towards research and science in a new and
different direction when we start to realize the mistakes we've made.
I promise that I didn't mean to just talk about existential risks throughout this podcast,
but it does definitely seem like that's what we're stumbling upon.
The next 100 years really are as Toby odd calls it, the precipice, I think, for humanity.
The potential advent of artificial general intelligence and misaligned super intelligent
AGI is the biggest as far as he's concerned, a one in ten chance that it causes us to go
extinct within the next 100 years and he gives our chances of making it through the next
100 years at five out of six.
So there's a one in six chance that between all of the different things,
engineered pandemics, natural pandemics,
nanotechnology that are known and knowns,
the natural risks, the anthropogenic risks,
everything bundled together.
The more that situations like this occur,
the more that we believe are unhubris,
I think that's a good word,
like a civilizational hubris,
We believe our own hubris, I think that's a good word, like a civilizational hubris, a overquoting of the naturalistic fallacy as well.
The more that we do that, the more it seems to me that we are stacking the odds in the
favor of us running straight into the great filter, whatever that may be.
And maybe we've already passed it. Maybe the
great filter that stops civilizations from reaching their full genetic potential, their
full civilizational potential in colonizing the galaxy. Perhaps we've already got passed
it. Maybe it was pro-cryotic to you, cryotic life. Maybe it was the presence of liquid water,
maybe it was whatever it might be. And maybe we've got passed it, and maybe we're going
to fall at the hurdle of thinking that West smarter than nature.
I know in the in retrospect, we're actually going to know what the hell we should have
done.
Yeah, I think that's the opportunity.
And on our current course, I think if we don't have a fundamental change in philosophy,
then the systems of economics, the systems of technology, information
technologies in particular, those systems will accelerate, and I think the one out of six
is actually very optimistic if we maintain our current philosophy.
But there's a lot of things that I think could occur that we can't quite imagine yet
that would instantaneously.
So fundamentally change our entire human experience and human philosophy.
And one of those would be the visible appearance of a global appearance of some of our neighbors.
And so if we have intelligent life,
visit this planet in a visible fashion
and we are presented with a diplomatic front
of four or five other species that live around the universe
and they show up here to have a discussion of where we are
and where we could go.
Everything would change in an instant.
Our spiritual identity, our scientific identity, our philosophical identity, all would change
in an instant when these other species show up.
We tend to call them aliens and then it sounds like a conspiracy theory and all of this but I really believe there's a high likelihood that we are seeing
signs and and symptoms of intelligent life bumping into the planet here.
What is that? What like? What life? What signs? What signs have you seen? What signs?
What signs, what signs have you seen? What signs?
I think that one of the telltale signs of it is sudden innovations are
insights that percolate up through the planet simultaneously in a
multi-focal fashion. So instead of one group innovating and coming up with
a new electric car and they call it Tesla and they go
see that thing all over the world in a new monolithic company.
When I see sudden breakthroughs in intelligence or psychological mindset happening all over the planet simultaneously, I interpret that as a high, one of the high likelihoods that's occurring at
that point is a shift in the frequency resonance on the planet. And one of the ways in which that would happen is people in that
resonance, which in the resonance I'm talking about, I'm talking about maybe what people think of as consciousness, but it's actually
consciousness is kind of like ethic where it requires a perspective, is really about a knowledge field. And the way in which knowledge emanates and manifest life in the universe
is through vibration.
And so vibrational changes on our planet
are happening that are changing the philosophy of humans.
And it manifests as new technologies
and manifests as new forms of communication
and education and all kinds of things shifting.
And so there's without going into things that, you know, specifics that
I think are replicating because then I'll have an opinion about them. Well, maybe that's
that and I'll have a thousand different things. That general concept of why would suddenly
the earth shift its vibration such that all of us would know something new. And I think
that if you start to look around at the world around you, you'll realize we are starting to make these seismic shifts in awareness, these seismic shifts in our sense of self and our potential to change the world.
If you can't find the evidence of that in yourself, then look to children right now. see how they see the world and see what reality they create around themselves. And then you come to terms with maybe there's one in 25 humans on a planet with an autism
spectrum disorder right now, at least in the industrialized nations at those numbers.
And that number might be as high as one in three by 2035 in 15 years.
And so humanity is literally changing its neurowiring.
It's manifesting in things like autism spectrum and aspergers and some of these hyper intelligent different ways of looking at the world.
Are they aliens? No, but they are tapping into a vibration of consciousness that we haven't had access to before as humanity.
And so, I think we're becoming vulnerable to an opportunity for cataclysmic shift and awareness.
And if there are other intelligent species out there, they're sensing that opportunity.
And if any time in human history they were going to show up, it would be about now.
Because we are seeing this dichotomy of the collapse of human consciousness and the rise of human consciousness as it's talked about, widely.
And so I think there's an opportunity here where a single touch from
a neighbor, another species, we're really fundamentally changed everything instantly.
And so you mentioned not wanting to talk about existential threats, but it is, if we're
going to mention those, it's also fun to think about existential corrections and existential
healing moments. And one of those would be, we're not alone and we're on our perfect path. We had to get to
this stage of scientific and you know innovation, sociologic innovation. We had to go through the
the fits and spurts of of human respect and integrity to get to the point where we could handle the
news that we're not alone. The universe is working towards biodiversity and all of its sectors,
and we could play on that new sandbox level of the galaxy or the universe, and that's what we're
being called into next. And so now nobody's worried about how big Monsanto is or whether 5G is good
or bad or any of these things. Now it's a discussion of how do we sit at the feet of higher intelligence
species and let them learn from us.
We are one hell of an emotional species, which might be one of our most unique aspects.
I'm sure are in wonderment over. I wonder what it feels like to be in such emotional conflict as humans are able to feel.
I wonder what that feels like.
And so maybe we're here to demonstrate something to the greater universe,
because the
universe is certainly not asking us to conform. I think it wants us instead to be in unity,
but not conformity. And it wants to bring all of our human weirdness and all of our human
quirkiness into this ecology of higher intelligence.
That is something that I've only just realized. I would be interested to know if you agree with
me that I think it would be difficult for any sufficiently advanced alien civilization
to be much more emotional than us, because too much emotion reduces your ability to coordinate,
and you need quite high levels of coordination in order to be able to achieve anything as a civilization. If you ramped up our emotions by another 20 or 30%, I think you have nation
states falling apart, I don't think that you can hold companies together, I think that
people are fighting in the workshop on the floor of SpaceX. I think the pilots are punching
each other as they're taking off from the from the tarmac. So that really is an insight I've never even thought of before.
I'm a bit gobsmacked to haven't thought of it,
but it would be difficult to imagine
a more emotional civilization than ours
because they just wouldn't be able to get anything done.
You're spot on.
And that really comes down to the individual level even. So, you know, as a
physician, I've very often seen very functional individuals tumble into psychotic breaks. And
in a psychotic break, your emotions start to dictate a new reality. You'll hallucinate,
you'll see that. Visual hallucinations, auditory hallucinations, you'll have new paranoia,
you'll create a whole new narrative in your head about the reality you live in within moments.
And it only takes a few seconds of neurochemistry perturbation to that emotional cascade in your
tiny little part of your brain called the hippocampus to lead you down this completely false pathway
that actually usurps your own self identity.
And so not only would we be dysfunctional as a society, we would be so dysfunctional
as individuals.
When you ratchet up the emotional codex even slightly, 20% would probably be catastrophic,
but even a 5% increase in our subjugation to the emotional brain renders us useless.
We've talked so far about some fairly scary terrifying topics and it has been a difficult
12 months for pretty much everyone worldwide.
What would you say to people who are wanting to be a little bit more robust
mentally? What is some of the insights that you use for yourself around mental health?
And what would you tell them to be able to hold onto and to value so that they can keep
themselves level over the next 12 months?
I think I would move back to what we were talking about earlier about the moment of silence
or the moment of where movement stops.
If you can create that pause and do that daily to listen long enough for a new reality.
Don't even have any preconceived notions of what that might look like.
Maybe you'll think about your life, perhaps you'll think thinking about your relationships, maybe think about your children, whatever it
is. But allow yourself a few minutes a day to go into a completely silent state where
you try to bring all of the molecules in your body into a state of pause. So that it can
pick up on the subtle tones, the subtle messages, the subtle energies that will point you
in the direction of the flow of the real universe,
the bigger universe that's guiding and forming the human experience.
And it's a tiny little sector of the reality we live in.
And so, free yourself up of the human mind for a moment and make yourself an antenna to
the universe to say, which way are you flowing?
Which way is the planet flowing?
Put me into alignment with that.
And then when you open your eyes back up,
start to reimagine everything that was
just taking up your mind, your relationships, your job,
your book you're reading, the Netflix series,
you're watching, whatever it is,
and start to inquire, is that in line with
what I just experienced in the silence?
And if it's not, lose that thing as quick as possible.
And imagine it in the form of something that is in line with it.
Lose your previous perception of your partner
and imagine a new relationship with that partner.
What if you let them be somebody completely new
in the next millisecond?
And what if they let you be somebody new in the next millisecond? Who would you both become? What would be the potential of it? It seems
like too many options, too many things, but you will know exactly which direction to go if
you took the silent moment. So take the silent moment, allow the atomic structure of your
body to align with a flow that you are not in alignment with right now and allow for redirection to happen.
And then imagine yourself untied to any previous identity, role, whatever it is, self-perception,
free yourself up and see if you can bring into alignment a new manifestation of who you are and
what you're here to do at the tipping point of human history.
what you're here to do at the tipping point of human history?
Man, that would be...
That would be incredibly beautiful if everyone was able to do that. There's a concept called the Mindfulness Gap
that Corialin talked about, and that
interjection, the break point between stimulus and response,
is this single greatest gift I think I've got from meditation.
And it still only occurs once every hundred times,
but the times that it does, I just think, like, it's the best gift I think I've ever given myself
as well, you know, one of the most useful skills that I think have acquired. Moving forward,
what do you think the future of health over the next few years has in store? I know that you're
massive into the microbiome, into gut health, into top soil management,
into all of these different things.
What do you think is going to be the future of health?
I can't see one future.
I see multiple futures and they are extremely dichotomous.
You can't fit one next to the other.
We're not gonna have some blend of these futures.
It's either going to be the devastation of the sixth extinction and the human health will continue to decline all the way into our extinct experience.
Or you find pockets of humanity that begin pilot projects of a new humanity. And that might be a nation-state,
it might be a community. But I think we're going to start decentralizing the human experience
so that we can start to do these pilot projects. And that would allow a great amount of
experimentation. And so if you started to imagine I'm plugging from the current narrative,
the current paradigm, and saying, what would I do at the household level to bring myself and my children and my
friends family into alignment with nature in the way that we eat breakfast?
Well, first of all, we'd have to touch nature.
So what if breakfast was, we all ran out with our cup of coffee and tea in hand and sit
in the garden and harvest a few things that will
throw into the skillet for breakfast.
And so we're going to start in gratitude and receipt from nature.
And maybe it's a tiny little vertical garden in the backyard or next to our front stoop,
or maybe it's a huge gym, a CSA that's down the street or a farmers market nearby.
We begin the day, connect it to nature, and then we start to reorganize around that.
So it's going to be in these small little pilot projects at the mental level and at the execution
level that we start to imagine a different future.
But that future can't exist in the common narrative.
And so you can't think that you're going to somehow go to the gym enough to avoid extinction.
It just doesn't work that way. You literally are going to be extinct
with the rest of biology on the planet
unless you can create a microcosm around you
that turns into a macrocosm.
And so that begins in your own thought process
and your own behavior.
But I think you're gonna find out
because of this high intelligence state
that we're starting to have access to, you're
going to be able to start to attract people to you that are of like mind and of like experience
and of complimentary skill sets that could start to scale your idea to become a community,
to become greater.
Never before have I seen so many millionaires leaving California to buy swathes of land
and inviting everybody they know to, hey, hate you want to set up a homestead
Know to pay your canions like emptying out and that Los Angeles at this insane rate
Well, we have like farmland and Idaho and all this stuff getting bought up at X-Streme rate
So this is this is what I mean when I think I see symptoms of higher intelligence
sharing with us information streams.
And we can pivot in a moment where people who have never run a farm or suddenly buying
farms because they just have received information through that subconscious silent moment to
say, oh my God, I was doing the wrong thing.
It's somewhere over here is the right direction.
I'm willing to dive in completely.
So this is happening all over the planet right now.
So make yourself part of that future that we can't quite see. I think there's many versions
of that future and it's really up to you what future comes to manifest itself and what
role you play in it.
You're an MD. You've spent a lot of time palliative care all this time doing research and working one or one like proper spitting
sawdust in the trenches stuff and then the research and the podcasts. Why do you talk with such
a spiritual edge to the things that you do coming from that background? Yeah, I guess spirituality is a word that we've put on it.
I think ultimately it's philosophy again, you know, is that if we don't find fundamental
truths that then shape the direction of our actions, we are lost.
And so we can talk about life and death situations, we can talk about macroeconomics we can talk about
politics we can talk about
you know health systems where we talk about
but if they're not pinned down fundamentally
on truth
uh... then then it's just somebody's opinion
and so the reason i try to always tie it back is to make sure that i can access
my anchor points that are now in in philosophical spaces
of integrity instead
of ethics, of unity instead of conformity, and start finding those bricks in your reality
that allow you to move not only within your own self-described specialty or something
like that, but you're going to find out that it's fractal.
Once you find truth, it will apply in every other scale of life,
every other specialty of life, every other environment that you can think of. Truth always
scales horizontally, vertically, through all systems, because it cannot be separated from any other
element of nature, because nature has integrity, which means there is absolutely no conflict,
between or within any of the truths that make up that whole thing that we call nature.
And so that's maybe where all of my podcasts and public appearances come back to is,
you're going to start to see some of the truths that have shaped my life. And when I say them,
you're going to pick them up and go build a different life for yourself that I can't even picture or experience because you already know what to do with them because you just found a truth and you're going to go do something with that.
That thank you so much for today, man. We didn't even touch on essentially anything that I thought that we were going to talk about, but that doesn't matter because we have time and we can do this again.
If the people who are listening want to find out more about your work
and I own good, and I own health,
where should they go?
Yeah, we've got Zach Busch MD.com
is like my educational environment,
so lots of access points to everything
I do through that website,
ZACHPU, S-H-M-D.com.
You've got IonBioM.com,
is the science of the microbiome
and how it is impacting human health.
We've got a whole product line there with gut health, sinus health, skin health product
coming out as well.
So understanding the role of the microbiomes communication in human rates of repair and
regeneration has been our expertise.
And it's a really compelling argument that biodiversity and communication is the fundamental
heart of biology. And it's a good template for you to start to live your life by.
So Ion, biome, Ion, bio, m e, dot com, find you that.
Our nonprofit is project biome, dot com.
I'm sorry, dot org, project biome, dot org is the nonprofit.
And one of our first big projects was farmers footprint, dot us.
We're also just launching a sister one in Australia
with Project Pyram Australia coming off the ground.
So in that space, you discover why it is so necessary
for all of us to be part of the revolution
of chemical agriculture into regenerative agriculture
to reset the biology on the planet for a future
that is less inflammatory, that
is less divisive and allows for the integrity and unity to come back in.
So, projectbiome.org, we'll find you all that nonprofit work.
And you can keep exploring with us.
If you want a deep dive on just an educational experience, I started the Global Health Education
Initiative a few months ago.
The first topic was the Virom an hour and twenty minute lecture that I think will just
completely blow your mind as to what viruses are and what we know about them and how everything
that's happening in the last year is completely old science that dates back at least 50
years, a lot of it, a hundred years old, and is erroneous.
And so blow your mind over what's already known about the beauty of the Virom and how
it supports and in fact the source of human life, not against it.
Blow your mind there.
The innate immune system we just did is much different than the adaptive immune system
that they want you to think about around vaccines.
The innate immune system is actually what keeps you in balance with the virus.
Coming out in just a couple weeks is a big project that I've been working on for almost
nine months and I'm calling it what happened last year.
And so it's a big look at public health and how we can use public health statistics to
manipulate a global narrative of who we are and where we belong.
So global health initiative there at zackbushemd.com will get you into all of that stuff.
So lots of ways to engage and I look forward to staying engaged.
Man, thank you so much for today.
you