The Dr. Hyman Show - Is It Possible to Truly Heal From Trauma? with Dr. Jim Gordon
Episode Date: September 18, 2019Trauma comes in many forms, and it’s something we’re all going to face at one point or another. Though it might seem in the moment that we should push away negative feelings and pretend everything... is fine, true healing can’t happen unless we open ourselves to our traumatic experiences and work through them. Despite what many of us in search of help have been told, this doesn’t necessarily need to involve years of therapy or countless medications—we already have tools existing within each of us to work through the emotional, mental, and physical effects of trauma and feel happier and healthier. I think you’ll be surprised just how accessible some of these solutions are. This week on The Doctor’s Farmacy, I’m joined by Dr. Jim Gordon to take a further look into healing trauma. He is one of the most extraordinary men I've ever met and I’ve been lucky to call him a friend for 20 years. Dr. Gordon is the author of The Transformation: Discovering Wholeness and Healing After Trauma and is a Harvard educated psychiatrist and a world-renowned expert in using mind-body medicine to heal depression, anxiety, and psychological trauma. He has worked with traumatized children and families in Bosnia, Gaza, Haiti, post-9/11 New York, and Parkland, among many other areas across the world facing tragedy and trauma. Dr. Gordon also works with veterans and active-duty military to address PTSD. This episode of The Doctor’s Farmacy is brought to you by Thrive Market. Thrive Market has made it so easy for me to stay healthy, even with my intense travel schedule. I never let myself get into a food emergency. Instead, I always carry enough food with me when I’m on the go, for at least a full day. I order real, whole foods online from Thrive Market. Right now, Thrive is offering all Doctor’s Farmacy listeners a great deal: you will receive an extra 25% off your first purchase plus a free 30-day membership to Thrive. There’s no minimum amount to buy and no code at checkout. All you have to do is head over to http://thrivemarket.com/farmacy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Coming up on this week's episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
You have to have compassion for yourself if you're reaching for the chunky monkey after
something terrible has happened. But then at a certain point, it becomes necessary,
if you're going to heal from the trauma, to begin to reverse some of those dietary choices.
Hey everybody, it's Dr. Mark Hyman.
Now imagine if there was one place that had everything you need to eat and live well.
From your favorite foods like organic dark chocolate and wild-caught salmon, to your favorite natural cleaning supplies and even your favorite supplements and skin care items.
What if there was one place that covered all these bases?
Well, Thrive Market is exactly that place.
And it helped me stay fully stocked in all the high quality items I love at incredible prices.
They have thousands of products including gluten-free, dairy-free, certified organic, fair trade, and other certifications that let you know you're getting something that
you can really trust. Now, the days of running the three different stores to buy natural food
items, household products like detergent, toilet paper, and personal care items are over. With one
simple checkout, you can have them delivered right to your doorstep at amazing prices from
Thrive Market. Thrive has truly changed how I shop for the better.
Now, smoothies are one of my favorite ways to get a lot of nutrition into a really tasty package.
They allow for so many variations of greens and berries and nuts and spices and herbs and nut
milks. You can create something delicious and different every single time. Now, when it comes to using a dairy free milk in my smoothies, I've discovered a new favorite. It's called Milkadamia macadamia milk
from Thrive Market. And it gives those smoothies a super creamy texture with the great flavor and
healthy fats of wholesome macadamia nuts. And at Thrive, you can get Milkadamia for a huge percent less than your average supermarket
or health food store. I love using unsweetened vanilla with blueberries, spinach, cashew butter,
collagen powder for my morning pick-me-up, or even using it in a homemade latte. So do yourself a
favor and order some Milkadamia from Thrive Market today and experiment with your own smoothies
to find your new favorite recipe.
So not only does Thrive offer great deals and carry all my favorite brands, but they also give
back. For every membership purchased, they give a membership to a family who's in need. And right
now, Thrive is offering all of our Doctors Pharmacy listeners a fabulous deal. You're going to receive an extra 25% off your first purchase,
plus a free 30-day membership to Thrive.
There's no minimum amount to buy.
There's no code at the checkout.
All you have to do is head over to thrivemarket.com forward slash pharmacy.
That's thrivemarket.com forward slash pharmacy.
That's with an F, F-A-R-M-A-C-Y.
I think you're going to love them as much as I do. I'm really proud to have them as a sponsor and to be an investor in their company. All right, let's get
back to the episode. Welcome to The Doctor's Pharmacy. This is Dr. Mark Hyman, and this is
Doctor's Pharmacy with an F, F-A-R-M-A-C-Y, a place for conversations
that matter.
And today's conversation I think is going to matter to a lot of people because it's
about trauma and it's with one of the most extraordinary men I've ever met who's been
a friend for over 20 years, who I first met when he was the chairman of the commission
on complementary and alternative medicine under President Clinton, where I actually
was a very
green doctor testifying about the benefits of functional medicine way back when. And Jim has
been an inspiration to me ever since because he's one of the guys who, when there's trouble,
he doesn't run away. He goes right towards it. He's like the firefighter who goes into the
burning building. Whenever he's running out, he's running in. And he's done some extraordinary work, particularly around trauma. And today we're going to talk about
trauma in his new book, Transformation, Discovering Wholeness and Healing After Trauma. Jim's a
Harvard-educated psychiatrist. He's a world-renowned expert in using mind-body medicine to help heal
depression, anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder, and psychological trauma.
He's the founder and executive director of the Center for Mind-Body Medicine on I'm On
the Board.
And he also runs extraordinary courses called Food is Medicine and Mind-Body Training Programs
for health professionals.
And he's just an extraordinary guy.
He's created really groundbreaking programs for doctors, for medical students, and health
professionals. He's created programs for helping people with, for medical students, and health professionals.
He's created programs for helping people with cancer, depression, and chronic illness.
And he's gone into some of the most troubled areas in the world over the last decades doing
extraordinary work, bringing healing and understanding in areas of severe trauma.
And I'm talking about a little trauma.
I'm talking about bad trauma.
People who were living in the ravages of the
aftermath of the war in Bosnia, in Kosovo, Israel. He goes to Gaza where there's Palestinians and
Jews bringing them together to heal trauma. He goes to Haiti after the earthquake. He's worked
with Syrian refugees in Jordan. He's gone into post 9-11 New York and dealt with the trauma
of survivors of that. And he's also gone into Katrina in Louisiana,
where Katrina was really devastating to that community.
He's also gone to the Pine Ridge Reservation and worked with Native Americans
where suicide rates were off the chart in youth and has dramatically reduced that.
He's worked with veterans in the military.
He's published papers on his work in major journals.
And he's also the author of a great book called Unstuck,
your guide to the seven-stage journey out of depression.uck, Your Guide to the Seven Stage Journey Out of Depression.
So Jim, welcome to the doctor's pharmacy.
Thank you, Mark, and thank you for that introduction too.
It's great to be here and to be with you.
Yeah, well Jim, your work is pretty important and you've taken on something that very few
people really have had luck with.
Trauma is extraordinarily common.
In your book, you talk about the fact that 60% of
adults have experienced trauma in their life, that one in four kids have experienced abuse.
And that in this society, we're seeing the effects of that, the opioid epidemic,
the increasing rates of depression, anxiety, the post-traumatic stress disorder,
the violence, the mental illness, the shootings. I mean, it's just devastating to our society.
And the conflict we experience as a result of it is one of those things that is just really troubling to me.
And also, it's troubling to the medical profession because we don't have a real clear pathway to fix it.
And yet your work is really groundbreaking.
It's something groundbreaking. It's
something different. It's something really that goes to the heart of what's at the root of the
trauma and has been successful in places where nothing else has worked. And that's what's so
important about your book because you've been out there doing the hard work. You've been in Parkland
after the shootings. You've been again in Haiti and Gaza and all these places doing the hard work.
And you took a little time out of all that global traveling to actually write this book and share what you've learned and share the methodology and share a pathway for people
who are suffering, which is probably most of us in some way or another, to actually
heal.
And this is a great gift.
So I encourage everybody to check out the book, Transformation.
It's actually The Transformation.
The Transformation.
My editor said you have to add the the.
The Transformation.
Discovering Wholeness and Healing After Trauma.
So I want to start off by asking you, how did you get into this?
Because, you know, most people, they think there's an earthquake or a hurricane. They're going the other direction. You're going right into it.
Well, you know, I think it's part of being a doctor. When I became a physician, even as a
young kid, I wanted to be helpful to people. And I wanted to be there when people were going through
difficult times. That's really what we do as doctors. You were an ER physician for a long time, so you know that.
And there's a certain real satisfaction that I think all of us have in being useful to other people.
As a doctor, we have the great privilege of that we even get paid to be useful to other people.
And so to be there, I recognize really from the beginning as a medical student that I'd like to be there with people when they were going through crises.
And that by listening to them and then helping them to find solutions, I could really make a difference in their lives.
So that's how I got into it.
I got into it from right in medical school.
I think the thing is that we have to understand is that some of the examples you
gave of the places we work, the trauma is very dramatic. It affects the whole population.
And trauma is going to come to all of us. If it doesn't come early in life, it's going to come
in midlife with illnesses or divorce or difficulties losing a job or issues with wondering who we are.
And if it doesn't come then, it's gonna come
if we're lucky enough to get older as we grow older
and become frail and deal with losses of people
and deal with our own death, that's traumatic.
So you basically have taken the things you've learned
from going to the places with the worst trauma.
I mean, in war zones, in disaster areas where people have really suffered extraordinary loss. And you've
taken that insight, which has worked when nothing else has worked. And you brought it into a way
that everybody who's dealt with some level of trauma can heal. That's exactly right. And what
those people do and what I show in the transformation is that these people who've been through these extraordinarily difficult times are able to move through and beyond the trauma.
And that's been obviously important to them, but also inspiring to me to see that the simple techniques of self-care that we teach them and have group support can make it possible. And I hope it will be inspiring to other people because I keep, I'm constantly amazed at what
human beings are capable of in terms of helping and healing themselves and reaching out to
others.
It's so true.
And you know, you're a Harvard trained psychiatrist.
You worked at the National Institutes of Mental Health.
Your tools you got were medication and talk therapy.
And while talk therapy can be helpful and medication can be helpful sometimes, you found that they really weren't enough.
And you developed a whole different way of thinking about how people can heal.
It seems to be far more effective. Can you talk about how you came to that and what that is?
Well, I think right from the beginning of my work, even as a medical student,
I was always interested in what people could do for themselves to help and heal themselves,
how their way of looking at the world and the things that they discovered for themselves could
help and heal them. And then once I began to work at the National Institute of Mental Health,
I got very interested in what we then called holistic or alternative or integrative medicine. And
I began to explore all these different approaches. First for myself, meditation and guided imagery.
I learned guided imagery from Ruth Carter Stapleton, Jimmy Carter's sister in the 70s.
Wow.
I was learning meditation from different teachers. I started looking at Chinese medicine,
which I practice. I was learning how if I used my body with Tai Chi or yoga, I would feel much better
and how if I ate differently.
So I experimented with all these things on myself first, and then I began to share them
and to develop a comprehensive program that I could share first with my patients in my
practice and then with whole populations that have been traumatized.
And it's an approach that is really educational and respectful.
It's saying we have this extraordinary capacity inside ourselves, which you know so well,
that we have the capacity to change our brain chemistry, to change the way our GI tract
works, to change the way we look at the world. So why not mobilize
that capacity first and be there for people to help them move along this path, either in person
or through a book like The Transformation? Now, one of the things that's sort of striking about
your work is that, you know, you can use these tools one-on-one with people and they can be
effective. And we're going to talk about some of those tools. But what you found is that when you put people in groups, when you get people to reveal themselves,
to have a safe and sacred space to tell their stories, to confront the feelings that they have,
to actually have tools like drawing and dancing and shaking and talking and all the music. I mean,
just stuff that's not, I mean,
what psychiatrist gets up with their patients and started shaking and dancing.
I mean, it's a kind of a weird thing, but it seems to work really well.
Well, you know, if the psychiatrists were doing it more themselves,
they might want to share it with their patients.
But what's so amazing is that when you put people in these groups,
it's the group is the medicine, the community is is the medicine and that creates a lot of the healing so can you talk about how you went
from the one-on-one psychiatric model to this group model which you use to train healthcare
professionals you use to train trainers who can then lead groups their countries you use it to
work with people in in in areas of great suffering yeah and And now we're actually doing groups. We're training many
peer counselors. We're training veterans to use this model that we're talking about with other
veterans. We're training teenage kids at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland where the
shootings were. We're training the peer counselors there to use our model with other kids. So the group is really important.
We have forgotten that in medicine.
All of our colleagues from Aboriginal societies, all the indigenous people around the world.
All our medicine men colleagues.
They know that the group is vital.
When you have a really serious physical or emotional problem, they bring people together. When you're
going through a difficult time, that connection with other people is so important. So all the
techniques are crucial to the healing. And it's also the other part of it that makes it so much
richer is being able to share what you're learning with other people. And I advise in the transformation, although I teach all the techniques, I'm also saying
and connect with other people.
Reach out when you're doing meditation or guided imagery and it comes into your mind,
oh, I should call up my brother or my sister or my aunt or my friend.
Pay attention to that and reach out to that person and share what you're going through
with that person.
It's true. You know, it's in your book your book you you talk about you know the medicine man and the
shamans you said uh you know the the timeless wisdom of the shamans who are planet's oldest
indigenous healers um and great spiritual and religious traditions tell us that suffering
is the soil in which wisdom and compassion grow. These are your words. It's the school from which we graduate committed to healing others hurt.
And you also say that recent scientific evidence bears this out.
And so we tend to shy away from suffering.
We tend to be afraid of suffering.
We tend to kind of try to push the pain down or look away.
But in a way, it's the pathway to compassion, awakening, fulfillment.
It is.
Healing.
Yes.
And that comes both out of traditional wisdom, also comes out of my own experience.
It's not that I'm choosing to suffer.
Yeah.
And when I have-
Oh, we're Jewish.
It's part of the thing.
Just, you know, it's in our DNA.
Well, that could be. of the thing just you know but even if you're not jewish it's gonna come with you no matter
what your religious persuasion it's gonna come and the question is we like to suffer it are you
gonna fight against it or if you're gonna accept what you can learn from that suffering and often
what the suffering does is it breaks down some of the structures that
weren't working. And it almost always, if you're willing to pay attention, opens your heart because
your own suffering makes you much more tender toward other people who are also suffering.
Yeah, that's true. You know, 25 years ago when I got very sick from mercury poisoning,
I had chronic fatigue. I could barely function. I was so ill. And in that process, I began to understand, you know,
what other people suffer from. And it allowed me to be a much better doctor because when people
came in complaining of all this weird stuff, I didn't think, oh, they were crazy. I thought,
wow, they're really suffering. And it's my job to figure it out and to, you know, make it safe
for them to tell their story and to give them a path to heal. And for me as a physician,
I really wanted to heal myself, but also it drove me to learn as much as I could about how to heal
my patients. Yes. That's beautiful. And that's, that's should be in some way, part of every
physician's education. I think one of the problems for physicians is they try to keep themselves,
hold themselves back from the suffering.
We need to experience our own suffering so we can be present with other people when they're going through really difficult times.
Yeah, that's true.
I mean, historically, shamans and medicine men usually came out of some trauma.
Exactly.
Went through some horrible experience that then led them to have this awakening and be able to be healers. And if they didn't have it on their own, the shaman who picked out a young person
who might be appropriate to be the next shaman would create some kind of ordeal. So they could
really discover who they are, what's possible for them. So let's go into what is trauma and
what are people experiencing and how is it the same or different than post-traumatic stress or ptsd well trauma is a greek word first of all and it means injury
injury to the body mind or spirit post-traumatic stress disorder is a a diagnosis in the psychiatric
diagnostic and statistical manual and it consists of a whole constellation of symptoms as i said everybody is going to
experience trauma sooner or later and the transformation is written for everybody
included in that group are the percentage of people who experience what can be diagnosed
as post-traumatic stress disorder so after something has happened that is devastating to them in some way, and
what that something is, is different for different people, they manifest a whole bunch of symptoms,
including anxiety, agitation, difficulty focusing, irritability. That's one set of symptoms. They become preoccupied with what happened to them
before. They have nightmares and flashbacks of what happened. Panic attacks are part of the first
set. Yeah. If you think about trauma and post-traumatic stress disorder, what you have
in post-traumatic stress disorder is a prolongation of responses that are potentially life-saving, but that
are meant to be turned on quickly and turned off quickly.
So the fight or flight response.
We all need the fight or flight response to deal with threatening situations.
But if it goes on, if after the traumatic event, you're still, your heartbeat is still
going fast, your blood pressure's up, your muscles are tense, what's going to happen is you're going to get irritable. You're not going heartbeat is still going fast. Your blood pressure's up. Your muscles are tense.
What's going to happen is you're going to get irritable.
You're not going to focus well.
You're not going to sleep well.
You're going to be sort of aggressive and fearful all the time.
That's one.
That's because fight or flight's continuing.
Another set of symptoms that happens when we're traumatized seriously is what's called the freeze response. When we shut down, and that's shaped by another part of the autonomic nervous system.
Fight or flight is what's called, as you well know, the sympathetic nervous system.
The freeze response comes out of the oldest part of the parasympathetic nervous system.
So when we're completely overwhelmed, for example, if there's an assault or we're in
the middle of a war or there's a hurricane and we can't leave our homes and we can't
get away, we tend to shut down and withdraw and close ourselves off and resist the situation
that's going on.
That can be helpful in the immediate situation because we put out endorphins.
It numbs our pain pain we don't have to
deal with a full psychological impact but if that continues for weeks and months we become somebody
who's kind of a shut-in shut it yeah exactly shut in we uh our bodies shut down we don't trust other
people we can't connect and that's because parts of our brain that make it possible to connect with other people have shut down. So literally, it's not only a psychological
problem, it's a physiologic, biological problem. Absolutely. There are major biological changes
that come with trauma. And with post-traumatic stress disorder, those changes continue. And they
make us the part of the diagnosis that we're no longer functional the way that we were.
So when I see the kids, you mentioned Gaza, the kids in Gaza after a war, they can't concentrate in school.
They're just, you know, kids who are A students start to fail in school.
Same thing is happening.
This is not just the Palestinian kids in the south of Israel where rockets are coming from Gaza.
Many of those kids are in the same of Israel, where rockets are coming from Gaza.
Many of those kids are in the same kind of situation after the war is over. So it's an ongoing biological problem.
And what we have is hyper stimulation of the parts of our brain that are responsible.
Amygdala is one of the parts of the brain and the emotional brain responsible for fear and anger and a
subduing of the parts of our brain for example in the frontal part of our cerebral cortex
parts that are responsible for uh good judgment and self-awareness and compassion function right
yeah and they shut and they shut down so you're you know you're irritable you're angry you're
fearful and you can't think straight it's It's a very difficult situation to be in.
And it's not that you're a bad person.
It's not that you, even though it's diagnosed as a disorder, it's not like you've got a
disease that's going to go on and on and on.
It's like a broken record.
You know, like it just skips.
So you get into a, you get initially a scratch and then you just stay in that loop.
And your methodology helps people break that
loop and the transformation the book is really a pathway for people to start to break that loop
exactly and then one of the central parts of that you're right you're stuck in the past it's as if
the the war is long over the assault is over the you know somebody who died died a couple years
ago but you're it's still as if you're there
in that moment.
You're stuck in that previous moment.
And you're worried also that it's going to happen again.
So you're stuck between the past that you can't do anything about and the future that
you can't do anything about.
And a major part and a beginning part of the work we do is bringing people into the present.
Meditation is the time-honored way to bring us into relaxed moment-to-moment awareness of what's happening to us right now.
And you have people use the breath, the soft belly breathing, which is a technique.
Soft belly breathing.
We can do a minute or two.
We can teach.
This is the techniques.
I was doing a workshop with a number of traumatized people this weekend.
And somebody said to me, as I was teaching many techniques, she said, this is not always easy.
I said, no, it's not always easy, but it is simple.
Right.
And soft belly breathing is just, as you know, because we've done it together, it's just simply sitting quietly and closing your eyes
and breathing in through your nose and out through your mouth.
Don't close your eyes if you're driving.
Belly soft and relaxed.
Don't do this while you're driving.
And just breathing deeply in through the nose, out through the mouth
with the belly soft and relaxed.
And focusing, this is technically a concentrative meditation.
And we're focusing on the breath, on the word soft as we breathe in and belly as we breathe out,
and on the feeling of our belly being relaxed. And as we do this, more air is going to the bottom of the lungs,
more oxygen is going to all the cells in our bodies
and helping them to feed them and helping them to be healthier.
And we're activating the vagus nerve.
V-A-G-U-S means wandering in Latin.
Not Las Vegas. Not the Las Vegas nerve. Not the Lasus nerve. V-A-G-U-S means wandering in Latin. Not Las Vegas, but not the Las Vegas nerve.
Not the Las Vegas nerve, the V-A-G-U-S. And that nerve is the antidote to the fight or flight
response. And it quiets activity in the amygdala, the center of fear and anger in the brain.
So you have pathways to actually access different parts of your brain and these are the techniques you teach and they really work. Exactly. This is all, it's all
grounded in our biology. And there's a lot of great science behind this. Yeah, the science now
is showing that meditation, simple techniques like soft belly can not only help the brain to
function better and more effectively and help us to integrate parts of the brain like the left and right hemisphere
that have been disrupted with trauma, but also we can build new brain tissue.
We can decrease the amount of not only activity, but tissue in the amygdala,
the fear and anger center.
We can increase the amount of brain tissue in the hippocampus,
which is responsible for memory and modulating the stress response.
And we can increase brain tissue in the frontal cortex in those areas responsible for self-awareness
and judgment and compassion.
You literally can grow new brain in the right spots and you can calm down brain that's overactive
in the wrong spots.
Exactly.
It's unbelievable.
Exactly.
And there's lots of science.
There was research done at Harvard, Sarah Lazar, Britta Holtzl, research done at University
of California, San Francisco, more and more.
Look, if meditation were patentable and profitable, every physician on the planet would be prescribing
it for every patient who walked in their door.
It works so well.
I mean, for me, it's been transformational.
We've had many podcasts about this, but it's like, you know, right up there is food is
medicine.
Meditation is medicine.
Exactly.
And it is.
And it should be basic.
We all, and don't wait for your physician to prescribe it.
Hopefully more physicians are learning, but it's there.
It's free.
It's available to everybody.
So true.
Now, you talked about the biological effects of trauma, but what's really frightening to marks in your genes that can affect your biology,
which is pretty mind-blowing, but also frightening.
It is scary. That's the bad news, if you will. The first thing about those epigenetic changes,
and the changes are not like the biological mutations caused by x-rays.
Right.
These are changes.
Not a mutation.
It's just a tag that regulates whether your genes are turned on or off.
Exactly.
And the ones that we're particularly concerned about are the ones that help us deal with stress, that get turned off by trauma.
And yes, that does get transmitted from generation to generation.
We've seen that in animal experiments
and in studies also, Rachel Yehuda's studies of Holocaust survivors. And those grandchildren,
even when they're separated, this is not a social interpersonal transmission. It's a deep
biological transmission. So that's the bad news. But the first thing is to become aware of the trauma that you're having and of some of the distress you're having. And particularly if you're having distress thatled in situations, then it is possible that trauma may come either from historical trauma, that is the trauma that people have experienced socially that's transmitted, or it may be coming from these epigenetic changes.
So it's important to become aware of that possibility.
The techniques that we're talking about, the techniques that I describe in the transformation
can reverse those epigenetic changes. And research is coming out now, for example,
on the effects of meditation in reversing those epigenetic changes.
The bad news, if your ancestors were traumatized or slaves, it's going to get transmitted. The good
news is you can fix that exactly that's
amazing that's amazing now there are two common and dangerous misconceptions that you talk about
in your book about trauma what what are they well the the first is the trauma just comes to those
other people that it comes to people who've been in a war or people who've had the most brutal and callous childhoods.
Well, it does come to those people.
And as I said a little bit ago, it comes to all of us.
It comes to all of us sooner or later.
So, it's not a part.
So, if you're not traumatized, yeah, just wait and you will be.
That's true.
It's true.
It's going to come.
And it's a pretty good idea to laugh about it too.
And that's one of the ways that people historically have learned how to deal with trauma.
And we need to bring that back, that we need to be able to look with a little humor.
This is part of being human, that it's going to come to us.
How do you become more resilient is really what you're teaching everybody.
So that's the first thing, the myth that it only comes to people in the most extreme situations.
The other is that if it comes and it happens to you, it's going to be there for your whole
life.
You're going to need constant treatment for it.
And that's not treatable, really, that you can manage it.
That's right.
Which is utterly untrue that what we've seen again and again using the methods that I describe in the transformation is people with
frank post-traumatic stress disorder, diagnosable by the Harvard trauma scale, by other trauma scales,
that those people in the course of working with us and learning the techniques in the transformation
are able to shed that diagnosis. They no longer have PTSD.
Now, sometimes that can happen quickly.
Some of the kids, for example, that we work with who've lost their families in a war,
within 10 or 12 weeks, the trauma is gone.
And 7, 10 months later, it's still gone.
And they're really-
Extraordinary.
They're quite resilient. They've had good childhoods so even though they've suffered terrible losses
the death of family members destruction of homes they're really not only back to
normal they're in better shape in many ways than they were before hmm before
the trauma happened other people those of us who've been seriously traumatized early in childhood,
who've had, you know, ongoing, really difficult issues, it's going to take longer. And I think
it's a question of being patient. But the same methods can work whether the trauma came early
and was overwhelming or whether it came more recently in our lives.
You know, what's sort of interesting about your work is that, you know, you've had to go out there
and get it funded through philanthropy and support. You've maybe got a few grants, but,
you know, if it were a prescription pill and it worked as well as this, it would be a multi-billion
dollar blockbuster. Yes, it would. And it's not well reimbursed by insurance. It's not well recognized by the field.
And yet the traditional treatments we have are not effective.
They're just not.
You can give people drugs to manage anxiety and antidepressants and any anxiety drugs.
You can do therapy.
But unless you understand that this is a different kind of thing that needs a different approach,
it's hard to solve it well it is but you know especially in the beginning but now that we have so much research
on the approach and now that people are beginning to realize the limitations of the other approaches
which certainly can be helpful but they're recognizing that there's something more is needed yeah and then beyond that um our approach
can work with people who don't have the capacity to pay for somebody that they can see psychotherapy
on a regular basis sure and also you just mentioned that you can train peers it doesn't have to be a
psychiatrist with a degree from harvard it can be just your friend who's learned a few skills about how to lead a group
and guide people through these methods,
which are accessible, free, and simple.
And we can work on a large scale.
And this is really important
that the method that I'm teaching
in the transformation
can work pretty much for anybody.
Doesn't require any, you know,
major level of education at all.
Doesn't require that you be a particular age.
You can teach these techniques to little children
and they can use them extremely effectively.
So break it down for us.
In the transformation in your book that's coming out September 10th,
what is the method?
What are you teaching?
Well, we begin by teaching a way of looking at the world, which is what we've been talking about up till now, which is essentially that it is possible for each person, each person who's reading the book, for each of us to learn what we need to learn to help and heal ourselves.
That's the beginning.
And so I tell some stories in the beginning
of people who have done precisely that. So that's the first thing that you have to believe it's
possible and that you don't have to have years of psychotherapy and you don't have to have lots
of pills to do it. That for most people, perhaps not everybody, but for most people, this is the
fundamental method. And that's what I'm presenting.
So that's the first thing. Second thing is that the method teaches you by your own experience.
So we did soft belly breathing. And I don't know about you, but even doing that for a minute-
Yeah, I felt relaxed. I was like, oh, I'm not stressed anymore doing the podcast. I just chill. So if you do that for five or 10 minutes,
you don't need me to convince you that it makes a difference.
So right from the beginning, I'm using techniques that people can,
yes, there's scientific evidence and people should look at the scientific evidence,
but they experience it.
So the first one we use is a soft belly breathing.
And then we work with, and people understand,
oh, okay, I can quiet myself.
And that generalizes, because not only do you feel quieter,
but your mind understands that you can make,
I can make a difference in how I feel.
And if I can make a difference in one way,
then maybe I can make a difference in one way, then maybe I can make a difference
in other ways.
So, that's the beginning.
Second technique that I teach is working with drawings and you don't have to be an artist
and there are no grades and nobody's looking over your shoulder.
Listen, I have my main trauma in life, jokingly, is my art teacher in eighth grade
failed me in art even though I did all the assignments I tried really hard I showed up it was the most traumatic thing in my life at that point and uh and I and I still
I still suffer from that trauma because when someone asked me to draw something
we'll be taking care of that because it was Mr. North I still remember him like it was yesterday
but you're not the only one I had a similar experience and so many people have
and then which is i mean that's a whole other topic about what's going on in education oh boy
you should be encouraging kids to be creative so what what i do is i have people do three drawings
first drawing is draw yourself and it doesn't have to be representational don't get nervous
i do a stick man.
Yes, of course.
Stick figures, abstract.
I mostly do abstractions.
So you start getting out of that,
dealing with that old drama of the art teacher and you start mobilizing your imagination.
The second drawing is draw yourself
with your biggest problem.
And what that helps people to do is to begin to identify something that's going on that's troubling them.
And by getting it out on paper, it takes away a little bit of its power because you have a little bit of control over it.
You're putting it out there.
And then the third drawing is to draw yourself with your problem solved.
And sometimes people will say, I don't know. know i can't there's no way to solve it i wouldn't be here if i wouldn't be reading your
book if i could solve the problem just just do it see what happens and most often something appears
on the page yeah and people will say well i'm not sure it can really happen, but at least the idea is there.
For example, we work a lot with refugees from wars.
And one of the things that they draw, the biggest problem is their home has been bombed.
They're living in a refugee camp.
That's what they draw.
Problem solved.
They're often drawing themselves back home in a new house.
They say, I'm not sure this can happen.
I sure hope it can.
And I say, put it on the wall of your tent.
And they do because that's the goal toward which they're going.
And the same with those of us who are here,
whether our biggest problem is we've lost somebody who's dear to us.
Maybe in that drawing, let's say we've lost a spouse
or we've lost a parent.
In that drawing of the problem solved, people will spontaneously come up with, oh, I can be with friends.
I don't have to be so lonely.
The biggest problem is my loneliness, my sadness.
And then they draw in the third drawing, and all of a sudden other people are appearing in the drawing.
Or maybe they're drawing themselves in nature.
And being in nature is going to help them deal with their sadness.
And it's coming from them.
It's not coming from me telling them how to solve their problems.
They're making those discoveries.
And so each time, each chapter in the transformation teaches another technique,
another way to help people understand and move
through their trauma. You know, it's really fascinating to me that you talked about the
trauma healing diet. And I don't think most people would think that food and trauma have
anything to do with each other, but you say they do. Can you explain it?
Well, part of the problem is that it's exactly what you're saying, is that people don't understand
it.
And I've never seen a book on trauma that talks about the importance of diet.
So I wanted to make sure that I did that.
I thought it was brilliant.
But I mean, all I'm about food is medicine.
But even for me, it's a stretch.
How does that help?
Well, but you have to think about what happens when you're traumatized.
When you're traumatized, it's not just the brain.
I mean, most of the research and most of the discussion focuses on damage to the brain,
which is real, but it also damages our gut.
So, for example, from the top to the bottom.
So we become more anxious and we eat foods to deal with our anxiety.
That's what happens when we're traumatized.
Just as many of the people who come to see you are in that place.
Second of all, we're eating fast.
So we don't have time.
The stomach doesn't have time to do its job.
Third of all, the stress comes with trauma,
causes problems in the small intestine.
So we start the villi.
You have leaky gut. gut yeah and leaky gut
exactly so the the endothelial cells the cells that line the small intestine start opening up
and all kinds of proteins that don't belong in our bloodstream start leaking through
you get going sensitivities yes so you get sensitive to things you were never sensitive
to before that creates inflammation which further inflames your brain and inflames your emotions.
Exactly.
Which in turn affects the gut, which disables the gut more.
And it's a vicious cycle.
So that's the damage that trauma does.
And there's really great data now how your microbiome plays a role in anxiety and depression
and many mental disorders.
Exactly.
And trauma disrupts the microbiome and promotes the growth of the
pathogenic, the bad bacteria, and depresses the growth of the good bacteria. And we were talking
about the vagus nerve earlier. The vagus nerve is responsive to the microbiome. So if the microbiome,
the bacteria in the gut, is disturbed, then it's going to affect the vagus nerve,
which is not going to be sending the same positive, creative brain-stimulating signals
back to the hippocampus and the frontal cortex that it should be sending.
So the gut is having a major effect on the brain.
True.
You know, I've noticed this.
I wrote this book years ago called The Ultra Mind Solution,
which was I was noticing my patients, when I would treat their physical issues in their gut,
their emotions would get better, their depression would get better, their anxiety would get
better, their, in fact, panic attacks would go away. And I was like, what's going on here?
Because I wasn't treating those things. I was treating other problems they had that
were, quote, unrelated, but it's all connected.
It's a whole body connected
yeah what do you know uh maybe as we should start something called functional medicine
where it connects the dots but this is this is yes of course then this is the ancient understanding
that we were reviving in the light of modern science yeah it's true it's so true so you know
one of the things that it sort of strikes me is that, you know, you're so
courageous and brave to go into these places where, you know, there's still so much trauma
going on.
Like in Gaza, that always struck me.
You're bringing Israelis and Palestinians together, people who often hate each other
or who've literally had their family members kill the other family members or vice versa. And even in that level of trauma, you've created healing.
And you talked about a story in the transformation,
your book about a young girl,
a czar who you met in a God's neighborhood that was bombed in the rubble in
the 2014 war with Israel.
And her father was killed in the war six months earlier.
And you led this group that helped this young girl heal.
Can you talk about that?
Sure.
And then some point we ought to come back to some of the elements of the trauma healing
diet too.
Okay.
All right.
All right.
Yeah.
I want to, well, yeah, we'll actually talk about this girl and then we'll come back to
the food part.
Want to talk about Azar first?
Yeah.
Okay.
So Azar is a nine-year-old Palestinian girl living in Gaza.
And during the 2014 war, it was her father was killed, her two uncles were killed, an
aunt was killed, and her home was destroyed.
And she came into one of our groups.
And I wasn't leading the group.
The group was being led by a Palestinian teacher who was leading the group for eight
kids, all of whom had lost their fathers in that war.
And Azar came into the group, and when she did her first pictures
in the first group, what she drew as the solution to her problem
was that she was in the grave with her father.
And when I asked her, she said,
the answer to my problem then was for me to die and be with my father.
Because there's no reason for me to be alive.
That was the most important thing she was saying I could do.
This is very striking because it was five, six months, as you said, after the war was over.
So nothing had changed.
She came through a group with these eight kids led by a Gaza school teacher.
She learned soft belly breathing.
She learned work with the drawing.
She did shaking and dancing.
She used guided mental imagery.
She used some written exercises because she could write.
And after nine groups, when she drew her drawings again, first of all, instead of drawing herself as this tiny little stick figure with the mouth turned down, she drew herself as a big girl with her brown curls and skirt.
And there was an arrow coming from her heart through a heart that she'd drawn on the page saying, I love nature.
And the arrow was headed to this beautiful tree with leaves.
So that was who she was now instead of this little tiny stick figure.
Yeah.
And then when we asked, okay, and who would you like to be,
which is sort of equivalent to having your problem,
the solution to your problem,
she drew herself with a stethoscope in her ears and the resonator of
the stethoscope on the chest of someone who was lying on an examining table and i said azar what's
going on she said i am a heart doctor and i am this is what i want to be i want to help people
and i want to heal their hearts. And I said, well,
who are these five people? She had five other figures standing there. Who are those five people?
She said, there were a lot of people in Gaza who had their hearts hurt. I want to help them all.
And they're waiting for me to see them. All right. So this is what can happen. And nobody was saying
to her, oh, Azar, you shouldn't be thinking about death.
Or Azar, you should be a good girl.
Or you should focus on school.
She was making these discoveries herself using the techniques that are there in the transformation.
It's not like you're hitting people over the head with a hammer.
They're discovering this on their own.
Exactly. The job, you know, my job, whether I'm leading a group or writing the transformation, is to create the opportunity for people to make those discoveries.
And just to be there for them, whether in person or in print, to encourage them to do that.
We all have that capacity that she has.
Yeah. know interesting you know i just remind me of this book i read probably you read it you know 30 40 years ago grist for the mill which is written by ramdas about all the stuff that's
tough in life actually is is good stuff when it's used to wake you up to kill you to bring that
transformation but transformation exactly exactly and it's such a great gift that you're giving people and it's done in a way
that's not hitting them over the head with a hammer.
It allows them to do this through this process of self-discovery.
It's done in community, which in a way being witnessed and witnessing is a
powerful, powerful way of creating healing. Yes, exactly. Okay.
So let's go back to the trauma healing diet because, you know,
we talked about it in general, but what but what can you eat to help your trauma?
Well, most of what you can eat are exactly the things that you and other people who are doing functional medicine are teaching.
I mean, it's really-
It's not ding-dongs and cupcakes and-
Well, that's what we go- that's important because that's what we go to when we're traumatized.
Comfort.
We go to the ding dongs, the cupcakes, the max and cheese, the pint of ice cream.
Chunky monkey.
That's my go to.
And there's a reason for it because it lowers the level of our stress hormones immediately.
It increases the levels of dopamine and serotonin, increases endorphins.
So we feel-
Momentary pleasure.
We feel, I'm sorry?
Momentary pleasure.
Exactly.
And we feel better for a while.
The problem is that after a while, all those effects get reversed.
So you have to have compassion for yourself if you're reaching for the chunky monkey after
something terrible has happened. But then at a certain point,
it becomes necessary if you're going to heal from the trauma to begin to reverse some of those dietary choices. And essentially, the rules are very simple. The first rule I would say,
or the kind of secret sauce in this new diet is mindful eating,
eating slowly, paying attention to how things taste,
paying attention to the food choices you really want to make once you've cleaned up your diet a little bit.
That's working on what the researchers call the cephalic phase of digestion,
the brain or mind.
So we need to approach food a bit differently, slow down instead of just putting it in.
Eating unconsciously.
Exactly.
Eating unconsciously, which is what we do.
And especially when we're traumatized, we reach for that comfort food.
So eating whole foods, eating organic food, eating much more fiber.
We want to nourish the microbiome that I suggest in addition to
fermented foods. All the things that you would suggest to patients who are dealing with chronic
conditions, I would say are even more important when people have been seriously traumatized.
Because as we were saying earlier, the gut is leaking.
You heal the gut, you heal the brain.
Exactly. So for example, I really recommend the importance of fermented foods.
I also suggest that people take probiotics for several months
while they're dealing with trauma,
shifting the kind of protein that they eat,
obviously eating much more fish and much less red meat,
which is pro-inflammatory.
Also suggest supplementary omega-3, supplementary fish oil, because that's important for brain
healing and gut healing as well.
Fiber is perhaps even more important than it is with more chronic conditions because
it's feeding the microbiome, which in turn is stimulating the vagus nerve in appropriate
ways so that the brain functions properly.
We used to call it fiber.
Now we call it prebiotics.
Those two.
Yeah.
Which could be called food too.
Yes, absolutely.
Or food, vegetables.
So that's the kind of diet.
And then paying attention to other things that you may want to add to that diet.
For example, turmeric, which I know is something that you use as part of your work with chronic illness.
It's perhaps even more important after trauma because inflammation is an extremely important part of what trauma does.
It promotes inflammation, promotes inflammation everywhere in the body.
In the brain, too.
In the brain, too, which causes symptoms are depression, anxiety, difficulty focusing,
irritability.
All of those things are compounded by the damage that's been done to the gut.
So if we begin to come back into balance through eating this appropriate,
healthy diet, we're going to be in better shape. The other thing is that it would also be important
to use a high-dose multivitamin, multimineral. In recent years, there've been some studies done,
initially in New Zealand after the earthquake there, a randomized controlled trial, population
trial, using a multivitamin, multimineral versus a placebo for people who'd been through
the earthquake.
And those people who took the multivitamin, multimineral, and these people didn't even
change their diet particularly, but just taking the multivitamin, multimineral helped to reduce
the symptoms of post-traumatic stress.
They were less anxious.
Their mood was better.
They were able to focus better.
So that's an important addition.
It's fascinating.
I remember reading in a paper years ago about Kosovo, where you worked, and they found that
people who were in the war zone had much higher excretion of magnesium.
And magnesium is what we call the relaxation mineral.
It helps you calm down, to sleep, to relax your muscles,
your nervous systems, helps with anxiety.
And all the stress we have causes all this chronic magnesium loss.
It increases vitamin loss.
And so we can actually help to fix that by replacing some of these nutrients.
Exactly. And it's vitamin loss at a time when we need them more,
because when we're under stress, we need higher levels of many nutrients. So that's why it's
important to supplement even the healthy diet with those, with the supplement with supplements.
Yeah. So, you know, one of the things, you know, we often feel in these situations is that our emotions are our enemy.
That we don't like to feel the emotions that we're feeling, whether it's anxiety or fear or irritability.
And we actually have a negative relationship.
But you talked about this concept of befriending your emotions
and how important that is in making them your partners in healing trauma.
So can you explain that?
Sure. Fighting against our emotions is a fool's errand and trying to suppress them,
which of course our culture too often tells our parents, the society, no, suck it up.
Go ahead.
Forget about it.
The show must go on.
Don't cry.
I'll give you something you'll really cry for.
All the things that are told to children and adults make us shut down our emotions.
And when we shut down our emotion, when we shut down one emotion, we shut down the others as well.
So if we shut down fear, we also tend to shut down joy.
We're not fully ourselves.
Whereas if we can accept the emotions, and also if we shut them down, if we try to avoid
them, they stay around forever.
And they're always there.
They're inside us.
They're disturbing our digestion.
They're disturbing our brain on an ongoing basis.
If we accept the emotions that are there,
the natural process with emotions is that they come and they go.
The problem is when we don't let that happen.
So they're essentially, as I see it,
there are three stages in the cycle of accepting
and moving through the emotions.
The first is just to recognize that they're there.
It reminds me of my mother.
She said, whenever I get the urge to exercise, I lay down until it goes away.
So if you have a negative emotion, give it a little time and it can pass.
But that's, she's right.
I don't know about that.
It will pass. It will pass.
It will pass if you allow yourself to feel it.
I think, you know, even in the research that was done long ago on supposedly correlating
the anger of the type A personality with heart disease.
Well, it really wasn't the anger so much.
It was the resentment.
It was the anger that was held inside
and you couldn't let go and you were feeling it all the time. If you just get angry and you hit
a punching bag for a while, it's going to go. So acceptance, relaxation. So techniques like
soft belly, you're feeling something, relax, be aware of it. Or you're doing shaking and dancing.
You're loosening up your body and you're noticing the emotions come up.
Let them come and let them go.
And then expressing the emotion, whether you're expressing it physically.
And if you're a really angry person, it's great to hit a punching bag.
It's great to hit pillows, to get the anger out.
And then you come back to relaxing again.
You try, I try, anybody who's watching, spend 10 minutes going like this and pounding some pillows when you're feeling frustrated and angry.
After that, you're going to be relaxed.
It's true.
Just don't hit somebody else.
Yeah, don't hit somebody else.
But that's the temptation when people have been traumatized i work with vets so much they're coming back from
combat they're still so often in that state that fight or flight state so somebody brushes up
against them in a store or bar they're ready to kill they've got to bring that out in a way that's safe, and all of us do.
Same with sadness.
If sadness comes, let it come.
Accept it.
Relax with it.
Express it as you need to.
That's so powerful.
Is there anything else from your work that you want to share?
Any stories, any techniques, anything that really matters
that you want everybody to know about?
One of the techniques that we should share with people who are watching that I use all the
time is the shaking and dancing. And this is really important. We talked about when we're
traumatized, we're either in fight or flight and we're really tense or we're shut down,
we're numbed out, we're holding the tension in our bodies. Our minds are kind of frozen.
What I do is I get people up shaking their bodies.
You close your eyes.
You put your feet shoulder width.
And you shake up and down for five or ten minutes.
And you relax for a couple minutes.
And have some music that you can move your body to. What happens is you begin to break up the fixed patterns,
physical as well as mental patterns that trauma creates.
If you have experienced trauma, you need to,
you not only need to befriend your emotions,
you need to refriend your body.
Because when we're traumatized, often our body becomes an enemy.
I'm sure you've seen this with people with serious illnesses.
You feel like, no, it's alien.
I don't want to deal with it.
If we've been assaulted, if we've been raped, if we've been sexually harassed, our bodies are uncomfortable for us.
So the shaking and dancing brings us back into our body.
And it also brings up emotions that we've shut down.
I'll just tell you one story.
This is working in Haiti after about a year where you were and I was early on in the earthquake.
And working there a year afterwards, we did a workshop with nursing students. And there were
90 nursing students who were killed in the earthquake. I remember I was
at the hospital and literally the memory is still in my mind where the nursing building was collapsed
and as you walked by you could smell the decomposing bodies. It was one of the most
horrific things I'd ever experienced and you just still in my nervous system.
So I mean I actually just an aside I mean i after i went to haiti and i came back
because i was there literally a few days right after the earthquake in the worst of the worst
of it and when i came back i had full-blown ptsd i had trouble sleeping i had sort of a sense of
like lack of connection to reality i mean i just couldn't understand why what people were doing
living their normal lives when that trauma was going on. I was angry.
It was very, very tough.
Well, a lot of our work is with people who are doing the kind of work that you're doing.
We're working with the caregivers, with the healers,
with the physicians, the nurses, the aid workers
to help them deal with that because it's understandable.
That does happen.
And it doesn't just happen in a place like Haiti.
If you're dealing with somebody in your family who's got a life-threatening illness, that's traumatic.
And often just dealing with the hospital system can be traumatizing as well.
We need to recognize that by being in that world of illness, caring about people, that we were also going to be traumatized
the nursing students there were so 90 of them died in the in the earthquake i was doing a
workshop for 100 nursing students and uh these are 17 18 19 year old girls and i was with them
teaching them soft belly breathing we did some guided imagery to help them imagine some change.
And then I got them up shaking and dancing.
And within three minutes of shaking, half the girls were weeping, crying.
Really, you could hear them.
And then when we were doing the dancing, girls were crying, girls were laughing, girls were dancing. Afterwards tools that you take some time to write down what happened,
to put it down in a journal so you have it there
and take some time to just sit with what happened.
So the girls were raising their hands, and they're saying,
Jim, this is the first time we've been able to cry.
It's a year after the earthquake.
We've had to be strong.
We're nurses.
We have to be strong for the little children,
for our parents, for our grandparents.
We haven't let ourselves cry.
It was so good to cry.
And then others said, and it was so good to laugh.
This is literally the first time we've laughed in a year.
And it's definitely the first time that we've danced.
And we're girls.
We like to dance.
But we haven't danced.
And this was so freeing for us.
And then one of them stood up.
She said, and Jim, we love Bob.
Because I was using Bob Marley's Three Little Birds,
Everything Gonna Be All Right as the song.
She said, we love Bob, but we are Haitian girls,
and we have wonderful Haitian music.
Music, right.
So I said, okay, from now on, we'll use the Haitian music.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So if people are watching us and want to do shaking and dancing,
say five minutes of shaking,
and then a minute or two of just standing and relaxing,
and then moving to some music, move to some music that's inspiring for you move to some music that's uplifting and upbeat for
you and see what happens oh great it's such a powerful thing and you brought this to places
not just like haiti but parkland with these young kids who suffered the trauma of shooting i mean that that's just almost
almost unimaginable trauma for a young kid to be in that situation it has been very very difficult
for the not just for the kids who are there for their teachers for their parents and for the whole
community i think this is an important point when trauma comes the way it has to Parkland and to many communities in the
United States, it doesn't just affect a small group of people. Everybody is affected. And so
our work at the Center for Mind-Body Medicine, our work is with the whole community,
not only with Marjorie Stoneman Douglas and the nearby middle school and the kids, teachers, and parents
there. But we're doing our best working with the superintendent of schools to work with the whole
county. It's 270,000 kids, 30,000 employees just in the school system. So this is really important
to do. And I think for people who are watching this, aside from thinking about the work that
we do, is to understand that what you're going through, that what all of us are watching this, aside from thinking about the work that we do, is to
understand that what you're going through, that what all of us are going through is not so strange,
that other people are also experiencing either similar or other kinds of trauma,
and that they're likely, if we share things with them, they're likely to understand what's going on with us.
The other thing about Parkland that's important here for people to know, and especially people who are interested in helping their children deal with stressful and traumatic situations,
at Parkland, we're training peer counselors in the school, Marjorie Stoneman Douglas.
Last year, we trained 130 peer counselors to use the
method in the transformation for themselves first, and then with the other kids, we're going to train
more and we're hoping to spread this whole peer counseling program as widely as we can.
And I think, you know, I think that's beautiful, Jim. And I think one of the things that's
underappreciated about your work is that it's not about you going and doing it to them.
You enable them to do it with themselves. Exactly. And,
and it is a model that I believe is a big part of the answer
to some of the biggest problems we're facing in America today around chronic
illness. And yes, you go into places where there's real trauma,
but it also is the way people
can heal from chronic disease by working together in groups and communities and helping.
And that's what we're doing at Cleveland Clinic.
We see dramatic results.
And I think, honestly, I think this should be a mandatory part of all health care and
medicine.
I agree.
It should be a mandatory part of care for others.
And it needs to be mandatory for all of us.
And that's what we're doing.
We're doing that with the health system in Indianapolis, with Eskenazi Health.
We're doing it with the VA now in Florida.
But we've got to take care of ourselves.
And then we can teach other people how to do it.
If we're not doing it for ourselves, how are we going to teach them?
It's so true.
Heal the healer.
Well, Jim, thank you.
This has been an extraordinary conversation.
Your work is really inspiring.
I'm committed to it. I believe in it. I've seen the benefits of it. Tell us if people want to find out about your work in the Center for Mind, Body, Medicine, where can they find you?
It's cmbm.org, Center for Mind, Body, Medicine. I'm not even sure what my website it's cmbm.org but that's the
that's the center's website yeah i guess james gordon md you'll find it yeah and then i'm that
i'm on twitter and i'm starting to get the word out but the center is really doing getting the
word out about the transformation as well as getting the word out about the work and you
run workshops you just did one in kripalu you have one coming up in December uh healing life's inevitable traumas
you you work in populations around the country you've got programs in Puerto Rico and and dealing
with the wildfire fallout in Sonoma County uh the wellness programs in Broward County that you were
just mentioning so you've got so much work you're doing.
It's such good work in the world.
And you're trying to leave a mark by not just doing the work,
but by teaching others how to do the work and scaling it up.
Exactly.
And we're very open to working with other communities.
That's how we started working in Sonoma.
We got invited.
Same thing with Houston after the hurricane.
We go where people want us to go,
where we can really be of significant help. And we're open to receiving invitations. We want this
to be spread. And I really appreciate being here with you and having this opportunity
to share this work as widely as possible. So great. And also, if you're interested,
you can watch Jim's's ted med talk called
fulfilling trauma's hidden promise you can just google that and you'll find it it's incredible
talk and i think that's the beauty of this within the the rough edges of what happens to us there's
often something beautiful that comes out of it in terms of healing and growing and and building
ourselves into beings that are more compassionate and kind
and understanding and healing ourselves while we're bringing healing to the world. So thank
you for that, Jim. It's really great. Thank you, Mark. It's great to be with you.
You've been listening to The Doctor's Pharmacy. I'm Dr. Mark Hyman. I've been here with James
Gordon, extraordinary psychiatrist, physician, healer. And if you love the conversation,
please share with your friends and family on social media. Leave a comment.
We'd love to hear from you.
Sign up wherever you get your podcast.
And we'll see you next time on The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Great.
Thanks, Mark.
Hi, everyone.
It's Dr. Mark Hyman.
So two quick things.
Number one, thanks so much for listening to this week's podcast.
It really means a lot to me. If you love the podcast, I'd really appreciate you sharing with your friends and
family. Second, I want to tell you about a brand new newsletter I started called Mark's Picks.
Every week, I'm going to send out a list of a few things that I've been using to take my own health
to the next level. This could be books, podcasts, research
that I found, supplement recommendations, recipes, or even gadgets. I use a few of those. And if you'd
like to get access to this free weekly list, all you have to do is visit drhyman.com forward slash
pics. That's drhyman.com forward slash pics. I'll only email you once a week, I promise, and I'll never send
you anything else besides my own recommendations. So just go to DrHeinman.com forward slash PICS,
that's P-I-C-K-S, to sign up free today. Hi, everyone. I hope you enjoyed this week's
episode. Just a reminder that this podcast is for educational purposes only.
This podcast is not a substitute for professional care by a doctor or other qualified medical professional. This podcast is provided on the understanding that it does not constitute medical
or other professional advice or services. If you're looking for help in your journey,
seek out a qualified medical practitioner. If you're looking for a functional medicine
practitioner, you can visit ifm.org and search their Find a Practitioner database. It's important that you have someone in your corner who's trained, who's a licensed healthcare practitioner, and can help you make changes, especially when it comes to your health.