The Money Mondays - Change Your Life with Celebrity Brain Expert Doc Amen | E46
Episode Date: December 4, 2023In this eye-opening conversation with Dr. Daniel Amen, celebrity brain health expert who has scanned over 250,000 brains unveils the impact of brain health on every aspect of our lives. Discover the p...ower of brain scans in understanding mental health, focus, performance, memory and success. Doc Amen, renowned as a leading brain health expert, is a double board-certified psychiatrist and a pioneering figure in the field of neuroscience. With over 40 years of clinical experience, he has revolutionized mental wellness by emphasizing the critical link between brain health and overall well-being. Dr. Amen is dedicated to empowering individuals to optimize their brain function through innovative research, advanced imaging techniques, and practical strategies for a better life. Like this episode? Watch more like it 👇 Elliot Roe Exposes How Your Subconscious Mind Tries to Sabotage Your Finances: https://youtu.be/28xErAeHrIs Jim Kwik Uses BRAIN TRICKS to Unlock Money, Success 🔑: https://youtu.be/elcTYCKc5zs World's Greatest Mentalist, Oz Pearlman Reveals His Money Tricks 💡: https://youtu.be/j_beL7ewDv4 Watch ALL Full Episodes Here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLs0D-M5aH-0IOUKtQPKts-VZfO55mfH6k --- The Money Mondays is a business podcast here to teach you how to make money, invest money, and donate money by showcasing some of the world's most successful people and how they do the same. Hosted by serial entrepreneur Dan Fleyshman, the youngest founder of a publicly traded company in history, this money podcast gives you an exclusive behind the scenes look at how the wealthiest celebrities, entrepreneurs, athletes and influencers make, invest and donate money. If you want to learn more business and investing while you work to improve your financial life, you're in the right place! Subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/@themoneymondays?sub_confirmation=1 Dan Fleyshman, The Money Mondays Learn more here: https://themoneymondays.com Watch all the podcast episodes: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLs0D-M5aH-0IOUKtQPKts-VZfO55mfH6k Let’s Connect... Website: https://themoneymondays.com Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-money-mondays/id1663564091 Twitter: https://twitter.com/themoneymondays LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-money-mondays/about/ TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@themoneymondays FB: https://www.facebook.com/The-Money-Mondays-110233585203220/
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The largest sex organ in your body is your brain.
Most psychiatric disorders are not mental health issues.
They're brain health issues because with a better brain, your life is better.
Your relationships are better. Your money is better. Your health is better.
You are not stuck with the brain you have. You could make it better and I can prove it.
you have, you could make it better and I can prove it. Ladies and gentlemen,
ttah-tah, I'm super super excited about this.
I've been following this gentleman for so many years and just the sheer content, the
knowledge, the information and like just watching what he's done for so many people.
It's inspiring, it's exciting.
You can probably feel it right now the way I'm kind of like a little kid, super excited to do this interview. and just watching what he's done for so many people. It's inspiring, it's exciting.
You can probably feel it right now, the way I'm a little kid,
super excited to do this interview.
A lot of you guys have probably already seen him.
But if you haven't, I want you to do this one thing at the end of this podcast
because you're going to be blown away.
I want you to deep dive down the rabbit hole.
Watch some of his old content.
He's got a bunch of books that we're going to walk through.
And it's just really important because I lost my grandma
to Alzheimer's.
My grandfather passed away shortly after that,
because you know, once you're a lot of times
often when couples are together for a long time, that happens.
And so to me, it's like a personal thing.
It's an emotional thing.
And I've just watched like Steve Aoki, how much he cares about it.
And a lot of my friends, how much they care about it.
And so as we get into this, it's a really long intro. It's just really important to me
for you guys to go down the rabbit hole and really learn these type of information
and read the books, watch the context, etc. So without further ado, please welcome
psychiatrist Doc Aiman. Thank you so much. How did it get started? How did we get here?
Like when did you decide this is the path I'm going to go down to help people fix their brains?
Well, it started when I was 18. Vietnam was going on and I became an the path I'm going to go down to help people fix their brains?
Well, it started when I was 18.
Vietnam was going on and I became an infantry medic where my love of medicine was born. But about a year into being a medic, I realized I didn't like being
shot at. It was not for me. I like helping. Don't shoot me. And I got myself retrained
as an x-ray technician and just developed a passion for medical imaging. As our professors
used to say, how do you know unless you look? And then I got out of the army in 1975, and
when I was a second year medical student in 1979, someone I loved tried to kill
herself, and I took her to see a wonderful psychiatrist, and I came to realize if
he helped her, it wouldn't just help her. That ultimately it would help her
children, it would help her grandchildren, is they would be shaped by someone who
is happier and more stable. I fell in love with psychiatry 44 years ago, but I fell in love with the only medical
specially that never looks at the organ it treats.
Think about that.
Last year there were 337 million prescriptions written for antidepressant medications in
the United States.
And none of those doctors looked at their patients' brains.
That's insane.
And when I fell in love with psychiatry, I'm like, oh, imaging has got to be the future.
In fact, everybody was talking about imaging is the future.
And in 1991, I went to a lecture on brain spectimaging. That's a study we
do at our 11 clinics. Spectates, looks at blood flow and activity. It looks at how your
brain works. And when I started scanning people, I got this epiphany that most psychiatric disorders are not mental health issues, they're
brain health issues. If I get your brain healthy, then your mind will follow. And
that created this revolution in my own life because when 1991, I'm like scanning everybody I know.
I scan my children.
I scan my aunt who has a panic disorder.
I scan my mother.
She has a stunningly beautiful brain.
Then I scan myself and it's not good because I played football in high school.
And I was overweight and I wasn't sleeping and I was chronically
stressed. And I developed this term. Mom has a great brain, she's 60, I have a terrible,
not terrible, but not a good brain at 37. So I developed this concept called brain envy.
I always say Freud was wrong. penis envy is not the cause of anybody's problem.
I've not seen it once in 40 years.
But in 1991, I'm a double board certified skiatrist.
I was the top neuroscience student in medical school,
and I didn't care about my brain.
I just really hadn't thought much about it.
And when I saw the difference,
brain envy, I wanted her healthy brain,
I think everything I've done since then,
for myself and my patients and my family
and the people I care about are community.
I want to help them get a better brain,
because with a better brain, your life is better.
Your relationships are better.
Your money is better.
Your health is better because your brain creates everything you do.
So typically on this podcast, we talk about three core topics.
How to make money, how to invest money, how to give it away to charity.
I don't want to talk about any of that today.
I want to talk about why people should invest into themselves
and especially into their brain.
Why do you think people do not actually invest the money
or time or energy into more brain study or brain research?
Because you can't see it.
See, that was a big epiphany for me when I saw my brain.
And I'm like, oh no, this is not good.
No, we're not having this.
And, you know, I live in Newport Beach, where I often say we care more, we have more plastic
surgeons than almost anywhere in the world.
And I mean, we care more about our faces, our boobs, our bellies, and our butts than we
do our brain.
And that's insane.
That's insane.
That's a chavisty.
That's insane.
It's because you can't see it.
People don't care about it.
Right, if you see the wrinkles in your skin or the fat around your belly and people probably
wonder what happened to my face, like foul playing basketball.
That's the basketball incident.
Yeah, I was exercising.
But they care more about the things they see
and because people don't look at the brain,
they don't care about it.
Even though it's not controversy at all,
your brain's involved in everything you do.
How you think, How you feel?
How you act? How you get along with other people? It's the organ of loving, learning, and
behaving. And when it's healthy, people tend to be happy. And when it's not healthy, people tend to be
sad or sicker and poor. So if we're talking about money, money is basically
about a series of decisions that you make. And if your brain's not healthy, you're much
more likely to file for bankruptcy. You're much more likely to live paycheck to paycheck,
being chronically stressed. And nobody knows it was the concussion you had in
third grade when you had a bike accident that damaged your frontal lobe so
you don't have forethought or as much as you need forethought judgment impulse
control. So if everyone out there that's focusing their surgeries on boobs, butt, and belly, the brain is actually really sexy.
You ever thought about that?
It's the largest sex organ in your body is your brain.
If there's no forethought, there's generally no foreplay.
Ooh, I like that a lot.
You guys go on a first date.
The decision you make about your second date,
some of it is visual, but it's really going to be
if they're funny or smart.
That's from here.
That's from the brain, right?
Looks fade away, looks come and go.
You can also become numb.
People date supermodels and become numb to them, cheat on them,
et cetera.
Like how could you cheat on them?
That superstar supermodel, sometimes it happens
after 12 years, 18 years, 25 years, etc.
People can become numb to it.
You don't become numb when someone's funny, smart, interesting, intellectual.
That is always sexy.
That is always cool because it generates feelings side of us.
When someone else is smart or funny, etc.
It gets us excited and we want to talk to that person, right?
You want to text with that person, you want to call that person.
Okay.
So, you've built up now millions and millions and millions of followers,
with hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of millions of views on your content.
Why do you think now over the last three, four, five years in particular,
people are starting to take notice and want to learn more about it and want to share your content
and want to dive into what you're doing with the brain?
I think the brain is in.
It's hot, It's sexy. When I was growing up in the 60s, space was
the new frontier and Star Trek and all of that. Well, now it's the space between your ears.
That people really see neuroscience as sexy and the future.
And people go, oh, but we don't know much about the brain.
It's like, no, we know a lot.
And you want to take care of it.
And you mentioned you have Alzheimer's in your family.
You want to know all of your risk factors
and attack each one of them now, right?
I believe that Alzheimer's is caused through a series of risk factors
and almost all of them are preventable or
Treatable and I have a nnemonic I talk about in my books
called Bright Mines.
You want to keep your brain healthy or rescue it.
You have to prevent or treat the 11 major risk factors
or bright minds.
And one of them is G for genetics, right?
But genes are not a descents,
what they should be is a wake-up call.
Right? I have obesity and heart disease in my family, but I'm not overweight,
and I don't have heart disease. Why? I'm on an obesity heart disease prevention program
every day of my life. I only love food that loves me back. And so, and I think people are beginning
to get it. Now, there were some cool things that happened. Justin Bieber had me in his
docu-series seasons because I've been his doctor and Miley Cyrus talked about me for 10
minutes on Joe Rogan's podcast. And so I have some influential friends.
And I think that helps.
Yeah, I saw it on the Kardashians.
Our mutual friend, Steve Aoki, is obsessed with you,
which is great, because I've been helping his charity
for years, which is about brain research.
I've been helping Aoki with all of his charity poker
tournaments for years and years and years
because how much he cares about brain research.
So every year we just had one recently.
And I think it's so important.
So what can people do when they're like, you know what, the docs write.
I should look into my brain.
What are some of the first things that they can do to start to either research, study,
figure out, like, what's the first step to like saying, yes, you're right.
Now what do I do?
Well a couple of simple things. I have a brand new book, Change Your Brain Every Day, which is 366 short essays on the most important things I've ever said. And you just read one
a day so it's like a three-minute a day commitment to your brain. and after 30 days you will love and start to take care
of your brain.
So that's simple.
And then there's these daily habits I talk about in the book.
Start every day with today is going to be a great day.
So you have to train your brain to look for what's right, not just default to what's wrong,
which so many people do,
which thousands of years ago that protected you
from being eaten by a lion,
but now it eats you up inside.
Whenever you go to make a decision in your day,
ask yourself, is this good for my
brain or bad for it? And don't lie to yourself because you're like, oh, why? And it's good
for your heart, but it's bad for your brain, right? And like not a fan of alcohol for so
many reasons we could talk about. Is this good for my brain or bad for it? Three seconds to just ask yourself that question.
And quite honestly, seven year olds,
if you give them a list of 20 things,
good for your brain, bad for your brain,
they'll get a 90% right.
Right, this isn't hard.
Sugar, bad for your brain, right?
Seven year olds know that. Fruit juice, they actually get that one wrong. They go, bad for your brain, right? Seven-year-olds know that. Fruit juice, they
actually get that one wrong, they go, good for your brain. No, it's bad because it's
too much sugar. Whenever you unwrap sugar from its fiber source, it turns toxic in your
body. My favorite brain exercise is when I go to bed at night, I go in a treasure hunt of what
went well during the day.
And I started at the beginning of my day, and I'm usually asleep by the time I get lunch
time, but I'm purposefully directing what I think as I go. So good habits, discipline, mind,
we live in a society of undisciplined thinkers.
And I teach all my patients to kill the ants,
the automatic negative thoughts that steal their happiness.
It's like, I was 28 years old in my psychiatric residency and I'm just
in class one day and the professor, another psychiatrist said, you have to teach your patients
not to believe every stupid thing they think. And I've never heard that before. I'm 28 years
old. I have 25 years of education and I believed every stupid thing I thought.
And like no one ever taught me thoughts can be really dumb, question them. And so many years ago
I coined the term and so automatic negative thoughts after I had a really hard day at work.
And I came home to an ant infestation in my kitchen.
And as I'm killing the ants,
I'm like my patients, they're infested with ants.
And so the next day at work, I brought a can of rage
and I put it on the coffee table.
And I went, I'm gonna teach you to kill the ants.
And so here's the exercise.
Whenever you feel sad or mad or nervous or out of control, write down what you're thinking.
And then ask yourself, is it true?
Can I absolutely know this?
And I have nine different ant species, like fortune telling or mind reading, focusing
on the negative, all or nothing, thinking,
blame, guilt.
So identify what kind of ant it is and then interrogate it, question it.
And my favorite part, it's like, take the bad thought, my wife never listens to me, and
flip it to the opposite, my wife listens to me, and flip it to the opposite.
My wife listens to me, and then meditate on the opposite
of the negative thought.
It's so powerful.
Are there any actual super foods for brain?
Like people talk about blueberries or almonds,
are there foods that people should be
or could be eating more often?
That'll help their brain.
So omega three fatty acids, your brain cell
membranes in your 25% of your brain cell membranes are made up of omega-3
fats and so never go on a low-fat diet. I'm not a fan of those and you probably
should supplement with an omega-3 fatty acid.
That's at the top of my list.
I'd love blueberries, but they need to be organic.
Non-organic blueberries hold more pesticides
than almost any other fruit nuts.
You're actually a few wheat tree nuts on a regular basis.
You're less likely to get Alzheimer's
disease and Parkinson's disease.
Food so matters.
Of the 11 risk factors, diabetes is 10.
It's where you're overweight or have high blood sugar or both.
If you have that one, you have seven of the other ones.
Because if you overweight or you have diabetes, you have a little blood flow to your brain.
Your brain looks older than you are.
So B, in bright minds, is blood flow, R is retirement
and aging. You have inflammation because fat cells produce something called inflammatory
cytokines. Your stored fat stores toxins, that's the T. It's not good. So how do you not be overweight or have diabetes is you significantly?
You watch what you eat. Like I have obesity in my family. I have a brother that's 150 pounds
overweight, but I'm not. Right? Because I'm clear on the calories I consume and the quality
of the calories.
And I stay away from things that give me high blood sugar.
So recently this summer, we've seen a lot of these water
fasts that have been happening.
And a lot of 48 hour fasts and 72 hour fasts.
Does that impact the brain when someone does these intents fast,
especially if they haven't done it before? Or is it something that's okay for them to do?
Well, it stresses their body. And you don't want a lot of cortisol around. I mean, you
need cortisol when you need it. It's a hormone that helps manage inflammation. But when
it's chronic, it shrinks a part of your brain
called the hippocampus, which is the major memory center
in the brain.
And so I like intermittent fasting.
That's not terribly stressful to your body,
but going two days, three days without eating.
I know the research that says it increases something called autophagy, which helps you get rid of some of the trash that builds up, but I think
you can do that in a less stressful way.
Okay, the question I've been wanting to ask about alcohol. So I'm obviously an entrepreneur lifestyle and running around with athletes, friends,
nightclub people, models, influencers, etc. and pretty much everyone's drinking and some are doing drugs.
Let's walk through both. On the alcohol side, how bad is it and are there alcohols that are
okay or better than others? Because I've heard things that are tequila might be better than vodka,
etc. Walk us through the alcohol situation with the brain.
So like I have no dog in the fight, but as psychiatrists probably have the people I see
got into my office because of alcohol out one form or another. Whether it's marital problems
and I always say you should never say everything you think.
But when you drink, thoughts get out.
And the problem with the brain is it has memory
and then people remember the awful things you said.
The American Cancer Society came out two years ago. In fact, in 2021, my biggest
blog was, I told you so, because I've been, ever since I started looking at the brain 32
years ago, I'm like, alcohol is not a health food. And my first clinic was right outside
the map of alley, so that was not popular. And I'm like, it's not a health food.
It prematurely ages, the brain, and think about it.
Why my wife's a nurse?
Why does she put alcohol on your skin
before she gives you a shot?
Because it disinfects your skin.
What did you know in your intestinal tract,
in your gut, you have 100 trillion bugs,
like bacteria, viruses, and fungi, and they're called the microbiome, and they make neuro-transmitters,
and they digest your food, and they detoxify your body. They're really important. So why would you pour poison down your throat to have a good time?
See, this is not making sense to me. And did you know during the pandemic, Jim Beam, the whiskey company,
turned their plants in a patriotic gesture into hand sanitizer plants.
Because alcohol is a disinfectant.
So why are you disinfecting your gut?
It's just, anyways, two years ago, the American Cancer Society came out against any alcohol because they said any alcohol increases the risk of seven different
cancers.
So from a smaller brain to cancer, to relationship, disruption, not a fan.
What about marijuana? So marijuana is the big lie.
The big lie is it's innocuous.
Yeah, teenagers who use marijuana
in their 27 increased risk of anxiety,
depression, and suicide.
Encyclosis.
In fact, one study from Norway,
marijuana use increased the risk of psychosis,
450%.
So increased 4.5 times.
Is it helpful for some people?
Yes.
If you have glaucoma, if you're dying and someone gives you marijuana, you're more likely
to eat and it can sustain you.
But the problem is, is everybody now thinks it's innocuous and it's not a
innocuous and it's not great. I published a study on a thousand bot smokers.
Every year, their brain was lower in blood flow compared to healthy brains.
I then published the world's largest brain imaging study.
It's on 62,454 scans on how the brain ages, from nine months old to 105.
So my database, which is now about a quarter of a million scans, has from nine months
to 105 on how the brain ages, and it's
fascinating. But then we looked at, well, what accelerates aging? And if you have schizophrenia,
which is a pretty severe psychiatric disorder, your brain looks 10 years older than the group.
The second worst was marijuana. It surprised me. It was worse than alcohol.
It was worse than nicotine. Yeah, I'm just not a fan. And then they looked at the lungs of
smokers and the lungs of marijuana smokers. The marijuana smokers, they look significantly older
than the smokers.
So there's something in it that is not great.
And people go, but you know,
we have cannabinoid receptors in our brain.
That must mean it's good for us.
We have opiate receptors in your brain.
That didn't work out very well.
You have benzoyceptors in your brain and that didn't work out very well. You have benz overceptors in your brain,
and that didn't work out very well.
All right, last question about this topic, psychedelics.
When people talk about mushrooms, LSD, psychedelics,
or going and doing an ayahuasca trip,
and a lot of TV shows are now popularized ayahuasca trips,
like what are your thoughts about psychedelics?
Like with alcohol, like with marijuana.
Can we try to get healthy?
First, by eating well and not believing every stupid thing we think,
and using healthy strategies with no risk.
See, the problem is, I've been a psychiatrist for 40 years,
I've seen people who do those things and have really bad experiences and have lasting
negative effects. And my worry with psychedelics, I think for some people, it's probably going
to be really helpful. But now, I have a daughter who's 20,
and she goes, dad, they don't have alcohol parties.
They have mushroom parties.
And I'm very worried about, and as marijuana is a health food,
or I'm sorry, alcohol is a health food, marijuana is innocuous,
mushrooms are in the incidence of mental health
problems in our society, especially among the young.
It's the highest it has ever been, certainly in my lifetime, certainly since they've been
tracking it.
This is not how we're going to solve this.
How we're going to solve it is we're going to get people to love and care for their brains
and treat it right. I have a high school course called Brain Thrive by 25 that's in all 50 states.
We teach kids to love and care for their brain, decreases drug alcohol and tobacco use, decreases
depression and improve self-esteem. It starts, I believe, by learning to love and care for the three
pounds of fat between your ears. Okay, something that people could do more of, and if they knew how
to do it better, is sleep. How important is sleep to the brain? What is the ballpark range of how
much people should actually be sleeping? And if they can't be sleeping well, what are some things that they could do to improve
their sleep?
So the S in bright minds is for sleep.
If you have sleep apnea, for example, it triples your risk for Alzheimer's disease.
So if you snore loudly, if you stop breathing at night, if you're chronically tired during
the day, you need to get that assessed and treat it.
So the sweet spots about seven and a half hours.
So somewhere between seven to nine hours would be great.
And why do you want to sleep? Why do you want to make it a priority?
Because when you sleep, a topology, which we talked about earlier your brain cleans and washes itself and we've only known this for
Seven eight years that the brain has its own lymphatic system
It's called the lymphatic system or fluid system so for many years neuroscientists said all the brain doesn't have that
Because it only opens up you can only visualize it when someone's asleep.
And so it's like you sleep
so your brain can clean and wash itself
and get ready for the next day.
You also sleep to consolidate whatever you learned
from the day before.
And so making it a priority, avoiding things that damage sleep blue light before bed.
So put your guts.
It's a way a warm room, a light, a room with light or noise.
So quiet, dark, cool, tends to be the best. And then rather than put your head
on the pillow and let every bad thought come into your head, start with, I went well today.
Start at the beginning of the day, go hour by hour. I'm also a huge fan of hypnosis for sleep. I have an app called Brainfit Life and
we have a sleep hypnosis track. I love that people write to me, love going to bed with you,
Dr. Eman. My wife doesn't like that at all. That's called Brainfit Life. Brainfit Life.
And then, you know, some time supplements can be helpful, but it's not a fan at all of melatonin.
No, melatonin for some people can be really helpful.
I like from a supplements standpoint, magnesium, melatonin, GABA, 5HTP. If you're a warrior, 5HTP can be helpful.
So on a scale of 1 to 100, how useful do you think that meditation is for the human body in the brain?
So I published three studies on a Kundalini yoga form of meditation called Kirtton Kriya. It's a chanting meditation, sa ta nama, birth, life, death, reborn.
Twelve minutes, activates your frontal lobes.
That's a really good thing.
And it calms down your emotional brain.
There's also research on loving kindness.
Meditation, one of my favorite ones, decreases migraine headaches,
decreases pain, can be very helpful to just take the chatter and turn it off, which is
the chatter that's causing so much stress for people because of the undisciplined mind.
So there's millions and millions of kids that are in high school sports,
middle school sports, and there's millions more that go on to play college,
et cetera. When they get into, let's call it football or hockey, those type of
extreme sports, and they're bumping heads together. How bad is CTE or
concussions and things like that that can happen from some of the more extreme sports
So CTE is a whole discussion by itself and I'm not a fan of the prevailing wisdom
So it stands for chronic traumatic and cephalopathy football dementia the dementia from
sports where you get repeated blows to the head the
sports where you get repeated blows to the head. The academics will tell you it's chronic progressive and untreatable,
and I think that's complete crap.
I think, yes, concussions are a bad thing.
In fact, if you tell me, if you go, hey, Daniel,
what's the single most important thing you've learned from a quarter of a million brain scans?
It's mild traumatic brain injury, ruins people's lives, and nobody knows about it, because
most skiters never look at the brain.
So it's a big deal, but why do I hate the current wisdom with CTE?
It's treatable.
You need to like know it, you have concussions, and then you need to put the brain in a healing
environment.
And if you put the brain in a healing environment, this is the big headline from Change Your Brain
Everyday and actually every book I write, you are not stuck with the brain you have.
You could make it better, and I can prove it. And I have thousands before and after scans showing significant improvement.
So on my show, I do this show called Scan My Brain.
One of the guys I saw was Troy Gloss.
He was a 2002 World Series MVP.
He was third baseman for the California Angels. And he came to see me suicidal, really depressed,
memory problems, drinking way too much.
And his brain looked terrible.
And he did what I asked him to do.
Stop drinking.
Took the supplements.
We worked on his thoughts.
Two months later, I scanned him again because he'd lost like 30 pounds. I mean, he like
drank the stevia sweet and cool late. It was so much better. 16 months later, his brain's better still.
Right. And he, the darkness has gone.
You're not stuck. Even if you've been bad to your brain,
you can make it better.
Now, I have six children.
Are they playing football?
Absolutely not.
But if they want to play tennis, I'm all for it.
They want to play golf.
Let's do it.
Table tennis is the world's best sport.
We revere football in this country. In fact, give it a day of the week.
It's bad for the brain. Now, I treat NFL players. I have active players that I adore.
If you're going to do that,
we better do everything else right. And, you know, great examples, Tom Brady, where if you read
his book, TB12, yes, he's playing a brain-damaging sport. But he does everything else right to make up for it.
to make up for so in a world full of chaos
people are bombarded by
that information
news drama
the world's falling apart there's a recession there's fifteen different wars
everything is
coming out our brains
where bombarded
what can people do to try to stay calm within the chaos
well one turn off the news because the news is no longer the news.
The news is to get your eyeballs and if it bleeds, it leads.
So I wake up every morning and I have an app called the Good News Network, you know, because
I want to know what's right.
And people go, oh, it's such a dark time.
And I'm like, come on, I grew up in the 50s, where we had to hide under our desks routinely,
and like kindergarten, first grade, second grade,
because we're worried the Soviets were gonna nuke us, right?
The world's always sort of a shit show.
It just depends where do you look?
Do you look at people like you who are doing amazing things?
Or are you focused on the crime that happened across the street
or somewhere in LA?
It's a matter of focus.
We can focus on war, and there are wars going on now,
but there are always wars going on from the beginning of time
where
Do you look because where you look determines how you feel?
Ask question so we typically and talk about how to invest money how to make money and how to give away the charity
Why do you think that charity in philanthropy should be part of people's lives?
Why is it good for their brain,
is it good for their family,
is it good for their heart?
Why should it be important to them
either in their companies or their personal life
is to be part of charity?
Well, because it's good for you,
because you begin to feel like you're part
of something bigger than you are.
And it's good for other people,
which has neurochemistry that's good for you, right?
It boosts your atonin because you feel respect and you feel a sense of purpose. It boosts oxytocin
because it's connecting you. I always think of my patients in four big circles.
It's like, what's the biology?
And we've talked a lot about brain health.
What's the psychology?
How do you think the ants, the social circle?
How are you connected?
How's the health of your connections?
And the spiritual circle. why do you care?
What is your deepest sense of meaning and purpose and giving helps feed all four circles?
Ladies, gentlemen, I could talk to the doctor here for hours and hours and hours and hours and hours.
So hopefully I'll get him back here for another 40 minute episode.
The reason we do the episodes for around 40 minutes is the average workout,
45 minutes, the average commute to work is 45 minutes.
So I try to stick around the 40 minute range for you guys.
Thank you guys for continuing to like, share, comment, et cetera.
We've been number one on the entrepreneur category for 34 weeks in a row.
Thanks to you.
So keep having these discussions with people about money.
That's what I always say at the end of every episode is talking about money bills credit cards loans
FICO scores IRS taxes and learn all those things but today's episode you heard about a topic that's mission critical
You have to learn about the brain you have to have discussion about the brain with your parents grandparents friends families co-workers etc
You can start off by checking out Doc Amon's books. How many books do you have?
42.
Oh my God.
That's what you're gonna say, like 12.
42 books.
So that's where you can get started.
Check them out on social media.
He's got like three million Instagram,
three million on TikTok, and everywhere in between.
So follow him on social media.
And please have these discussions, learn about your brain,
talk to their friends and families,
and we'll see you guys next Monday on the money Monday's dot com.