The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - No.1 Brain Scientist: My Brain Shut Down & I Realised Everything I Believed Was Wrong!
Episode Date: November 6, 2025Harvard Neuroscientist DR. JILL BOLTE TAYLOR reveals How to Retrain Your Brain, Heal Trauma, Control Emotions, and Unlock the 4 Characters Running Your Mind Dr. Jill Bolte Taylor is a Harvard-traine...d brain scientist who experienced a stroke in the left hemisphere of her brain and spent 8 years recovering. She is best known for her viral TED Talk “My Stroke of Insight” and is the bestselling author of books including Whole Brain Living. She explains: ◼️What her near-death stroke taught her about consciousness, ego, and identity ◼️How to escape the brain loop keeping you stuck in stress and anxiety ◼️How technology and habits are silently shrinking your brain’s potential ◼️Why overthinking physically damages your brain, and how to reverse it fast ◼️What holding a REAL human brain taught her about life and death (00:00) Intro (02:31) Understanding Your Brain Will Improve Your Life (05:23) Choose What Part of Your Brain to Use (09:23) A Real Brain with a Spinal Cord (15:54) The Central Nervous System (19:04) The Event That Changed Your Brain Forever (22:04) When I Realised It Was Life or Death (25:29) The Left Side of My Brain Was Damaged: I Couldn't Speak or Remember Anything (26:50) The Importance of Having Fun and Being Present (32:24) Reaching for Help During the Stroke (37:48) What Did the Scan Show? (43:53) Ads (44:56) Where Do These 4 Personalities Happen in the Brain? (47:59) Where Addiction Lives (49:39) What Are the 4 Personality Types? (55:12) The Odds of a Single Human Being Born (01:05:11) How to Shift Between the 4 Characters (01:10:20) Ads (01:12:24) Emotions Only Last for 90 Seconds (01:21:58) How to Heal Trauma from the Past (01:25:57) Lifestyle Choices for a Healthy Brain Follow Dr Jill: Facebook - https://bit.ly/47VX7t7 X - https://bit.ly/3LKRaGM Instagram - You can purchase Dr Jill’s book ‘Whole Brain Living’, here: https://amzn.to/4hMIVWT The Diary Of A CEO: ◼️Join DOAC circle here - https://doaccircle.com/ ◼️Buy The Diary Of A CEO book here - https://smarturl.it/DOACbook ◼️The 1% Diary is back - limited time only: https://bit.ly/3YFbJbt ◼️The Diary Of A CEO Conversation Cards (Second Edition): https://g2ul0.app.link/f31dsUttKKb ◼️Get email updates - https://bit.ly/diary-of-a-ceo-yt ◼️Follow Steven - Sponsors: Linkedin Ads - https://www.linkedin.com/DIARY 1Password - Find out more at https://1password.com/doac Function Health - https://functionhealth.com/DOAC with code DOAC100 for $100 towards your membership Join the waitlist for the limited edition Diary Of A CEO Conversation Cards here: https://bit.ly/cardswaitlist.
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A couple of weeks ago, we took all of our team here at the Dyer of a CO to
Mioka, thanks to all of you guys, and thanks to the fact that we'd hit 10 billion subscribers.
So we went there to celebrate.
And as we were sat in New Yorker talking about a variety of things, one of my team members referenced
that they had put their house on Airbnb the day they had left to come to Mallorca to make
some extra money.
And as we talked through this, it became abundantly clear to me that this is a huge opportunity
for all of my listeners.
When you go away, when your house is empty, you have the potential to make some extra money
just by listing your house on Airbnb.
And as you probably know, Airbnb are a sponsor of this podcast. And it shocks me that more people
haven't considered this. Hosting your property on Airbnb when you go away is a no-brainer to me,
especially if it's sat there doing nothing. And do you know what? I think that your home,
sat there while you're away, might just be worth more than you think. And if you want to find out
exactly how much it's worth, go to Airbnb.com.ca slash host. And you can find out how much you could be
making while your home is sat empty and you're away on holiday you've brought a present for me in
this box and I feel nervous and excited so this is a human brain with a spinal cord such a masterpiece
but what people don't know is that we have four different structured parts of our brain that
automatically shape how we think feel and behave but what if it's not unconscious what if we could
pick and choose when how we want to be in any moment on purpose like we can manifest our own mental health
And by the end of this conversation today, you're going to teach me how to you go.
Absolutely.
You're going to so get it.
Harvard neuroscientist Dr. Jill Bolte-Taylor has transformed how we understand the brain through her research and own traumatic experience.
She's teaching the world how to unlock every part of their brain to regain control of their thoughts, emotions, and behavior.
We have a problem.
We are skewed as a society to the two parts of the left brain, which focuses on me, the individual.
How do I fit myself into a society?
Trauma's living in there, as is his cravings
and addiction. And we need this.
It protects us. We get in trouble
when this is the only portion of our brain
that we value, because look at the world
we currently live in.
So is there a strategy for making sure that you don't act upon it?
Well, so many people are trying to
get rid of their emotional reactivity,
but the way to heal it is not to get rid
of it. I mean, we're wired for this.
Why do I want to just put myself in a little box
and say, I don't want to have pain? I don't want to be mad.
I want to be a robot. I don't want to be a robot.
I want to be a robot. I want to be a whole.
human with a whole brain. Like, this is life. And it lasts this long and then it's gone. And it took
me losing the left side of my brain for eight years to realize just how precious this thing is.
So how do I control and protect my brain at all costs? Well, there's a lot. So you ready?
Bomb, bomb, I want some hot stuff.
Just give me 30 seconds of your time. Two things I wanted to say. The first thing is a huge
thank you for listening and tuning into the show week after.
means the world to all of us, and this really is a dream that we absolutely never had
and couldn't have imagined getting to this place.
I see messages all the time, but secondly, it's a dream where we feel like we didn't realize
you didn't subscribe.
And if you enjoy what we do here, please join the 24% of people that listen to this podcast
regularly and follow us on this app.
Here's a promise I'm going to make to you.
I'm going to do everything in my power to make this show as good as I can, now and into the future.
We're going to deliver the guests that you want me to speak to, and we're going to continue
to keep doing all of the things.
love about this show. I appreciate you for that. So thank you. Thank you.
Dr. Jill Boltey Taylor, what have you spent your professional career endeavoring to understand?
And why does it matter? I am fascinated with how does our brain create our perception of reality?
And based on that information, what a wonder it is any two of us can communicate at all. I think I am fascinated.
by what we are as biological creatures.
And most of us are so consumed with everything outside of ourselves that we have missed
the wonder of what we are as this biological conglomeration of cells.
I think we're absolutely beautiful.
You know, none of us came into this world with a roadmap about how to get it all right.
And the roadmap is the brain cells.
And when we understand the brain cells and what they do and how to work with them
and how to keep them well, then we can manifest our own mental health.
And do you think the average person understands the brain?
Did you understand the brain before you started studying it?
Well, I understood it because I had a brother who was diagnosed,
would be diagnosed with the brain disorder of schizophrenia.
So I became fascinated by five or six about what are we
and why is he the way he is.
We are so different from one another,
our interpretation of our experiences are so different from one another, what are we?
I just became a philosopher very young and fascinated with the biology and the anatomy of what we are.
What do you think an understanding of the brain, the understanding that you're going to communicate to myself in my audience today,
how do you think that can help me improve my life?
Oh my goodness.
If I understand what part of me interacts with the external world and is smart and is good
with details and is well organized, then I know how to use that part.
And that's we are skewed as a society to that left thinking portion of our brain.
In fact, as far as traditional medicine is concerned, that thinking portion of our brain
is the only portion that it's actually conscious.
So then we live our lives literally with our left emotional tissue.
our left, our right emotional tissue and our right thinking tissue, all is part of our unconscious
brain. But what if it's not unconscious? What if we actually know what those groups of cells also do
so that when I'm experiencing my pain from the past, I can actually call on the portion of my brain
that knows how to self-soothe me so that I can lift myself out of my pain, learn from those experiences,
and then live a more fulfilled life.
It's the power to choose who and how we want to be in the world
when we understand what our choices are.
Is it possible to choose which part of your brain to use in a certain moment?
You do it all the time.
You're just probably not aware of it.
Let's say you're going to have a business call.
And you got your stats and you got your data
and you pick up the phone and you say,
yes, this is Steve and blah, blah, blah,
and you work into your details.
And then let's say someone peeks in to,
to, let's say a little dog comes running in. Okay. Well, you're going to have a couple of
responses, potentially responses. One, you're going to smile, right? You just smiled. You just
moved into, oh, I love my little fuzzy and yeah, okay, now, you know, now you're a little gentler
because now you shifted into a different portion of your brain that is open to the present
moment, and now you just got uplifted. So we have these four different anatomically,
neuroanatomically structured parts of our brain, and we can pick and choose who and how we want to be in any moment when we know what our choices are.
But we don't know what our choices are as our society because we are functioning skewed to that left-thinking portion of our brain, and everything else is running on automatic.
And the left-thinking portion of the brain is that what more logical...
Logical, rational, analytical, likes to control people's places, things.
there's a me definition ego center of I exist. I am Jill Boltey Taylor. This is my phone number. This is
where I live. I know that this is where I begin and end where my skin meets air because a group of
cells tells me where I begin and end. But you've probably had flow moments where you were doing
your sports or you were making love or you were whatever you were doing. And you didn't begin and
end here. You were vast and open and you were this big energy ball that you are. But the
left hemisphere focuses on that little group of cells and those skill sets and the right and the
wrong and the good and bad and that portion of the brain defines the social norm. And we all have
to fit ourselves in the social norm. But it's only a quarter of our brain. Is it making us unhappy
the way that we use our brain currently? Well, we're out of balance. We're completely out of
balance because we're at the balance of the value of that left brain. What's going on in the right
brain? The right brain is right here right now. We spend so much of our time. So fundamental differences
between the right hemisphere and the left hemisphere. And I know this only because I lost my
left hemisphere and that's all I had for eight years. I had to use what I had currently going on in my
right hemisphere after I lost those cells of the left hemisphere in order to rebuild the skill sets
of the left brain so that I could become completely functional again. Are we unhappy? Well, that's not a
happy part of the brain. When you're being analytical and organized and structured, you probably got
that frown right there, you know, and it's a different expression than as soon as I said, a little
puppy comes in, and then all of a sudden your face happens. Well, what happens is you're shifting
into a different part of your brain, and that's what we do. We're running it on automatic. So if we are
running our brain on automatic.
Imagine how much better we might do if we were actually picking and choosing who
and how we wanted to be on purpose.
And you're telling me that's possible.
Absolutely.
And by the end of this conversation today, you're going to teach me how to do that.
Absolutely.
You're going to so get it.
And once you see you, you will no longer ever not see you.
And then you're going to see these four characters inside of yourself.
And now you're going to be looking at your partner, who you speak about often.
And you're going to be going, I am I recognize all.
four parts of her too. But what that means is that any relationship that we have, there's eight
of us. There's eight of us. Eight very specific personalities in every relationship. So I have four very
predictable character profiles, as do you. It's the way the anatomy of the brain is built.
You've bought a present for me in this box. I did. What is in that box? This is a very special brain
with a spinal cord.
This is a real brain.
This is a real brain with a spinal cord.
A real spinal cord.
And do you own this brain?
This, I did this dissection, and yes, this brain was specifically donated to me for educational purposes.
How old was the person?
What was?
In their 40s.
Do you know how they passed away?
Brain cancer.
And can you see the brain cancer?
You cannot.
Not until I cut this open.
And I've had this brain for over a decade, and I haven't cut it open.
It is very rare to have a dissection, which is actually brain and spinal cord.
Usually you dissect the brain, and we learn about the brain.
But I wanted to have the brain and spinal cord because that's the central nervous system.
And it's a spectacular dissection.
I feel nervous and excited.
Excited's good.
I'm excited.
Because you're right here right now going, oh my gosh, something new.
It's exciting.
Right here right now is an exciting.
time. Are you ready? I am ready. Okay. Shall I put my gloves in? I encourage you to do so.
Okay. So, this is a real human brain. And right now it is, um, hydrated in rubbing alcohol.
So that's what this is. So you don't have to be afraid of that. So this is a real human brain.
spinal cord. And I think what I'll do is I'll just move this over here. Yeah.
Out of the way. Okay. So this is a human brain. What's that skin on the top of it?
With a spinal cord. This thing here. We'll get there. Oh. So you've heard about meningitis. Yeah.
It's layers that support between the bone and the brain tissue. And it protects it. So this is called, these, there are three layers called the meninges. So when, you
you've heard of meningitis.
So this is the Dura Mater.
It's very tough, and you'll feel that.
It's like a really tough lettuce.
And this is essentially strapping the brain into the cranial vault and holding it into position.
Because you don't want this thing flopping around and having wounding and injury.
So it straps it into here.
Well, it straps it in certain spots, yes.
And generally, often, when you do a dissection, you actually have to put a, like, screwdriver in there to peel the dura off the bone.
So it straps it into positions, kind of like a bra for the brain.
Okay.
Okay.
So this is the dura.
And then what I'm touching now is called the arachnoid.
And that's the second layer of the meninges.
And what you're looking at in there is blood, is blood inside of the blood vessels.
So one of the things about why the brain is so fragile is the blood.
is the blood vessels are transparently thin.
So the pressurized system of what's going on inside of the cradial vault has to be highly regulated.
And it's actually the pressure of the cranial vault versus the pressure in the thorax of the chest and the pressure of the abdomen.
It's a system.
And they all work together in order to keep everything well regulated homeostasis, a state where the cells are happy.
And so the third layer is like right here, and it's, you can see this layer's peeled away, the erectionoid.
And under here, I'm now touching Pia, and Pia is the external layer of the brain cells themselves, the brain tissue.
So, so this is a beautiful brain, and it would be positioned in my head like this.
So front of the brain, back of the brain, coming down, hanging down as the spinal cord.
And then as you look at the spinal call, this is called the Kota Aquina or Kata Equina.
And these are the nerves that are actually going to go down into your lower extremity.
So all the information that's going to go down into your lower extremity to control your body is controlled.
And the sensory information is coming in through those nerve fibers.
Looks like a bunch of wires.
It does.
Well, you know, we are quite a well-designed machine in its own way.
A difference is we are organic, we are biological.
And I think one of the biggest mistakes that we make as a society is we think ourselves
and we think ourselves as a machine, push it, push it, push it, push it, push it, push it, push it.
Well, you can do that with a computer.
You plug it in and it stays on until you turn it off or it blows up.
We have to go to sleep.
Yeah, have a good time with that.
Yes.
It's okay.
You won't hurt it.
Wow.
We hope.
Gosh.
Uh-huh.
Beautiful.
Our design, such a masterpiece.
We are this massive conglomeration of 50 trillion molecular geniuses making up our form.
Beautiful.
It's so crazy that every single person listening right now has one of these.
Yes.
Processing my voice as you're hearing my voice.
That's right.
And it is this.
For anyone that has never felt a brain before, which I imagine is most of you,
it is like this very, very soft but dense, sort of tofu-y, how would you describe the feeling?
Pork roast.
Pork roast.
It's very soft, though.
It makes me realize how easy this would be to damage.
Now, this has been in alcohol or formaldehyde for since at least 2008, probably earlier.
And when you first pull a brain out, it's even softer.
It's like a tough jelly.
So that when you first bring out a fresh brain, if you take your finger and you just
poke it into the tissue, it'll squeeze right in.
And then you pull your finger out and then it goes, it'll scrunch right back together again.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
So this is a prepared specimen.
And we have to do that and lock together the proteins or the lipids in order for us to be
able to handle it for educational purposes.
So this is the computer, and then this is the wires that control the rest of the body?
Well, it's part of the system because this, this what you're holding is the central nervous system.
And then the central, all of it, and then the central nervous system sends between each of the vertebra.
Here you have different vertebra.
Between different vertebra, you will have different nerves coming out and then going around the body.
And then you're also going to have vagus nerves coming off of the brain stem area and going down into the abdomen taking care of the visceral.
The first time you saw a brain like this, how did it change your perspective of life?
I love it. I love it. I was very blessed to have an aunt who was a debutante back in the years where debutantes did not get jobs.
and she wanted to be an emergency room doctor,
but there was no way that she was going to do that.
So she would actually encourage me to pick up roadkill,
and we would take it home and dissect it.
It's beautiful.
See, that look, we have two responses.
The left brain says, oh, my gosh, this is disgusting.
This is the worst thing I ever had.
And that's a part of your brain that's designed to kind of critically judge and say,
no, it's not safe.
It's not cool.
Push it away.
But the right hemisphere comes on.
online with curiosity.
So people see these things and they go,
oh, no, not my thing.
Or they go, oh my gosh, that is like so cool.
I feel both at the same time.
I feel, I have like almost a respect for the person.
Yes.
Who grew the brain, whose brain that belongs to you.
And then the other part of me is just like totally fascinated.
And almost, you know, when you look at it, you still don't realize that you have one of those in your head.
Yes. Now, now, so you're still looking at that as that's one thing. I don't look at it like that at all.
This is a brain, but what's important about this brain is our brain health, our brain abilities is 100 dependent on the cells that make up that brain.
So most people, many neuroscientists talk about the brain and how the brain does in the external world and the behavior and the neurotransmitter systems and all of that.
I go down to the raw data of the cells. So I am a cellular neuroanatomist. And so I care about
the cells making up the nervous system. And how do we interact with them? How do we relate to them?
How do we care for them? How do we feed them? How do we provide for them so that they can be
healthy so that I can live a whole brain life in a healthy way?
For context, where did you do your PhD?
Did your PhD in Neurina Asthma, Indiana State University?
Indiana State, and my research was at the IU School of Medicine, Indiana University School of Medicine.
So that's where I focused on neuro.
And then from there, I went to Harvard Medical School and did two postdocs, one in neurobiology, and then one in psychiatry.
And when I say the 10th of December, 1996, which was four years, four years, four years,
years after I was born, roughly.
Mm-hmm.
You were 37 years old.
Yes.
What happened on that day?
Can you give me a play-by-play?
Yes.
Well, the day before that, I was teaching and performing research at Harvard Medical School.
And I'm a gross anatomist, which means cadaver, entire body, as well as histology, which is tissue, as well as neuro.
So I'm all about anatomy.
So I'm teaching and performing research at Harvard Medical School.
and I woke up the next day, and I was experiencing a major hemorrhage in the left half of my brain.
So I woke up, I sat up, and I immediately had a pulsing pound behind my left eye.
And generally I didn't have that, and it was pretty severe, and it got all of my attention.
And I have my before and after is before and after that morning.
What happens next?
So you've got a pulsing pain behind your left eye.
What'd you do then?
Well, I thought, wow, that's weird.
And it's the caustic pain that you get when you bite into ice cream.
It's like that freeze brain.
And I thought, okay.
And I felt suddenly weak.
And I thought, okay.
So I got up and light was kind of burning on my eyes.
It was I didn't want light in the morning that day.
So I closed the curtains.
and I thought, well, let's get my blood flowing.
Maybe I'll feel a little better.
So I jumped onto my cardio glider, which was a whole body full exercise machine.
But I'm looking at my hands, realizing that my hands looked like primitive claws,
grasping onto the bar.
And I look at my body, and I'm thinking, whoa, I'm a weird-looking thing.
And my perception of reality shifted away from my perception of being the one on the machine,
having my normal morning experience to, wow, I was witnessing myself having this experience.
And I'd never had that happen before.
And I thought, okay, so this isn't helping.
So I get off the machine and I head across my living room table.
And I'm realizing every movement is very rigid and very precise.
And I'm actually kind of directing.
I felt very robotic.
getting into the bathroom.
So I remember pulling on the water, and when the water came out, it smashed into the tub,
and the volume just reverberated in my brain.
It was so loud.
The sound was amplified, and it pushed me against the wall.
But when the volume hit, I'm a neuroanatomist.
So what that means is that I'm teaching students about all of the anatomy here and which fibers are coming in
and going where and what is the tracks of everything.
And so sound comes into the ears and it goes right down to the pond's region of our brain down
here.
And this is where life and death is.
This is where those cells, if you're going to inspire, you need your pounds and your medulla
in order to have those cells functioning.
So when mine went, we're being disturbed, that was the moment I realized I've got a problem.
This is a grave problem.
This could kill me.
So I got out of the shower.
I dressed mechanically, just dressed.
I'm still going to work.
And then my right arm went totally paralyzed by my side.
And it's really strange when a limb goes paralyzed.
It doesn't just like drop down.
It goes, boom.
I mean, it's a heavy entity.
And I thought, oh, my gosh, paralysis.
Oh, my gosh, I'm having a stroke.
And then I'm thinking, okay, you know, oh my gosh,
how many brains I'm.
have the opportunity to study their own brain from the inside out. And I literally thought,
okay, I'll do this stroke thing for a week or two, and then I'll get back to my job, right?
So then it was a matter of, I have to get help. I have to communicate with the external world.
And a problem was that the hemorrhage was happening inside of the left thinking portion of
my brain, which is where language is. So I was drifting for four hours. I was drifting in
and out of the consciousness of the present moment. And the present moment, the present in the present
moment, I don't know who I am. I don't know what I am. All I know is what's in the present moment.
So explain that for me. So the left side of your brain was where the stroke was happening. Yes,
it was. So you were in the right side of your brain. I was waffling back and forth because it was
growing. It started small. So I had what we call an arteriovenous malformation where an artery.
which is a high-pressure system.
It's bringing blood into the system.
And then I have a vein,
and the vein is a no-pressure,
low-pressure system.
And then we have these little capillary networks in between.
Yeah, this is an ischemic stroke.
I had the hemorrhagic stroke.
So when you think about stroke,
most people think, oh, blood clot.
And the blood clot blocks a...
So the thing about arteries is they taper, taper,
taper, taper, taper, taper until they get down to the capillary level, which is where the red blood cells
kind of line up in single file and pass through that. And it's a very low pressure system. And then it
absorbs back up into the vein. Well, what I had was the hemorrhagic stroke and a blood vessel
exploded. And when it exploded, then the blood goes out into the extracellular matrix, which is
extracellular between the cells and the cells cannot function. Blood is essentially poison
to cellular communication. So it's no good. And whatever blood, wherever it goes, those cells
start going offline. And then as that hemorrhage grows inside of the brain across time,
more and more cells are becoming incapacitated. So you were in that moment unable to remember how to speak
properly enabled to... Nothing. I had nothing. I didn't even have me. I had no Jill Bulte Taylor
because she was over in the left hemisphere and eventually that whole hemisphere ended up swimming in a
pool of blood and was non-functional. But it took four hours to get there. So I was waffling into the
present moment, blissful euphoria. I didn't exist. I know who I am and that I exist at all because
I have a tiny little group of cells inside of my left hemisphere that tells me who I am. Have you ever
awakened in a hotel somewhere because you've traveled so much and you're going, where am I?
There's this blank, right? And it's like, I don't know, but the bed's comfy. You know, what a nice
room. You know, and all of a sudden, you're just right here, right now, and you're not about the past and
you're not about the future and you're just in the present moment. And joy lives in the present moment.
Love lives in the present moment. Laughter lives in the present moment. The present moment is a fantastic
place, and we are wired to that by literally half our brain.
So why wouldn't we spend more time over here?
Or at least balance it out.
That's all I ever ask for.
I am not here to, you know, as a wave in the flag of the right hemisphere.
I want a whole brain living.
I want people to understand the different parts of their brain, what they do so that it says,
okay, so let's say, do you meditate?
Sometimes.
Okay, sometimes. What's it like for you?
Difficult.
Okay, why?
Because you start thinking about stuff.
Okay, because this part of your brain won't be quiet.
Left thinking brain. We're languages. It won't be quiet.
Or you just had a little argument with your sweetheart, and so down here now, you're in your emotional system, and you're not really feeling peaceful, and you got on that airplane and things weren't like perfectly smooth, so now you're kind of, you know, ruminating about, you know, oh my gosh, oh my gosh, oh my gosh.
oh my gosh, you know, and whatever, and that takes you away from the present moment.
But the present moment is, it's not about me, the individuals.
I think about this, the, so I look at the brain, it's divided in four categories, very specific,
anatomically.
Each one of those result in a constellation of skill sets.
And then that constellation of skill sets actually manifest in our lives as personalities.
And we all have all four.
Now, do we all practice all four?
No.
Some of us do.
We usually have a dominant.
You seem to like your left-thinking brain a lot.
When do you have fun?
What does Steve do for fun?
This.
This?
No, also, I watch Manchester United play and I...
You lift weights.
Yeah.
What's that like for you?
Is it work?
Or is it refreshing to be in your body?
Oh, when I'm at the gym, it's, yeah, it's, I'm just in my body, which is, yeah.
Okay, but no, not just but.
When you're at the gym, you're in your body.
Now, can you go back in your own mind and have that feeling?
Can I?
Yes.
How?
Well, go there in your mind.
I actually imagined myself on the treadmill at my favorite gym and how that felt.
And I had a brief moment of that feeling emerge in my mind.
And what did it feel like?
Present.
Present.
Yes.
Okay.
And any other emotions that you can attach to that?
Just like calm, peaceful, without concern.
Very present.
Yeah.
Very present.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay.
What else do you do to get there?
Massages.
Massages.
You receive massages.
Yeah.
Okay. Okay. And what happens to your brain? Do you analyze what's coming and just work your butt off? Or do you allow yourself to actually drift and shift into the present moment of, oh my gosh, I'm so glad I'm here.
I allow myself to drift. Good. Where do you go? I don't know. It's like a fuzzy middle ground place. Yes. No boundaries. Some kind of limbo.
This portion of the brain up here is going to be the part that says who you are as an individual. It's your ego.
center. This hemisphere, the left hemisphere, has the picture of nature with you in the middle
because you exist in your left hemisphere. That's where the world revolves around you.
The world revolves around you. In the right hemisphere, you don't even exist. You exist as a part
of it all. So what you hear gets integrated with what you smell, with what you feel,
gets integrated in the excitement of possibility.
So I'm not working from a plan.
I'm not in the past.
I'm not in the future.
I'm not all about me.
I'm just here.
So when you're on a table, massage table,
and you're allowing yourself to go fuzzy,
that's essentially the skill set of what's going on in the right hemisphere.
When you dive into water, you swim?
Not well.
Okay.
But do you dive into water?
I do, yeah.
Okay.
Or even just in the shower.
Yeah.
When you feel, when you dive into water and you feel the water, the pressure against your body, the temperature of the water, you feel the phenomenon of wetness.
This is a present moment experiential opportunity, diving into the water.
Now, a lot of people might dive in the water because I'm racing and the whole goal is to get to the end because I got that left brain thing going on and that's the goal.
But if I'm just being, this is, you know, are you being or are you doing?
Right? When we're being, we're simply being here. We're being alive. We're being aware. We're being
an experience. So as I take in this room, I take in this whole room. My left brain says,
I'm going to focus on you, and I got these books, and I've got these things, and I got the
brains and everything, and everything's a thing. But to the right brain, everything is one thing.
And when I live my life, knowing that I can shift out of the stress circuitry of that left brain that
says more cortisol, more cortisol, do, do, do, then when I, it's the, that's the push,
the right brain is the pause. And that's why I was saying before, we're not a robot. We're
not a computer. We are a biological organism. And so we don't plug ourselves in and turn it on
and it stays on and forever until it dies and then we buy a new one. We have rhythms. We have
natural patterns and we have to push and we have to pause and we have to pause because we are
50 trillion molecular geniuses that are eating and creating waste and we need to clean up the mess
and that's what happens during sleep and so when you were stood there you'd put your clothes on
the left side of your brain was offline so you were very much in this sort of blissful euphoric
present moment state what did you do next I go through all the details of trying to
get myself help. And that meant to me the one plan I could get between shifting back out
into the euphoria of my right hemisphere where I'm just happy. I'm just there and I don't have a
plan. Why didn't you call 911? Because it was this floating in a pool of blood. It wasn't there
for me. What do you mean? Well, when you look at where my hemorrhage happened, it happened.
So language, the creation of sound and language dog, dog is a sound. It's going to come out of
Broca's area
and then Wernicke's area back here
is going to place meaning on that
sound and my hemorrhage
was impacting this whole area
and in there with language
is numbers. 9-1-1.
Didn't exist for me. It was not
an option.
You couldn't remember 911.
Didn't exist for me.
It'd be kind of like I say to you
what's 8,322
times 4 million.
It doesn't exist
for you until you figure it out 164 million 3174. I'm checking. Exactly. So, 9-1-1 didn't exist for me.
So I had to, when I would come back into the left hemisphere consciousness, then I would, I got to my phone
and I have a phone pad here, and I spent 45 minutes waffling in and out right hemisphere, left
hemisphere. And finally, I found my business card that had my phone number of work. And I had to set the
pad of the phone pad up against right next to the business card and match the shapes, the squiggles
in order to figure out how to call my office because I had no idea what numbers were. And what did you
say when the person answered on the other end? I said, this is Jill. I need help. And what came out of my
mouth was and then I thought, oh my God, it sounded like a golden retriever. And then he spoke to me
and I thought, oh my God, he sounds like a golden retriever. I had had a golden retriever and they're very
verbal. So I knew at that point, I did not know, because I could still hear myself, my language inside
of my brain. Language is very complex in this because different cells do different things. And in this
this left thinking portion, we can read, we can write, those are completely different
circuitries, we can speak, we can uncomprehend when others speak. I mean, it's complex.
So this is a busy, busy, busy place. But as long as this is the only portion of our brain
that we value, then we live based on the values of that portion of the brain. And what that
brain values is me and mine. And I want more. And that's the world we're living in.
it's selfish well it certainly is because people talk about there being a spiritual crisis in society at the moment
with many of the things you're describing the individualism the narcissism sociopathism the leaders of the world being very zero sum and how they approach economies and how they treat others you're saying that's because we're so right there over here is on the right side on the right side it's right here right now and in the right here right now what do i care
I care about connection because I'm not individualized. Here, I'm a part of the whole. I am. We are all
standing around this beautiful planet and I, man, is equal to all the other creatures and all the
other life and to the life of the planet. We are one construct here. And we either figure out how to
nurture and support and be one thing. We are one human family. In our right hemisphere, you are my
brother. I love you. I can support you. I can nurture you. I can encourage you because you're
a part of me. And then the left hemisphere comes online and says, oh, Jill, that is so inappropriate for you to
say. And he has his body space and I have my body space and we need to be formal and we need to
right and wrong and good and bad. And we need to establish how the construct of the social norm is that we
are now going to take the mass of all that we are and fit ourselves in that so that we can
communicate with one another and run a world.
You make that phone call.
You sound like a golden retriever.
What happens next?
Does your colleague get concerned?
He recognizes it is me.
It is I.
And he comes to my home.
And back in those days, we had managed care.
So you have to go to the right place or you don't get coverage.
So he took me there.
And then they took a picture of my brain.
And then they put me in an ambulance and sent me to Mass General Hospital.
And as, and I'm still curled up in a little fetal ball going, hold on, hold on.
And I was slowing down and I knew that I was becoming weaker and weaker.
And I wondered, how detached from my own ability, my own body can a person become before they can never get back inside this tiny little body?
Because I felt that I was literally energetically as big as the universe.
And what did that scan show?
It showed a major hemorrhage in the left half of the brain.
Yeah, about that size.
Actually, it was a little bigger than that on that day, but by the two and a half weeks later when they removed, that's why we have a golf ball, a golf ball-sized blood clot from the left half of my brain, two and a half weeks later, December 27.
And then I woke up and I had this huge hemorrhage.
I mean, I had this huge scar, but my mother comes rushing in and she says, speak to me, speak to me, because this is my language.
If my language cells are gone, I will have no language.
And I will struggle the rest of my life for language.
And I whispered to her, I'm better.
I'm better.
And what I meant by I'm better was that I felt bright again.
I felt bright.
I felt like whatever life was going to give me at that point in time, I had brightness.
I was still alive.
I did not die that day.
And when, you know, so many people have said,
What motivated you to get better or how can you, could you have been so happy?
And it was like, I did not die that day.
And that meant no matter how disabled I was.
I could not walk, talk, read, write, recall any of my life.
I became an infant in a woman's body at the age of 37.
I completely fell off the Harvard ladder.
And none of that mattered.
All that mattered was I was alive.
And what that meant was I had the potential to grow and heal and become whatever I would become. And it didn't matter. And it still doesn't matter. What matters is I'm alive. It's the gift of life. And that's for me the wonder of what we are as living beings. And we are at a time where we are in a mental health crisis. And our mental health is 100% dependent on the health and well-being of the brain. And the health and well-being of the brain. And the health and well-being,
of the brain is 100% dependent on the health and the well-being of the brain cells.
So how do we nurture those cells and love those cells so that we can live the life we want
to live and we can live in joy, we can live in present, we can live feeling connected to something
that is magnificent as a life force power of the universe and have this magnificent left brain
that allows me to have language, allows me to be a part of society an effective way,
and allows me to have pain from my past
so I can learn and grow from experiences that have happened to me
that I would rather not repeat.
What is the complex range of emotions you're experiencing
as you recount in the story?
Oh, awe. I feel such awe for life.
Life. This is life. This is Larry's life and there is death,
and we have life. And life is the miracle construction of the universe
argue about it all you want, have a million conversations about it, analyze it to death.
But the fact of the matter is you are alive in this moment.
You are alive.
You can say you have eyes that can see and ears that can hear and you have a digestive track
that can bring in nutrition and you have manual dexterity and you have mobility.
You have legs that can run around the planet and you have this magnificent mind so that you can do what you want to do.
You are a miracle.
And we have forgotten that.
And for me, it took me, this whole stroke experience took me straight back to the part of my brain,
that right thinking part that connects me in that transformation or that transcendence experience
of being so much more than just a little human being running around the planet.
Oh my gosh.
Life is this miracle.
And it makes me feel awe and wonder.
excites me so much. And if everybody had that and recognized that and could grasp that and
hold that, imagine the different world we'd be living in. Eight years. Eight years of recovery.
Yes. Every day, every breath, every everything I thought of nothing else other than what can I do
and what's in the way of being able to do what I want to do next
and rebuilding using what I had in the right hemisphere
to rebuild the circuits.
I knew I had language.
I knew I could speak.
I knew I had vocabulary.
I knew I had ideas.
I knew somewhere in there I had numbers.
It took four years for me to even understand what's a one.
I mean, wow.
Wow.
I did not die that day.
I did not die that day. And so I have all the possibility of what will be. And it was wide open. I wasn't
going to be a neuroscientist again because that left hemisphere. I never held myself to returning to whom I had
been before the stroke. That girl died that day as far as I was concerned. But the phenomenon was
that as I'm a gross anatomist, so I taught cadaver lab. And when you are teaching, you have a whole body there
and you're teaching medical students about what's inside of there.
You get your hands in there and you say,
I want you to slip in behind the stomach.
And I want you to slip in this hand in here.
And I want you to know the relationship between the stomach and the duodenum and the liver
and the splenic nerve and the kidney.
I want you to feel it because I want you to have a three-dimensional image of that inside of your mind
so that you can use that information.
very right-brained.
So when we learn, we learn facts and details with the left brain,
but we learn context and big picture with the right brain.
So we have these two very different ways of working it out.
I've had so many founders speak to me and say,
why didn't this particular ad that I ran on this platform work for me?
Maybe the copy wasn't good, the creative wasn't strong,
but usually the problem is they're not having the right conversation
because that ad never reached the right person.
And if you're in B2B marketing, that is much of the game.
And this is where LinkedIn ads solves that problem for you.
Their targeting is ridiculously specific.
You can target by job title, seniority, company size, industry, and even someone's
skill set.
And their network includes over a billion professionals.
About 130 million of them are decision makers.
So when you use LinkedIn ads, you're putting your brand in front of the right people.
And LinkedIn ads also drive the highest speed to be return on ad spend across all ad networks in my experience.
If you want to give them a try, head over to LinkedIn.com slash diary.
And when you spend $250 on your first LinkedIn ads campaign, you'll get an extra $250 credit from me for the next one.
That's LinkedIn.com slash diary.
Terms and conditions apply.
So you said there's four personalities in everybody's brain.
What are those four personalities?
As we're looking at the brain, just from an anatomical perspective, the way evolution happens for the mammalian brain is that there are creatures who have a spinal cord, and there are creatures like that, like worms, and then a little brain, a little medulla will form at the top of that tissue, and then now that brain controls and streamlines information processing to the rest of the system.
And then we add a ponds.
What's that?
It's just a structure of cells.
So this is the medulla.
Yeah.
We would have spinal cord there.
And this is the ponds.
Call that the ponds.
It's a group of cells.
Yeah, it's a smaller brain.
And in relationship to that ponds is this cerebellum.
And the cerebellum has this gorgeous cell in it called the Purgengi cell.
And they're like a hand.
They're like, you know, two-dimensional.
And they all line up like this.
And then fibers run through those.
and it's part of the mechanism of timing so that you have fluidity of movement because of the way
those cells are aligned. So not all cells are created equal and not all cells look alike.
Cells have the right shape for the right job. So as then we grow and now we have the mammalian brain,
we're going to have the hippocampus, you've heard of that for learning and memory, the amygdala,
you've heard that for am I safe.
Am I safe?
Are you safe?
The immediately, yeah, there's a group of cells right there that is scanning constantly.
Am I safe?
Am I safe?
And you're fine until you're not safe.
Okay, so like threat detection.
Yes, that's exactly what it is.
You have two emotional systems.
One in your left hemisphere and one in your right hemisphere.
And the right hemisphere is going to be right here right now.
Am I safe in the right here right now?
So let's say all of a sudden a snake row went by and we would jump.
we would startle because it's your right amygdala saying, oh, my gosh, am I safe?
And then the left hemisphere is going, oh, my gosh, it's a snake.
No, I'm not safe.
Push it away.
And when we're calm, that's when the hippocampi, because we have two amygdala, one in each hemisphere,
two hippocampi, one in each hemisphere.
And when the amygdala are calm and you feel safe, now you can learn and focus,
focus with the anterior, with the cingulogyrus, and learn new things.
So, so, you know, these groups of six.
cells. Now, if you wipe out an amygdala, you're not going to feel any fair. You wipe out a
language center, you're not going to have any language. You wipe out motor skills to your index finger
and you can't, you're paralyzed. So every ability you have is because we have these brain
cells that perform that function. So for the four parts of us, so we have an emotional system
in each hemisphere. The emotional system of the right hemisphere, this is a right here, right now
machine. Right here right now. That's all it has. Doesn't have the past, doesn't have the future,
doesn't know who you are. Doesn't have anxiety, depression. Well, it has anxiety, but most of that is
going to be based in the left hemisphere because this machine, the left hemisphere, has linearity
across time. So this emotional system is remembering every traumatic event that ever happened to you
that you don't want to have happen again. Is that where trauma lives in the brain? Traumas living in
there, as is addiction. Addiction, there's a group of cells in here called the insular cortex,
and that's where craving is, and that's part of the limbic system of the left hemisphere.
And if you wipe out craving, do you still have an addiction? So this is, so, so, let me just keep
going. So we have these two emotional systems, and then we have these two thinking systems.
And the thinking system is what distinguish us as humans from all of their mammals. Okay,
So our mammals, our dogs love us.
They're in any question about that.
Our dogs can punish us when we're not very, you know, we don't show up and we've sent them to doggie care if they're not happy about that.
So mammals have other forms, but we have this higher executive functioning.
And in the right hemisphere, it's right here right now.
And in the left hemisphere, it's all about me.
Because in there, in that thinking is my ego center in that prefrontal region, I, me, I exist, back here.
orientation association area, I begin and I end here. This is the package of me, the individual.
I have a language. I can create language. I can understand language. I can read. I can write.
I have mathematics in there. And this motor system controls the opposite side of my body.
So that's a personality. So what are the, to summarize them, what are the four types?
Okay. So when I look at a brain, and this is totally randomly named, and I did that because
I had to communicate about it somewhere.
So I call left thinking, character one.
And I actually give that part of my brain a name.
I call her Helen.
Hell on wheel, she gets it done.
You're talking to Helen right now.
She's giving you facts and details.
She is all about what is right and wrong and good and bad.
How do I fit myself into a society?
How do I use my words in order to communicate?
So this is part of us that goes to work.
It's our A-type personality.
Character one, left thinking.
And that's on this I hear.
Yeah.
Well, it's all, it's this.
outer. This outer layer of cells is called the cerebral cortex. And the cerebral cortex is actually
inhuman made up of mostly six layers of cells. It's very complex. In some areas, especially
where you have sensory systems, it's just going to be four layers. But this is a complex
portion of the organ that separates us from other animals. What about character two? So character
two is going to be the left emotion. Now, the difference between the things you can say predictably
about the left hemisphere is it has linearity across time and it has me the individual. And my
emotional system then has my past pain and it wants and it's kind of always looking for a reason
to knee-jerk react and have emotional reactivity. So so many people are trying to fix or heal or get
rid of their emotional reactivity. This is a portion of our brain, which is running constantly in
the background to protect us in the present moment when new information comes in. So we want to
work with that, and we want to appreciate it, and we want to love on it, and we want to be
kind to it because it's generally not very happy because it is storing all of our pain from
the past. And would you call that? Character 2. I call mine Abby. We could spend a whole
semester talking about character two. Because character two is our pain from the past. And in our
society, everything's about our pain from the past and our professional self. Character three is
going to be the emotional content of the right hemisphere. Well, this is right here right now. What am
experiencing emotionally experiential? This is where, what's the temperature of the air? What does it feel
like to have clothing on? What does that feel like on your body? When you meditate, they ask you to
become aware of your environment, right?
And focus on your breath. Exactly.
Because they want you to expand yourself one out of the thinking consciousness
and right and wrong and good and bad structure, the box that we think in of the left thinking,
and they want you to stop, you know, thinking about your girlfriend and, boy, we didn't really end it very well.
Or, boy, I had a great morning this morning.
Okay, so this is playful.
So character three, it's young.
We have two little people inside of ourselves, and that's the emotional.
they're immature we are feeling creatures as biological creatures we are feeling creatures who think so a lot of character
three's actually we have character three moments that land us in jail because it's not thinking about consequences of behavior it's just thinking oh yeah the neighbor's pool it's three o'clock in the morning they won't notice let's go jump in their pool and then the next thing we know you know we've been arrested so then character four is the thinking portion of our brain this is our this is our wisdom we we go and we have a
experiences and we learn because neuroplasticity is real and every we have to have neuroplasticity
these and this is all about the cells neurons in real time reaching out making new connections
constantly but their cell bodies are in position but in order for me to make an association
between you and something else then I actually grow to you and I grow to the something else and
then I learn about that so our capacity to learn is what
The underlying feature is neuroplasticity.
I would not be sitting here talking to you today
if neuroplasticity didn't turn on fire
when I needed it for eight years.
And it took eight years for me to use what I had in this brain
to rebuild the skill sets of this brain.
But the thinking portion,
the character four portion of our brain,
is the wisdom that we gain
from the knowledge that we have had
and we have associated it
and we can relate to it.
And this part, all it cares about is that emotion that I felt that morning, which was all,
all that I'm allowed alive at all. And when we can connect to that, people, people, you know,
it's a billion dollar industry of meditation to quiet what's going on in the left hemisphere
so that we can open up the possibility to what's going on in the right hemisphere. And it's our peace.
we are wired at the core of our being of our right-thinking tissue to feel peace.
And we do not exist in a world that is peaceful.
So if we are functioning on an extreme left brain, left thinking,
and we are emotionally volatile when people insult us,
and we're all about the me, me, me, and we have forgotten about the we,
look at the world we currently live in.
And right now, we are so skewed to me, the individual,
and I want more and I'm against you because you're not a part of my tribe.
We balance that by knowing that I'm alive.
It is this incredibly precious gift.
The odds that I had to beat just to be here.
Have you ever stopped to think about the odds you had to be just to be here?
Think about this.
Now, first of all, think about this.
The little egg cell that would evolve into you eventually, it took form.
It's about the size of, you know, it's an egg cell.
It's tiny.
but it took form during your mother's fifth week of gestation.
So your mother, your grandmother's pregnant, right, and that little egg cell that would be
your mother has now made it into the womb.
And during the fifth week of being there, the little egg cell that would grow into
you took form.
It differentiated into the ovum.
And so you, the little egg cell, witnessed the next eight months of your mother's gestation,
your mother's birth, your mother's screaming, your mother's toddler years, your mother's learning
to sing and laugh and play and learn geography and mathematics, all the way through her puberty.
And then, so she's born with some 400,000 egg cells in her two ovaries.
And out of those 400,000 egg cells, approximately 500, of those egg cells, are going to be the next follicular.
eruption month by month by month with her period and your little egg cell imagine you're hanging out
in your little ovarian follicle and it's your turn and you're getting all prepped by the hormones
of the body and you're going oh my god it's my ride right and you're this little egg cell and then
the hormones swoop by your little egg cell and it beams you out and the fembriere of the fallopian tubes
gather you up and you begin your promenade your fallopian promenade on the way road to your mother's
womb. And in that moment, your father was there for you. And you were one of the lucky ones.
And you beat the odds of all those egg cells. You beat the odds. And how can that not be something
that we celebrate the wonder of the odds you had to beat just to be here? And then for the next nine
months, that little egg cell is going to multiply its DNA, repackage that DNA. One cell becomes
two becomes four, becomes eight, becomes 16, becomes 50 trillion cells over the course of nine
months, and you're multiplying egg cells at a rate of 250,000 new cells per second, per second,
not per minute, per second. You're this explosion, and literally the energy of the universe is
what is fueling all of this from happening. You are nothing other than mass and energy working together.
and then there's you.
And it's like, how on earth can I have mental health problems
and not acknowledge and have awe for what we are?
Oh, my gosh.
And that was the gift that stroke gave to my life.
And you can see I get a little excited about it.
A little, yeah.
We are so beautiful.
We are so beautiful.
We are perfect and whole and beautiful just the way we are.
And it's like if we would become balanced as a society, we would,
I truly believe, truly believe with every essence.
of my being, that our number one job is to love one another. When we love one another and we
support one another and we encourage one another, we all grow and we will benefit as humanity.
And when that happens, we will really recognize we have fragile resources on this planet
and we need to nurture the planet as a part of us because we have a symbiotic relationship
with this planet. Tokes me up.
Why?
Because it's, you know, lots of conversations about are we going to make it or are we not going to make it?
What is the future of humanity?
Where do we go?
How do we, what happens?
We live in a threat every day of our existence, of our, you know, existence being completely blown apart.
Okay.
What are these?
I would like for you to put those on.
Okay.
No. Okay. And I just want you to sit in that for like, oh, just a, you know, 30 seconds, 20 seconds. Actually, it's pretty good look on you there.
It's like men and black. Yeah. Exactly. Okay. Now, I would like for you to pull your right one. Do you see how it's got a little, little edge? Yeah. You flip it up. It'll flip up. Yeah. And flip it all the way up. Now, what you're doing right now is you are bringing light in from the last.
portion of your visual field.
What does that mean?
So close one eye and leave one eye open.
Okay.
That's a ball.
Okay.
Down the middle is an artificial line.
Yeah.
Outside, the outside portion, that is called lateral.
And the inside side is called medial.
Okay.
And so the lateral light is now coming in and that hits the medial side of your retina.
And the retina is the back of the eyeball.
Okay.
So the light's coming in from the outside of my eye.
it's hitting the inside of my eye.
It's hitting the, it's coming out from the outside of your visual field.
It's hitting the medial, internal side of your retina.
And then those fibers are, boom, crossing over to the opposite hemisphere.
Okay, I'll put a diagram on the screen for anyone.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So right now you are purposely stimulating your left hemisphere.
So I wanted to just, how do you feel inside of your body?
Just describe a few things to me.
How do you feel, feeling analytical about anything, thinking about anything?
My back has got a little bit of a pain in it.
But otherwise, just very focused on doing this job as the host of the Dyer of a CEO.
Beautiful, just focus, which is what that left hemisphere should do.
So go ahead and flip that down.
Okay.
Yeah.
And then just, like, stay for like 20 seconds and let everything kind of equilibrate to whatever the darkness is that's in there.
Yeah.
All right.
Okay.
go ahead then pull up the other side it's a good look it's like a little flag right there
yeah okay how do you feel weirdly i felt more relaxed now or before no now i feel your whole body
just went calm yeah what else tell me something
more. Any aches or pains in your body? I just feel way more relaxed. I feel like I'm laying
low on a sun lounger. Yeah. That's what the right brain feels like. So you're bringing left
information in from that the light of the lateral side of your visual field. It's hitting the
medial portion of your retina and crossing into your right hemisphere. So what you're doing right
now is you're sending light energy photons into the right hemisphere and it is pushing through
and now this is an easy easy way for people to control and choose how they want to be between
their two hemispheres and really get to know oh how do I know this isn't just a placebo like
how do I because I said I do feel way more relaxed like I can't be bothered to carry on this in it
But if you look at the anatomy, if you look at the anatomy, this is where light is coming in on the, you can't really see it on here, but that's going to be information from your eyeballs, which would be sitting right here, right there.
This is fibers.
You're wired for this.
This is how you are wired.
That's why everything about you.
This isn't about a placebo having a behavioral impact.
This is about the anatomy of the brain.
Have they tested this in trials to see?
Absolutely. In fact, they just did a brand new one at Harvard and showed it on fMRI.
Yeah. And...
Have they done like a double blind control trial where they put these glasses on and then ask people how they feel?
Well, even more than that, they're doing, they're manipulating the light source in different kinds of ways.
I'm not involved with that work, but I know that Marty Tyshire at Harvard as well as Frederick Schiffer.
Now, Frederick Schiffer is a psychiatrist who has been doing psychiatry at Harvard Medical School
for his whole career, and he would use these types of glasses with his psychiatric patients
and would show the patient that there is a part of them that is less well and one side that is more
ill. And so he would use the relationship between these two different characters, these two
different personalities to find more peace and healing. I feel very, it's weird. I felt I just lifted
up the right side again and put the left side down. And I immediately felt, well, not immediately,
but it took a little while to 20 seconds. I felt focused again. Is that just placebo? Am I make it?
No, that's what you're wide. That's why you can feel focused because of the cells that,
you are now stimulating. In the other hemisphere, it's not about focus. It doesn't care about
focus. It cares about the big picture and your relationship to the big picture. So it's not like
the brain is just this soup of cells. These cells are very specifically organized. Every ability
you have is because you have brain cells that perform that function. And all you're doing right now
is preferentially stimulating certain cells. It's kind of like, okay, I'm going to stimulate. I'm
going to open my eyes and I'm going to experience vision. Well, that's not a placebo.
If I want to be able to actively switch between these different parts, these four personalities
in my brain so I can be most effective in a given situation, is there a practice where I can
control my brain in that way? Absolutely. In your life, this is a practice. You don't just learn it
and then go do it. This is a practice. You've got to say to yourself, first step. Step number one,
recognize in this moment am I using my left thinking judgment listening to this conversation
and what is my judgment is my judgment yes this makes sense this is interesting I want more
or is this oh this is just crap I just can't go there I got to turn it off or okay I'll give you
an example once you know who your four characters are once you have really thought about
them studied about them paid attention to what your when they come out in
you, what they feel like inside of your body, I can, I can jump between all four in an
instant because I know them so well.
But is there a practice?
You have to say, heck you come in.
So this is what I do.
So this is what I do. Well, once you know the four of them and the only way to know them
is to practice with them, get to know them, when do you get really unhappy?
Who unhappies you?
When do you want to growl at people?
I won't name her name.
And don't name a name, but you know, see, you went straight into that character too, part
you. That's the only part of you that holds grudges. Your right thinking doesn't care about that.
It doesn't even know about that because that's in the past. So here's the key. Step number one,
observe yourself. When am I being a character one? When am I at work? When am I speaking and organizing
and making a to do do list? And when do I like to be the boss? And when do I like to control? People
places, things in time, and all of that. When am I doing that? Well, you know that part of yourself
very well. He's probably called Stephen. The part of you that is not very happy, you know,
your parents probably know this part of you. Your girlfriend definitely knows this part of you,
right? Yes. Okay. When are you playful? What does it feel like? It feels completely different
than when you're at work or when you're not happy. When are you at play? And if you're not at play
much, then you might want to give yourself a little bit more play. So I was working with a group of
physicians because physicians are very busy people. And right now, the physician is a very high level
of suicide. So I care passionately about this population because they're not finding any peace.
Because society expects them to be a left thinking all the time. They're supposed to be the
authority and they can't have any mental health issues because they're the ones we go to
for mental health issues. So all they can do, they don't have time. They are.
busy, busy, and they're not very happy about it. And our system is a mess. So they're having to
deal with that. So I was working with a group and I said, okay, I want you to take a pair of chalk
outside of the ER room and I want you to draw a hopscotch. And what happened was all these
doctors in and out and these medical professionals were hopscotching in and hopscatching out.
And that, just that helped them bring their glee back just for a moment.
just for an instant.
So this is the glee, and it's exciting and it's fun,
and it's like figure out what brings you joy and do that.
And no, and this is why it really helps to know this,
because if you're going to say, okay, I'm going to go,
I'm going to go play basketball.
I come from Indiana, everybody plays basketball.
I'm going to go play basketball, and I'm going to go do it for 20 minutes.
And my character one is over here saying,
we don't have time for you to go shoot some hoops, girl.
We got business to take care of.
we're on a deadline. And little character three comes in and says, I will refresh you. I will be
your pause. I will refuel your spirit. I take the stress away from that subject. I release. I
I have all kinds of endorphins and excitement stuff going on. And then I go back and I do such a more
creative and open job because I made space instead of just the drive, drive, drive, drive, do, do,
linear, linear, linear, linear. The beauty. The beauty.
of being a human is you have all four parts of this brain. This is our design, but we are functioning
with only one online as conscious. Imagine, imagine. Imagine if you could say, in this instant,
I want to feel as though, just feel as though, whatever your spiritual beliefs or your beliefs
about a higher power, whatever, just call it the universe because we know there's a bunch of rocks
spin it around in space, and we're on one of them, hanging on for life, just being human, right?
So that's all happening. So, oh my gosh, I can say thank you to all those rocks for being in
the positions they're in so that we're still here. And I can feel this deep sense of gratitude.
And as soon as I feel that gratitude and that, oh, my God, I exist at all, and it could be over like that,
and then it's over. But right now it's a party. Life can be play. Did I ever tell you about the data
breach that we had at my previous company.
Yeah, I remember hearing about that.
Which was a total nightmare, so I'm glad that we now use OnePassword.
What actually is it, Steve?
It's called OnePassword, and they're the sponsor of the podcast now.
And they have this feature called Enterprise Password Manager, which means that if any of our
passwords across the team are compromised or leaked, then it notifies us.
And obviously, if that were to be the case, we're at huge risk across the entire team.
Through One Password, EPM, you can also store all of your sensitive information.
And it's helping us to move closer towards pass keys, which means eventually everybody will be able to log in to pretty much everything without ever having to put a password in.
Sounds like a good addition.
Yeah, I think it's like the single most impactful security edition you can make to your team, especially if your team has tons of passwords that are all like hidden in Excel files and stuff.
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do not tell anybody. That's DOAC 100. How long do you think emotions are supposed to last?
90 seconds. From the moment you think of thought, we're only doing three things inside of our brain
at any moment in time. We think thoughts, we feel emotions, and we run physiological loops to
what we're thinking and feeling. So let's say I'm going to think a thought like you did.
I said, think of somebody you're not happy with. And you went and you thought about it. And then you felt
it and we could see it in your body. So you thought the thought, oh, that's the person. I'm mad at
them. And then it's like, oh, I'm really mad at them. You can see you feel. I'm really mad at them.
And then you either act on it or you don't act on it. But if you simply observe it, it will loop right
through just like a muscle reflex. It's an emotional reflex, less than 90 seconds. Which means,
and everybody's saying, oh, I can stay mad for a whole lot longer than 90 seconds. But what you're
doing then is you're rethinking the thoughts that's restimulating the emotional loop, restimulating
the physiological response. And it just goes on forever. When you feel that emotion, is there a way to,
is there a strategy for making sure that you don't act upon it or you don't re-loop? Well, I enjoy it.
You enjoy the emotion. I enjoy it. Even if you're angry. Even if I'm angry. Thank God I'm
capable. I am wired to be mad. I am wired to be angry. I'm wired to push things away and say,
That is not okay. I get big. I get ugly. I make myself heard because that's a healthy boundary I'm going to establish. So I celebrate the fact that I'm capable of anger. I love that I can be sad. I'm glad that I can grieve. Oh my God. Grief is this powerful emotion that can consume us, totally envelop us. Take us to our knees. And it's like, it's like I have a friend right now who's about ready to pass away. Beautiful, beautiful person. She's been great.
friend in my life. I love her and I will celebrate every time the wave of emotion hits me
because that's how much I loved her. That's how much I loved her. I celebrate that I'm capable
of being taken to the floor in that kind of pain and just weave my whole soul. I mean, I'm wired
for this. This is life. Why do I want to just put myself in a little box and say, I don't want to
have grief. I don't want to have pain. I don't want to be mad. I don't want to do this. I want
to be a robot. I don't want to be a robot. I want to be a whole human. I want to be a whole human.
with a whole brain.
I want all of it.
It's delicious.
Oh, my gosh.
And it lasts this long and then it's gone.
Mmm.
Thank you.
And I'm guessing your headache feels a little.
little better.
What did you say thank you?
Because it's so rare that people will really connect with another human being for anything
more than like three seconds and then I'm uncomfortable and I can't do that anymore.
But we're here to love one another.
You're the gift of my life.
People on this planet are the gift of my life.
We are the gift of your life.
And if we are constantly judging each other negatively and pushing each other away and killing each other, we are violent against each other.
And it's like, oh my gosh, we are so off track of what we could be as whole breed living.
I truly believe the next step for our evolution is waking up the whole brain.
And if we wake up our whole brain, the game is changed.
And that becomes no.
it's not okay for us to create war. It is not okay for us to create hate. It is not okay for us to make that
division anymore. That is not what we respect and that is not what we want as humanity. We want
to be whole. We want to be the next level. We want to feel safe with each other. Are you hopeful?
Completely 100%. That doesn't mean we couldn't be gone in an instant. But yeah,
Absolutely. That's the beauty of the right hemisphere. It is hope. It's possibility. And that's why when you talk to me about AI, yes, I think a lot about AI. AI is, wow. I listen to your podcast. There's a whole lot of, wow. And I don't have that. And this is why.
You know, it's hard. It's hard. You've had some really difficult conversations about, you know, the reality of the potential dangers. But here's why that doesn't bother me. Because I have a whole brain. And my whole brain says, yes, that is that. And that is going on. And that is scary. And I think about it through the perspective of a neuroanatomist. So I see the internet is like this higher level of consciousness.
that we're feeding ourselves into and everybody's plugged in.
And now we're creating robots and consciousnesses
that will think independent of us.
So we're essentially creating an other that we cannot control.
Well, I can't control who's got those nuclear codes.
So from my perspective, I'm just glad I wake up every day.
And it's like, oh, I get another great day.
And it's like, who, possibilities.
So...
Have you always been like this?
No, this is, this really came with a stroke.
This so much came with a stroke.
Because I lost all of the box.
I lost the box.
The box.
The box of thinking.
This is right.
This is wrong.
This is the way we're going to do it.
I value money.
I was climbing the Harvard ladder.
You know, I was a little girl from Indiana.
I was climbing the Harvard ladder.
I mean, that was pretty big deal to a little girl in her family.
And so, so I was climbing the Harvard ladder.
And then, bam, that was all gone.
And when that was all gone, what I gained was connection, heart, time, possibility.
My business perspective has shifted in that I don't reach out to people.
I don't solicit.
I don't hustle.
I don't need to.
Because if I'm working, great.
I love to work.
I love my work.
It's yummy.
I mean, it's like, how can I not?
But I love to paddleboard.
I live half of a life, half my time on a boat, out in a beautiful cove,
pretty much in isolation with the bear and the deer and the fish and the bobcat.
I live in nature.
I live the life I want to live.
And then I get off the boat and I come and visit people.
And we talk.
Or I go and I do whatever it is I'm doing.
How do you not have this joke?
How different do you think your life would look?
Oh, I'd be probably a professor of,
neuroanademy at Harvard Medical School, teaching and performing research, doing that thing.
That was my dream.
Do you think you'd be happier or less happy?
Oh, no, I'm so glad I had that stroke.
I am so glad I had the stroke.
It set me free.
It set me free.
Having the stroke set me free from having to live a life based on other people's expectations
about what my life should be.
Because it changed something in your brain?
Because that went totally offline and it wasn't going to be a job.
choice anymore. Is it still offline? No. So it went offline, which allowed you to focus on other things.
Think about the brain. Think about your consciousness. And think about you have four parts of you.
And all four parts are always running. And they're kind of vying for the microphone.
Who's going to talk in this moment, right? Who's going to think what? Who's going to perform what?
Who's going to do what? So we have these whole brains. And then imagine that you lose your
business sense. You lose that guy. Character one. Character one falls off the planet. Which is the
facts, factual part, the working part. So that would leave me with just the sort of emotional part
and the present part and the wisdom. Yes. So do you miss it? Well, it's gone. Your ego has pretty
much dissolved because that's a part of it. But you might be angry. You might be angry because I was doing
so well and I was living life and I liked those facts and da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da. I wanted to do more business. And I
wanted to do more businesses and I, and you are that guy. I mean, you are so diverse in your
business. You are so good at being character one. But let's say he goes offline. What do you have
left? So my character went offline. Would you still value? Would you have value? What value would
you have if you weren't him? Tell me. I think my girlfriend would appreciate me still. My dog
would probably appreciate me.
Maybe more because you'd probably spend a little more time with it.
Yeah, probably, yeah.
My girlfriend would definitely appreciate me more.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Because you'd have time.
You wouldn't be running that wheel.
You'd be a different part of you.
And then if you can master and help heal your pain from the past
or your disgruntled self that, well, you know, I had this problem
and now I can't use my left arm.
And so I'm going to be a miserable human being the rest of my life because my left arm doesn't work anymore.
So how do we do that?
How do we heal our trauma from the past from a neurological perspective?
Well, I think what we do is we recognize, first of all, the question, everybody wants to heal it.
So the way to heal it is not to get rid of it.
I cannot get rid of my trauma from the past.
My pain from the past is real.
And it is mine.
and it is expansive and it is mine and everybody has their pain from the past their trauma we all have
trauma so what do i do i do i do i let that trauma just fester in that character too part of my brain
and then i just look at everyone else who's not like me now and say well you didn't have any trauma
you know you're better off than i am nah la la la you know i start making a negative hostile judgment
about, well, this is my trauma and I want to protect it.
The purpose of trauma is to say to you, you're a biological creature.
You're in the present moment.
You're a real human being.
You have a life.
My life, part of my life is my trauma.
And I will bounce from trauma to trauma to trauma to trauma.
And if I look at the trauma and say, this is a horrible thing.
Well, maybe it was a horrible thing.
And maybe that was 30 years ago and that was a horrible thing.
And the more you think about it and you root into it,
And the more often we run a circuit, the more of that circuit stronger that gets and begins to run on automatic.
And so now I'm always worrying about, oh, my God, am I going to have more trauma?
And I put all my energy into that trauma.
Well, what am I doing?
It's just the same as if I'm just a workaholic and doing nothing but character one.
And so the power of whole brain living is to know that I have four parts of me.
And that trauma is important information.
And let's say I was attacked or I was raped or I had a horrible experience with a person.
And now in the future, whenever I see a person that looks remotely like that, I need jerk away from that because I perceive myself from my drama that that's not safe.
So I push it away.
That is an appropriate response.
But then I say, oh, but this is actually a different person.
And I can open up my right hemisphere and with curiosity, look at this new person and say,
Well, you might look like somebody who hurt me many years ago, but you're not that person. Who are you? And make a
connection in the present. So the trauma is supposed to be information. We get in trouble when we turn it into a
lifestyle. So how do I heal that? I acknowledge it. I value it. I say thank you to it. I acknowledge
its purpose. And I pull my energy into the other parts of my brain. My character for Queen Toad can come
in and self-soothe me and hold me?
And what would character for say to the trauma?
You're loved. You're okay. Thank you.
Thank you for this information.
Thank you. And hold it. Well, trauma needs to be heard.
It needs to be held and it needs to be heard.
And then it can like transform itself into the next level of, oh, okay, I'm okay,
even though I had that trauma. Even though I had this stroke that all but killed me,
I'm not resentful.
Why would I be resentful?
It's my life.
This happened to be the life story of me.
We all have a life story.
So the question is, how much energy am I going to put into that and hold myself back
when I have all these other incredible possibilities?
And if I was hurt or I was raped, then I can actually, if I want to take that anger because
I matter than hell about it, then I can advocate for other people to help,
women get self-defense courses so that we can actually protect ourselves.
I mean, I can turn it into something else.
I can make lemonade out of lemons.
We all can.
We're wired for that.
You've talked a lot about how you think about the brain from a cellular perspective
and how we keep it healthy from a cellular perspective.
So I wanted to get some of your advice on lifestyle choices that I should be making
to have an optimally healthy brain at the cellular level.
Number one, sleep.
sleep is everything sleep sleep these are billions 800 billion cells that are eating and creating waste
for you to have a consciousness in every instant imagine the number of cells it takes for you
to just look at me and have a relationship in this moment with me I mean your brain is working hard
so it's eating it's creating waste go to sleep sleep should be a priority
And if you sleep, then the microglia can come out and then all the garbage and waste can get
cleaned up. The waste gets pushed away. And you wake up crisp and fresh the next day because
your brain cells have been taken care of. What are you feeding them? If you are feeding them
preservatives, you are preserving them. Oh my gosh, pay attention to what you're consuming.
Fresh fruits, fresh vegetables, try to do it if, you know, I know we exist in a world we're not
everybody can eat organic, but boy, pesticides are poison. So paying attention to what we are
consuming. How much sugar are we eating? Sugar is just not a healthy choice, no matter what.
Now, I love chocolate and I'm going to eat chocolate. It's my, you know, vice. I'm going to do it
anyway. Dark chocolate. It's a bean. It's a vegetable. Somebody said that to me once
that I believed him. Okay, so, um, what do you eat? Movement. You have to move your body. You are an
organism. So many of us think that, especially if we're in that character one left thinking brain,
my body is designed to like move my left, my brain around. No, you are an organism. So finding
ways to get yourself into the different characters is great for you. If you can't get into
your body, name for me a song, if you would, that is,
soon as you start in on it your body goes we'll get your beat going give me one why did i think
of gigs walking the hardest um um and do it no i can't i can't do it yes you can't do it was no it was
i was thinking of because it's playing outside before we started recording i was thinking of
olivia dean's new song man i need but i can't sit here and sing man i need and then well then
don't sing it just get so so for me she's like i got to make you do exactly yeah yeah but that
was forced. Now, can you do it like you mean it?
We ought to put the glasses back on you and see what happens.
Okay, for me, I'm disco era.
Bomb, bump, bump, I want some hot stuff, baby.
I cannot not do this. I become my body. All of me.
It's like dance like nobody's watching. That's what character three is all about.
So why is that important for a healthy brain at a cellular level?
Oh my gosh, it's the break. It's the pause. It's the fun. It's the joy.
It's the present moment connection.
What is my life going to be like if I don't have any of those things I just listed?
To exercise, quality, sleep, nutrition.
Hydration.
Hydration.
Hydration.
Why is that simple?
Oh, my God.
Your body is nothing but cells connected to one another.
And cells are filled with water and the space between them is filled with water.
And it's a delicate balance of what atoms and molecules are inside the cells.
versus outside the cells, but you're just a big liquid ball.
Excuse me.
Yes, you are.
I said it and I meant it.
That's what you are.
You are a fleshy ball of you.
That's it.
Water, you need to be hydrated.
Now, you can't overhydrate.
If we overhydrate, then we're distilling what's going on in those populations of in the cell or extracellular matrix.
So don't just, you know, drink your.
weight in water every day. But you have to stay hydrated. What about learning? Is it good for the brain?
Oh, yes. Yeah. It's wonderful. When I learn, let's say I'm going to learn to do a sport.
Yeah. So, and let's say that sport's going to be tennis. Yeah. And so I'm going to go to my
character one and character one is going to say, okay, this is how you hold the racket and
this is how you hold your body. And this is where, how you're going to swing that and try that.
And so left hemisphere comes in, it gives you the plan, and it gives you the details, and you do that.
And then at some point, you've done it enough that now you're just going to start whacking a ball, right?
Wacking a ball.
And you're going to practice it over and over again.
And then it gets, like, really fun.
And then it's back in your body.
And now we're back to girls just want to have fun.
You know, I mean, we're back into character three.
Well, we know alcohol's bad.
Well, you're drunk because your cells are drunk.
I mean, just think about it.
If I'm going to consume alcohol, it's going to.
going to suck the water out of those cells, they're going to be dehydrated and I'm going to end up
with a headache. And when they get fragile, because the membrane has been drunk, drunk, drunk,
you know, abused, abused, abused, eventually they tend to creanate and blow up and that's the end of
those cells. So alcohol is not good. Addiction is, you know, we exist in a society and I think that
this is important. We exist in a society where the left hemisphere, especially character two,
our cravings and addictions are, is if I'm not happy because I'm not living a fulfilled life because
I'm on YouTube or I'm watching social media and all these people are getting all these clicks
and I'm not getting all these clicks and I'm not living this lavish life that these other people
are living and I'm down on me and I'm just like not very happy. I'm going to make poor choices
because that is what that part of us is designed to do. So I say take responsibility for the
energy you bring into a room. And if you pay attention to who walks in,
and what party you walks in and you come in as a whole person,
now I am completely available to master the moment, whatever the moment is.
Dr. Jill, Volte, Taylor.
Uh-oh.
If you had a closing message for my audience,
something that maybe a subject we've missed.
Yeah.
Or something that you think is the most important thing to close upon,
what would it be?
Your life is worth 30 seconds.
If you're in your car and you're getting ready to pull out between those two cars that are coming,
your life is worth 30 seconds take a breath take a pause and save your own life it has changed my life
as soon as somebody said to me jill isn't your life worth 30 seconds and i thought to myself oh my gosh
actually it is and what does that mean it means just relax it means i'm not going to try to squeeze
myself into boxes where i maybe don't fit or belong i'm going to pause
Physically, I'm talking about physical, physical. So seriously, if you're driving...
Okay, so you're saying slow down.
Slow down. 30 seconds. Your life is worth 30 seconds. Be conscious about it.
Thank you. Very fascinating. Incredibly fascinating. You have a remarkable energy and you have a wonderful
way of reminding me of the, I guess transitioning me from the working factual part of my brain
to being more present in the moment. And I imagine,
you've done that for everybody that's listened today.
There's a real pureness to you that I wonder
if many of us might have just lost along the way somehow.
So thank you so much for being who you are.
And your journeys are unbelievably incredible,
unbelievably inspiring.
And the fact that you've been so centred on gratitude
and an appreciation for life despite all that you've been through
is a remarkable thing.
We have a closing tradition on this podcast
with the Laskos leaves a question for the next,
not knowing who it's for.
And the question left for you,
is what do you do when your life doesn't turn out the way that you had hoped?
I think the universe. That option wasn't for me.
Next.
So easy. So easy. Thank you to that right hemisphere consciousness that connected to the universe
with all those atoms and molecules and big old rocks floating around that that wasn't meant.
for me, something better is on its way. Or I'm going to go paddleboard. I'm perfectly good with
that. Thank you so much. Thank you. If there's anything we need, it is connection, especially in
the world we're living in today. And that is exactly why we created these conversation cards,
because on this show, when I sit here with my guests and have those deep, intimate conversations,
this remarkable thing happens time and time again.
We feel deeply connected to each other.
At the end of every episode, the guest I'm interviewing
leaves a question for the next guest,
and we've turned them into these conversation cards.
And we've added these twist cards to make your conversations even more interesting.
And there are so many more twists along the way with the conversation cards.
This is the brand new edition.
And for the first time ever, I've added to the pack this gold card,
which is an exclusive question from me.
But I'm only putting the gold cards in.
the first run of conversation cards.
So if you want them, join the waitlist now
and you'll get early access when they get released.
Head to the link in the description below.
A couple of weeks ago, we took all of our team here at the Dyer of a CO to Miorca, thanks to all of you guys,
and thanks to the fact that we had hit 10 billion subscribers.
So we went there to celebrate.
And as we were sat in Miorca talking about a variety of things, one of my team members referenced
that they had put their house on Airbnb the day they had left to come to Miorca to make some extra money.
And as we talked through this, it became abundantly clear to me that this is a huge opportunity
for all of my listeners.
When you go away, when your house is empty, you have the potential to make some extra money
just by listing your house on Airbnb.
And as you probably know, Airbnb are a sponsor of this podcast.
And it shocks me that more people haven't considered this.
Hosting your property on Airbnb when you go away is a no-brainer to me,
especially if it's sat there doing nothing.
And do you know what?
I think that your home, sat there while you're away,
might just be worth more than you think.
And if you want to find out exactly how much it's worth,
go to Airbnb.c.ca.
slash host and you can find out how much you could be making while your home is sat empty and you're away on holiday
