The School of Greatness - How to Rewire Your Mind in 63 Days | Dr. Caroline Leaf
Episode Date: December 31, 2025Dr. Caroline Leaf reveals that depression and anxiety aren't diseases; they're messengers trying to tell you something important. For nearly four decades, she's proven through rigorous neuroscience re...search that your mind controls your brain, not the other way around, and that you have far more power over your mental health than you've been told. She breaks down why the chemical imbalance theory is a myth, how traumatic experiences literally change the structure of your brain, and most importantly, how you can reverse that damage through deliberate mind management. You'll learn the exact five-step neurocycle process she's used with everyone from traumatic brain injury survivors to Navy SEALs to help them reclaim control of their thoughts and emotions. This isn't about positive thinking or pretending everything's fine, it's about embracing your pain, processing it systematically, and reconceptualizing your past so it stops controlling your future.Dr. Leaf’s books:Switch on Your BrainThink & Eat Yourself SmartThe Perfect YouThink Learn SucceedSwitch on Your Brain Every Day101 Ways to Be Less StressedCleaning Up Your Mental MessHow to Help Your Child Clean Up Their Mental MessIn this episode you will:Break through the myth that you're stuck with a broken brain by learning how to direct your own neuroplasticity in just 63 daysUnderstand the exact five step neuro cycle process that reduces anxiety and depression by 81% through deliberate mind managementDiscover why your depression and anxiety are actually helpful warning signals, not brain diseases that need to be medicated awayTransform traumatic memories from toxic patterns that control you into wisdom that serves your growth and helps othersMaster the daily practice of brain building that creates mental resilience and protects you from falling back into dark patternsFor more information go to https://lewishowes.com/1870For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Dr. Marc BrackettDr. Joe DispenzaDr. Daniel Amen Get more from Lewis! Get my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy!Get The Greatness Mindset audiobook on SpotifyText Lewis AIYouTubeInstagramWebsiteTiktokFacebookX Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I love that you're in this field of understanding the mind-brain connection and how it plays into our thoughts and our emotions, our feelings, our mental health, and everything else is happening in our lives.
My first question is, what is the difference between the mind and the brain?
And does the brain control the mind or does the mind control the brain?
You've asked one of my favorite questions there.
That's a really great place to start.
I've got some props.
Is that okay?
Can I use some props to show you?
Show me.
Show me.
Explain.
I need to understand in the simplified way.
Okay, so here's a brain, not a real one.
In a skull.
And the terminology for about the last 40 years is that the mind and the brain have been used interchangeably.
So most people think when you talk mind, you're talking brain.
When you're talking brain, you're talking mind.
And most of the popular literature, even the scientific literature that the media tends to put out,
talks about how the brain produces thoughts or the brain produces the mind.
but your brain actually can't do anything on its own.
So if you did, and if I was holding up this,
if this was a real brain and I just took it out of someone's head,
which I wouldn't do, but if it was bleeding and whatever
and you looked at this brain, we could stare at this all day long,
but it would never do anything.
So what is the difference between a dead brain
and yours and mine and the listeners and the viewers
is that you are actually thinking, feeling, and choosing.
You're alive, and your aliveness is your mind.
and your mind is this ability that of what you're doing right at this moment as you're listening
to me you are processing the auditory sound waves the electromagnetic light waves through your
ability to think and feel and choose which is mind so your mind is like processing unique
brilliant processing field gravitational field around and through your brain and body and you
convert what you're hearing and seeing into actual meaning and that meaning is formed from
trees that you actually grow into your brain so to
400 billion actions per second, you're using your mind to translate auditory and visual
signals into protein tree-like structures in your brain to make sense of what I'm saying.
And then each thing, new thing that I say, you're growing more and more.
And everything I'm saying is in the root section because it's the source of the information.
And the tree trunk and the branches are your interpretation of what I'm saying.
And you're linking it to other existing whatever I'm triggering at the moment that you know
about whatever in your life.
related to our subject and that keeps going and that's what we do all the time that's your mind
is always with you and your mind works through the brain and the brain then responds so here's a little
model so your mind is the gravitational field and this is not woo-woo science this is hardcore
Nobel Prize winning science that there's discovery of the gravitational field in fact Einstein spoke about it
back in the early 20th century how we each human has this gravitational field this electromagnetic field around us
and that is basically through us
and when you die that's not there anymore
and that's the thing that's kind of keeping you alive
and that's the thinking feeling choosing
the psychological version
and the sciencey version is this gravitational field
so it's a little bit like a magnet
this is a super easy way to understand it
if you imagine a piece of white paper
and you put a whole lot of iron filings on the paper
you may have done this at school
and then you bring a magnet
and you put that in the middle
of this mountain of iron filings
and suddenly you've got this beautiful
electromagnetic field
The iron filing arranges itself into this field around the magnet.
So you can't see the electromagnetic field, but you can only see it because of the iron filings,
it's invisible, but the iron filings follow the tracing of the field, and therefore you can see it.
So the relationship between the magnet and the field allows the iron filings to express themselves in that pattern.
The brain is like the magnet, and the field is your mind, and the relationship allows you to express your behavior.
So the little pattern is your behaviours.
And the biggest core thing is that that's the primary source.
You never stop thinking.
Your mind is always going.
You wake up with your mind.
You eat with your mind.
You choose your clothes with your mind.
You're doing the podcast with your mind.
You'll go to sleep with your mind.
So mind is the source.
And if you don't understand and manage it, it's changing anyway, then it's a mess.
And if it's a mess, your brain and body are a mess and you can't achieve greatness.
So to achieve greatness, you need to understand mind.
There you go.
There was a mouthful.
Let's just end the podcast now.
That was perfect.
So how wide can this?
So the mind, you're thinking, your ideas, your thoughts is a field, an energetic field.
Yeah.
Around you, inside of you, connected through your whole body and then outside of your body.
Is that what I'm hearing you say?
Exactly.
Totally.
How far does the field extend?
Is it two feet in front of us?
Is it six feet?
Is it football field, how far can it go?
They don't really, we don't really know because when you're talking about quantum physics
and gravitational fields, there's a lot of interaction that occurs.
But what the science seems to show is that it's kind of a almost how, you know, like around
us sort of this kind of, like a haloy field.
Yeah, yeah.
And it's probably more because, but it interacts because everyone's got this field and we,
and then we live in gravitational fields.
So you, everything around you is a gravitational field.
So everything's interacting.
And so that's why, you know, when you come up to someone, an example would be like
that electrostatic shock.
You know, when you brush past someone, you get that.
And on a more psychological level, you can experience that field is like maybe in a really great mood.
And then you get into a conversation with some friends and they're so totally depressed.
And you come away from there thinking, I feel awful.
I need to go and have a shower, you feel so.
So their field has interacted with yours and impacted you because that field is coming from your mind,
which then uses the brain and converts what you're experiencing into these thoughts.
And then these thoughts are generating, you know, there's this whole relationship,
the iron filings concept, and there's this back and forth.
And this literally is photons.
Einstein showed this, that we're literally generating from our thoughts as we talk from our thoughts,
which we, you can't talk without thoughts, you build thoughts,
and then your actions and behaviors and communication come from the thoughts.
So this would generate healthy, it's a nice, healthy green tree, and here's a toxic one.
So this would be a toxic, you know, the depression or whatever, you know, being negative or whatever, that would generate toxic photons.
And these are the ones that would make you, you know, you feel it.
You feel that negativity.
This is a sense of around a happy person and you just feel like amazing, you know.
So this is, it's very real.
This is not some ethereal thing.
It's, we're talking about the non-physical sciences of quantum physics and physics and things like that, but it's real.
And there's an impact and an effect, and we can control it.
That's the interesting thing.
What is the definition of quantum physics?
What is that in relation to the mind?
So quantum physics is considered to be one of the most fundamental and accurate sciences.
And at its most simple level, because it's really had bad press,
but it's been around for very long.
And it basically just deals with the unseen,
when you talk about particles and waves and the subatomic level.
So what we can see now looking at each other would be what we would consider the classical physics realm,
that you can see and touch and feel in here.
So it's very...
You can operate on it, you can...
Yes.
Yeah, so it's the physical.
But if you actually...
And we see from studying at the atom
that things get smaller and smaller,
and then you've got the subatomic level,
then you're entering the quantum world.
So once we go into the subatomic level,
we actually see that the atom is not really an atom.
You know, particles change according to their waves
and then they're particles only when you actually look at them.
So it's considered the observer effect,
And it's really interesting because it means that we have these waves of energy.
And as we make a choice, we create reality, which we do.
So as you think, feel, and choose, you change your brain.
Because every time you choose, think, feel, and choose.
Those three things always go together.
Always thinking.
Always thinking means you're always feeling.
Thinking and feeling means you're always choosing.
And it's happening at like 400 billion actions per second constantly.
So we're processing this world around us through this think, feel, choose.
And then we build thoughts.
So there's this structural, there's this.
structural consequence. So thought is actually a physical response of the think
if you'll choose. And quantum physics kind of is helping us understand that. But quantum
physics is easier to understand with classical physics. So classical physical, quantum,
the sort of non-physical world to work together. Does that make sense? It does. When we feel
something, when something happens, there's an event in our life. Someone touches us. Do we
feel it first, do we think that we're feeling something? How is that connection to the mind,
body work? Very good question. So it's think feel too. So like as we are. So I touch you on
the shoulder. You think it first or you feel it first? It's going to happen pretty much
simultaneously. So there's going to be the, because there's the sensation and it immediately will
stimulate think and then feel and then choose. So the feeling, the think feel, choose work together
to make sense of the physical impact and what it means. And if it's threatening what
not threatening, and all kinds of decisions are made in your mind, and it happens super fast.
So it's think-filled-chew-ch-chews, think-fell-chews in cycles, and it's really, really fast.
You know, we talk about 400 billion actions per second, but it's actually a 10 to the 27 and
faster, which is an inconceivable speed.
So what I've done with my work is to try and understand this, you know, what is the thought
and what is memory and what is mind and what is brain and how do they interact and how do they
influence and do we have any sense of agency over this process and what does that look like?
Yeah, can you explain it all?
Absolutely, I can certainly try.
So I spent 38 years studying this, and I started out in the world of working in more clinical.
I practiced clinically for 25 years.
And I initially started my research in the 80s.
And funny enough, in the 80s, the brain, we were taught that the brain couldn't change.
So all my lectures were around, the brain is fixed.
It's fixed.
Fix mind, fixed brain, fixed mindset.
Yeah.
So kind of that's it.
You've just got to learn how to kind of work around it.
and so that's just, and compensate, more of a compensation kind of philosophy.
So I remember thinking in one of my neuroscience lectures that this does not work for me
because we're changing and growing as humans.
So I said, no, I'm going to start researching this.
And I was told by my professors, that's a ridiculous question.
And I actually did a TED talk on this, the ridiculous question of neuroplasticity.
So in the 80s, I said, okay, well, give me the worst situation.
What's the worst situation?
They said, okay, it's traumatic brain injury.
Once someone's had a traumatic brain injury, and I mean, your dad went,
through one. That's it pretty much that's, you know, we've written off. And we were trained,
as I said, to compensate. So I said, okay, well, there's hardly any research in the 80s on brain
injury and on how to treat it. And so I thought, okay, well, I'm going to start there. And so I worked
with people that had been in comers for like longer than two weeks. And at that stage, if you're in a
coma for longer than eight hours, the brain damage was considered irreversible. Now, in this day and
age, we know that's not the case. But in the 80s, that was the going philosophy. So I was completely
swimming upstream when it came to this concept.
Anyway, I showed with my subjects that with using your mind and not in any weird way,
just a very systematic, deliberate, intentional mind management in different ways
and different brain building and dealing with emotions and just different ways.
Same sort of process that you can actually change this.
And so some of my first, my very first case study was a girl who was 16 at the time of
accident and she had lost a whole year of school, written off as a vegetable.
I mean, that's what the doctors used to say in those days, which is a terrible thing to say to someone.
Anyway, long story short, after eight months, not only did she manage to, she came around, I sort of worked with her when she was conscious and functioning sort of at a second grade level.
And she wanted to her goal was to get, her goal of greatness was to get back to finish 12th grade and with her peer group.
Now, that was an impossible task.
All the doctors said, don't even go down that road, not even worth it.
So I said, well, I was a new scientist then, very young, totally into this.
You know, go with me, let's do this.
And within eight months, she caught up to a 12th grade level,
finished school with her peers, and went on to get a university degree.
And one of the coolest things was that she was actually a really average student
and not even good at math.
After the accident, using her mind to change your brain,
she became like a math genius.
You know, I mean, this was like, and I can tell you story after story,
and that really motivated me to work across the board with,
now I really have to understand what's going on.
And I happen to be living in South Africa,
I grew up at the time.
I was born in Zimbabwe and grew up in South Africa and in the apartheid era.
I mean, this is like, it really ages me, doesn't it?
Go back into those, I work through the apartheid era, the transition and the post-aparid
era.
So I was seeing all the socioeconomic trauma, the racism trauma, and I worked in that three days
a week in those environments with terrible poverty and whatever.
And I worked in Water and Rwanda.
And I worked with the wealthiest of the wealthy heads of CEOs of corporations, schools everywhere
that my laboratory was the world to try and understand.
understand humans and mind and get away from this scientific concept that consciousness is
the hard question and no one is really doing anything.
We're just talking about it as being as this elusive philosophical thing that we will
push aside and one day promissory science will do it one day.
And I thought, I can't do this because I am mine, you are mind.
So if I don't manage it, I mean, you can go three weeks without food, three days without
water, three minutes without oxygen, but you don't even go three seconds without using
your mind.
So my underlying premise was, okay, well, if that's the case, what is it, and how do we manage it?
And if I don't manage it, what I did from my research, you can learn to manage it.
Mind is malleable.
You can direct the neuroplasticity of your brain.
I did some of the first neuroplasticity research in my field in the late 80s, early 90s.
Before it was accepted by the mid-90s neuroplasticity was, well, that's it.
And I showed that my underlying argument or thesis was, well, if our mind is,
always changing, which it is. So you wake up, you're experiencing everything, conversations,
the emails, the pot, life, politics, you're immediately immersed in life and you're processing
that through your mind, you're growing it into your brain and you're doing this every moment
of the day. So if I don't control it, it's a mess. But if I do control it, then it isn't a mess.
Now, I know we can't control events and circumstances. We all agree with that. So I'm not into this
whole law, I'm not talking about law of attraction and, you know, saying 15 positive affirmations
and that's going to fix your story.
No, I'm not talking about that at all.
It's not realistic.
I'm talking about the fact that you cannot control events and circumstances,
but you can learn to manage your mind, which means your responses.
Yes, the things are going to happen.
Torma, death, life happens, but how you manage it,
and your case is a classic example.
Your life was thrown upside down and your family's life was thrown upside down
and you managed your mind and got yourself back going.
So you were doing this concept anyway.
You know, greatness, that's why I said.
Greatness comes from.
us managing our mind and greatness doesn't necessarily mean that you've got millions in the bank
and you this famous superstar it means that do you have mental peace are you actually growing
are you satisfied as a person or you know that's the sort of where we want to go as opposed to
this very externalized version of it so yeah wow um this is really powerful so how do we learn
to manage our mind in response in a more positive way to
to the chaos, stress, traumas of life around us.
You know, obviously we can maybe influence certain events to manifest in our life,
but we can't control the things that are happening around us necessarily,
just how we respond, like you said.
So how do we learn to reframe our mind or rewire our mind
and so that we can have inner peace when there is trauma or pain around us?
Brilliant question.
It's a skill that we learn.
So that's really nice to know.
the sooner, it's never too late to start, but the sooner we start, the better.
So I have four adult children.
They learned this, they grew up with this stuff.
And as I've learned new things, they've been my lab rats.
So they've been trained in literally and my husband.
And they all work for me, by the way.
They're either all amazing kids or messed up kids.
Totally, yeah.
Yeah, we'll have to ask the question.
Well, Dominic's my producer.
So I think she's sort of doing okay there.
But, you know, the thing, the biggest thing with the mind and managing mind,
Lewis, is to accept that depression, anxiety.
Even the scary words like bipolar and schizophrenia and then going to the more sort of things like that we can accept grief, anger, et cetera.
These are not illnesses.
This is the biggest message that I probably have.
The second biggest, the first is that mind is the source.
And if you don't get mind right, everything else, you can read all the great books you want and go to all the great seminars and self-help.
But unless your mind is right, you won't ever use that stuff.
It's just data.
And so there's another step missing.
and it's understanding that autonomy, that sense of agency that we have to manage what's going on around us
and to accept part of mind management is not to make the bad stuff go away, but to know how to live in the
bad stuff because it's not going away. So despair, anger, depression, anxiety, these are all
completely normal responses. In fact, they're very helpful. They're helpful messengers and warning
signals as opposed to being scary illnesses. They are not neuropsychiatric brain diseases like we've been
told. They are actually responses. And because they are responses of our mind in the world,
we use our brain and body to express them because we've got the mind has to have the brain and
body to build the thoughts and then we use that to speak. We're using our physical to
store what we've processed and to convert and then to speak. So obviously if our mind's a mess,
our brain and our body will be a mess. But because our brain's neuroplastic and we, if we manage
our mind, we can change your brain. We can change our DNA. Literally, that's what I've shown
in my research, you can literally change your DNA, your blood markers, literally.
If you change your mind?
If you change your mind, you can immediately influence your biomarkers.
So, for example, if you, in acute trauma, for example, and you go through, just, okay,
let me explain it in a very simple way.
I'm testing out a glucose, continuous glucose monitoring device, and for some research purposes.
And I happened to while I was wearing it, because you wear it, and then you, you know,
you track your levels.
And I wanted to see, in terms of mental health and the neuropy that I've developed, I wanted
to see the impact and I happen to be going through experience a very acute trauma in our family
over December and in the moment of the trauma I happen to see on my glucose monitor that my glucose
had shot up to 240 now that's heart attack level and I immediately managed my mind through the
neurop that I've developed which is just the system anyone can learn it and I drop my glucose
levels within seconds back down to a normal level and as it cycled up it cycled I could manage it
And if glucose is at that level, your cortisol's shot up at that level.
Your DHA's dropped, your homocysteins up.
All that means is that your immune system is going crazy.
You get the same response to a mind thing, a thought, which is the consequence of mind.
Think, if you'll choose, you build thoughts.
Thoughts are made of roots and trees, branches, which are the memories.
So thoughts are made of memories, like trees are made of branches.
Any kind of damage in my body, the immune system sees that as threatening survival,
because we are wired for survival.
So this is not survival.
So your immune system says, hey, that's a threat.
Let's send out the army, T lymphocytes, B, lymphocytes, macrophages.
Let's go fix this thing.
And it creates inflammation, which is a temporary state of healing.
So initially, inflammation is to isolate and fix.
Exactly.
Isolate and protect.
And then you're supposed to fix this up and sort this out and find the root cause.
And then this goes away.
And then the anti-inflammatory factors come in and the inflammation goes away.
But if we don't deal with the stuff and we don't deal with our past traumas and we don't deal with those patterns in our life that we are enacting, that the constant arguments or these certain, you know, we all have these toxic patterns.
Well, no one's immune.
And the signals of those are things like depression and anxiety and those are simply telling you, hey, there's a pattern.
It's either trauma-based pattern or it's a toxic habit you've developed.
But that pattern is actually putting your body under tremendous stress.
even to the point where your DNA is affected
and I showed in my research that
if you think of the DNA ladder
if you pull out a chromosome
it looks like an X
and where you see my fingernails
pink fingernails for those of you that are listening
that pink fingernails would then
represent what we call telomeres
and telomeres are a proxy
for how you are managing your mind
very interesting
aren't they also based on how long
you'll live as well if the telomeres are longer
exactly totally correct
so those are under attack
and dying, you're probably physically going to die as well.
That's exactly what I showed.
So we had subjects at the beginning of, in my clinical trial that I put in this book,
we had subjects, and I've actually got a picture of this person's, one of the subject's brains.
This is inside, looking inside their brain.
And the blue represents someone who's totally depressed, flatline, brain, flatline, literally.
And this person's, all their biomarkers were up their cortisol, inflammation, etc.
But this shows that the energy levels in the brain are very flat.
Blue means a very, very depressed.
This person was.
Their narrative was tremendous torment in their life.
They were offline.
They were battling with work, relationships, a lot of stuff.
Everything.
Everything was off.
Everything was off.
Sleep, you name it.
They were at like really to check out.
What page is this on?
This is on page, I should tell you, I should know the page of my heart.
161.
Okay, cool.
I think you've probably got it in black and white in that version.
that you've got there.
So this person's telomeres, when we looked at their DNA and we looked at their telomeres,
they will tell you how, the shorter they are, the weaker your cells, the shorter your
lifespan, the more vulnerable you are to disease.
So they were sitting, so that will show in terms of your biological age.
So their telomeres were short and unhealthy.
Their ages were in this particular subject, and we had a group like this as well.
They're similar.
They're biologic, they chronological, the actual age was.
in their mid-30s, but their biological age.
Or like 70 or something.
Yes, a sickly 70-year-old.
That's crazy.
Crazy.
Within nine weeks of mind management.
Note, I didn't work on, I don't use drugs.
I do talk about diet and stuff, but in this particular clinical trial,
it was pure mind management, just the neuropsych.
Just get your mind under control.
And that gray means that their brain stabilized, that the brain waves that they were actually
managing.
So here they were saying, I am depression.
I am hopeless, all the biomarkers, DNA.
Here they're saying, I now know why I feel depression.
I'm not depression.
I now know why, and depression is simply a signal of an underlying cause.
It's not who I am.
It's not an it.
It's not an illness.
By 63 days, and these numbers are very significant,
they were actually seeing behavior change in their life.
They were saying, okay, so I'll still get depressed, but I know why and I know what to do.
And there was changes in their behavior.
They were back at work.
They were back sleeping, 25% in preemptive.
moving in sleep and I mean all kinds of like the relationships not suicidal anymore and
I mean that's I can go on and on and on wow this subject over here was in the control
group so they got no mind management and what you'll see is a lot of red and a lot of chaos
and that red shows complete brain that is like a tsunami in your brain which the biomarkers
were terrible this person's DNA telomeres were very short and so with mind management
in nine weeks we showed how you can literally change your telomeres which are your markers
for aging and for health, mental health and physical health.
And that's pretty unusual because most of the work on telling me
this has been done around diet and exercise, which are very significant.
It's all about like, you know, leafy grains and plant base.
Exactly, which is significant.
And also there's been some work on meditation,
but there's been no, I think this is the first study that's been done
on actually doing deliberate intentional mind work to change.
And then you saw significant drops as well in inflammation markers
and blood markers
but the biggest thing
was their narrative
the person's story
so if we go away
from the biology for a minute
and we listen to the person's story
that person was offline
they were online
they were living again
and even though
and they had also had
this acceptance
and this is what I wanted
to kind of circle back to
when you started
was life and managing
your mind doesn't mean
that it's going to be
one big rosy
you know put on rose tinted glasses
that's crazy
it is actually the ability
to be okay
and at peace with having moments
of depression
and actually looking for
message and seeing them as helpful.
We have this really weird philosophy, which has been about 40 years in the West now,
where we look at depression and anxiety and those kind of things as illnesses and
neuropsychiatric brain diseases and as bad symptoms that you must suppress,
like cancer symptoms you must suppress.
So it's been lumped or misery of life has been medicalized to quote a brilliant psychiatrist
and Joanna Moncrief.
So we've got to really watch out for that.
But actually, the real truth is that those depression and anxiety are not illnesses.
They are just survival instincts.
It's telling you, hey, pay attention.
There's something going on.
You need to go and unpack.
Something's not working.
Something's not working.
Something's not working.
And it's manifesting as a pattern that needs to be addressed.
And that will block the greatness.
So are you saying, am I hearing, did I hear you say that there isn't a mental health disease?
It's more of just a pattern or something that we should be mindful of, but it's not an actual disease.
No, it's not a disease.
And I know this counters, this counters the current philosophy, but if you look at the science, there's a large body of science.
In fact, if you interpret all the science around this field and you really look at what's being tested, you actually will see it's not a, they've been looking for the neurobiological correlates.
They've been looking for where in the brain is depression.
And for years, we've been told about the serotonin imbalance causing depression.
I mean, that's not even, it was a theory, never proven, great for marketing, for telling drugs.
And also a simplistic way of telling someone, hey, you're depressed, don't worry, it's
chemical imbalance.
Let me give you a drug to fix it.
We want this quick fix mentality.
So as medicine has advanced and technology is advanced, so we've become very caught up
in the quick fix.
But life's not like that.
Mind is not like that.
Mind is separate from brain and body.
You can apply that kind of thinking, not quick fix, but you can apply a symptomatic
diagnosis treatment approach to body, to physical brain and body.
But when it comes to mind, that there's this, this.
gravitational field, this force, this think, feel, choose thing.
It's not going to go, a medication is not going to change how you're thinking, feeling, and
choosing.
It's not going to get rid of this.
It's just going to numb your brain.
So maybe you don't feel this while it's working.
But at the same time as then when that drug wears off, this is still there.
This is still being recognized by the immune system of your brain as a problem.
So this is increasing your vulnerability.
The longer it's there, the more you increase your vulnerability to disease.
Oh, my gosh.
You know, and this is what gets you stuck.
And these are the patterns.
So, no, it's not an illness.
it is a normal human response.
Mental health has always been an issue.
It's from the beginning of time, mankind has battled with life, with issues, with death, with fighting, with war, with whatever.
So mental health is not on the rise, but the mismanagement of mental health, making it a disease, has created a whole new problem.
Wow.
So here we sit before the pandemic, they started doing a population study in the mid-90s, and this is when I was still early days of my practicing sort of 10 years into my work.
And I started seeing this trend of, and I was watching the study where people were, where the decades-long trend of people living longer.
So we know, we all hear this message.
This is what we've heard.
People are living longer because of the advances in medicine and technology.
None of us question that.
But something happened in 96 that did start questioning that.
By the mid-2000s, it was an established research fact that we don't live longer anymore, that the trend of people living longer has actually reversed.
and that we have a pandemic of deaths of despair
where people are dying from preventable lifestyle diseases
and the age group most being affected
but are between 24 and 65.
So people at the beginning of their career
and the prime of their career
and through that age group are dropping down dead like flies
and it's considered deaths of despair
by preventable lifestyle diseases.
So we have to look at the bone lifestyle disease
means that there's something in our body that's weaker.
Why?
Lifestyle, which is mind-driven, how am I eating, drinking, sleeping?
But more than that is what's my mind behind all of that?
How am I actually managing the day-to-day moments?
How am I managing the patterns, the traumas, the established toxic habits?
What am I doing about that stuff?
And that's when we ignore all of that because this current trend of science is saying,
oh, those don't matter.
What matters is the symptoms.
Let's just look for the symptoms.
Checklist, diagnose, label.
When you label someone, you chop up to 10 years more of their life.
You know, it's like it's adding on, they've shown studies of people with a mental health diagnosis,
have a chop their 20 years off, up to 20 years of their lifespan.
People on psychotropic drugs because of all the complications and the changes in the brain and the body,
chopping up to 25 years of their life.
There's such a contradiction because they're saying, hey, there's this adverse circumstance,
grief of loss of people, uncertainty, medical and, you know, not knowing if you're going to live or die
and how long is this isolation going to go on and economic impact and whatever, the whole lot.
That's trauma and they're saying that when they're saying, but this is the way to treat it.
Let's label it, let's diagnose it, let's medicate it.
So we've got to shift our narrative completely and we've got to stop saying that mental illness is on the rise
and that there's one in four people on antidepressants who are depressed.
A hundred percent of people are depressed and anxious.
A hundred percent of people in the world at some point in their life have and will be.
anxious and depressed and in grief and sadness and terror and despair and one of the others.
A large percentage of the population and I'm not sure of the exact percentage because no one's
really done this kind of research, but estimates it's probably 30, 40% of people will have
extreme trauma of it from abuse, war trauma, that kind of stuff where they'll go down the
continuum to sort of the minus 910, 8, 9, 10, if you look at a continuum of 0 to 10, 0 to minus 10
and have things like psychotic breaks and hearing voices
and extreme states of distress, mental distress,
which are still not diseases.
They are simply in that traumatic situation
you're having a traumatic response.
Think of someone who's a war vet.
I just interviewed a Navy SEAL the other day
who was trained snipers.
And, I mean, the things that he had to do
and that his teams had to do,
they come back and try and, we all know,
the problem of trying to reconcile back into civilian life
after you've gone through.
I mean, you know,
This is what they'd be experiencing all day long, stuff that's completely against survival, completely against our human nature.
And now they, instead of them being allowed to process this trauma, they're coming back and being told that they're diseased.
And he would tell me that what they do with a lot of, we don't hear this sort of thing, but he told me this.
They will inject things like respiradol, which is an antipsychotic, into the spines of war vets because they're but psychotic.
And they're psychotic for a reason.
It's they coping.
How do you deal with this?
Of course you're going to be angry.
You're going to be frustrated.
You're not going to be able to love like you did.
you have to be able to
embrace process and we conceptualize
giving them a drug's not going to make it
not going to help it in fact it constrains
the brain it restricts the brain
you can't there's no chemical cure
for that this this is
that's just going to add fuel to the fire
because your mind's got to work through the brain
so now you put chemicals in
and now that's not going to that's not going to facilitate
change we have to do something
so it's like a narrative
do you feel like there I mean is there such a thing
as a chemical imbalance in some
people, you know, when they say, oh, I have a depression, it's a disease or bipolar, or I have this
mental health disease, or I have a chemical imbalance. I was treated with this. Don't try to say I
don't because this is who I am. Is that, do some people have that or is that? That's a result of,
the narrative of I have a chemical imbalance and my depression is from chemical imbalance is a narrative
that is the only explanation that people are being given. They're not given an alternative
reaction, I mean an alternative narrative. So the most important thing is that anyone listening
to this podcast, I want to validate your depression, your anxiety, your grief, your despair,
your PTSD, whatever label you've been given, I want you to, I want to validate that that doesn't
need to be validated with a disease label. You're not diseased. You're not a broken brain.
Your brain isn't effective. You are going through something. So you aren't something. You
aren't that. You are going through something. You're experiencing something.
You're experiencing something and you're experiencing and you've coped in the only way that you could cope in that moment.
So it created this adverse response because it was an adverse situation and you were just trying to cope.
So what we have to do is go through a process of embracing and processing and reconceptualizing.
So the important thing here is to recognize that chemical imbalance isn't the cause of your despair.
The cause of your despair is what you've gone through and what you're going through and learning how to, not knowing how to manage it and how to deal with those thoughts that are driving you.
crazy in those flashbacks and the trauma of the flashbacks and going back into those
situations of the rape or the abuse or the ward pormer or the that it can drive a person crazy
and that's not crazy in the sense of illness it's crazy in the sense of your mind is like this
erratic tidal wave around you and it's going through your brain and you've got these and your
immune system and everything's screaming out to you and saying hey let's fix this so a disease
label invalidates it and for a moment it might be nice to
to know, okay, well, there's a label to how I feel
because it kind of gives us a bit, it feels like we've got
a bit of control. So initially
that gives you comfort, but don't see
yourself as that. It's better to say
I'm experiencing post-traumatic
stress issues because
of what I've been through versus I
am PTSD, or I have the sickness
of PTSD. It's better to
say, I'm experiencing symptoms
of bipolar, these
intense swings because of my
whole story than saying
I have bipolar, I have a chemical imbalance.
I mean, just researchers coming out the other day
show that we've got to stop saying this.
The top psychiatrists that lead this field
will tell you we've got to stop saying this
that there's no ways that serotonin imbalance
you can't even measure that.
There's no genes or serotonin imbalance causing it.
It's what you've experienced.
That's the cause.
And then that moves through your brain and your body.
So obviously your brain and your body respond.
So we will see changes in the brain and the body.
We will see neurochemical chaos,
not necessarily serotonin imbalance.
That's just one.
Sometimes it's dopamine.
And if dopamine's down, serotonin is often, then anandamides often, I mean, I can give you a list of
chemical terms, and that's going to change every function in the structure of your brain
and your DNA and your telomeres and 1,400 neurophysiological responses are off.
So, you know, that's the response, though.
And that doesn't mean that you have this thing hidden inside of you, the scary thing that's
controlling you.
And that invalidates.
if someone comes back from war, someone's had a sexual trauma, to tell them that the
depression or anxiety they're feeling is an illness is an insult to what they've gone through.
But if I say to you, gosh, that's terrible.
Tell me about it.
I want to hear your story.
I want to support you.
Your depression and anxiety that you're feeling is a signal that there's stuff going on.
There's an origin story.
There's a source.
So can I listen?
Can I help?
Can I support you in trying to.
to recognize the signals and go through the process to find the origin story and then to
reconceptualize it and that takes time it's not a 15-minute appointment where i can give you a label
that takes time that's not also it's also not the conditioning kind of treatments that are in place
that some of them work if they're used in the right place but to try and to try and put a veteran
who's gone through something back into the situation to try and condition them you can't condition
you have to reconstruct.
So it's kind of like an algebraic equation.
X is the situation.
Y is how you should want to function for mental P.
So you've got X plus Y.
And so here we are in our X situation
where we are the sort of human experiencing life.
We're supposed to be at Y.
And you put the two together
and what the current treatment says
is that, okay, now we're going to create Z.
We're just going to ignore X and Y.
We're going to create a new thing
and that new thing is you diseased.
But that doesn't work.
It's actually X plus Y equals XY.
X is what you're going through.
Y is where you want to find mental peace.
And you want to put the two together to live together
so that you can change how the past plays out into your future.
Oh, man, this is powerful.
Gosh, I want to go back to what you said
when you're experiencing this traumatic event
in the family you had recently
where you were wearing a glucose monitor
and you mentioned that there was a process.
You realized like the monitor went through
the roof, heart palpitations, stress. You could feel your physical body changing into
this stress response, this protection, tightness, whatever it was. Yeah. Fear, anxiety, all these
these things you were experiencing in the moment. What was the process that you broke down
to bring it back to more normal levels for yourself of feeling more peace, groundedness, calm?
Okay. So it's the process of the neuropsychol, excellent question. It's the process of the
Neurocycle, which is it's in the second half of the book. So the neurocycle is five
steps, right? This is the five steps. This is what I initially developed for people's traumatic
brain injury. It was my first time that I developed it and developed my theory. And then from there
refined it to all the different types of situations I worked with. And then it's been refined over
the years. This is the most updated research. So a good scientist should keep learning and changing
and improving, which is what I've tried to do. So in this book is the updated version of the
neurocycle. The neuropsychel is how you get your mind, which is always working under control.
If in the state of acute trauma, like I was in that moment, acute trauma creates a red brain.
I showed you that picture of a red brain. That red brain means that I have a tidal wave in my brain going on,
or that there is, the left and the right brain will be out of harmony. I'll have a drop of blood
and oxygen to the front of my brain. I'm going to have things like the delta, we've heard of
things like delta, theta, alpha, beta, gamma, all those waves are supposed to flow like waves in the sea.
And if you think of the C, you've got the big swells, which is DELDA, slightly smaller swells, which is Theta, the Nade, they build, which is beta, the crest, which is high beta, and the gamma, which is the ripple on the beach.
And so we want that through the brain in this nice kind of even way.
That's kind of the Y state, X plus Y.
X is what happens, so as Y is that state.
So X happens and then that Y state gets thrown off.
So in that moment, that's what happened to me.
So what we want to do is because mind works through brain and body, and mind is experiencing this, this, this,
trauma, which is a mess, our brain and body just do what the mind's doing. So then there's a mess
in our brain and our body. But if I have that kind of chaos, I can't think straight. I'm not
going to have any wisdom. I'm going to fall apart. And in this situation, I would have. And I have
in the past, but now I've learned how to deal with this. And I talk about there that this
neuropical can improve how you manage anxiety and depression by 81%. That's a massive claim.
And I've shown it scientifically. Okay. So what I did was to try and get
myself back under control. Now, in that state, you don't know what to do in a tremendously
acute traumatic state, but I knew from my science and from my knowledge, so I'm proactive,
so I could go into two zones. So I went into two modes. The one mode was the mental mess that
I was in, which is the pilot, because I'm driving. I'm in this time. Imagine yourself being in a
helicopter that's like a time capsule, and you're flying over this forest, and the forest is your
mind with all these trees. And this acute trauma has just grown, because it's instant. So here's
this terrible and your helicopter's drawn to this because you are in shock and terror and
fear and deep panic and anxiety that is all the smoke signals so i my my pilots going like this
the co-pilots is also me but it's my wisdom because inside of each of us is our survival
and that's our instinct that you know when you give someone great advice and you just think oh wow
where did that come from you know you get that off it's like we know what we know we know we know
much we can handle.
We will say, I know this, that kind of thing.
That's the co-pilot, this wisdom.
So what we want to do in those states is to get ourselves into the co-pilot.
Remember the co-pilot and the pilot, and you use the U language.
So here you flying this plane all over in the co-pilot saying, okay, let's calm down,
let's land it at that tree.
So you land the plane, you land this time capsule, whatever, and you get out, but you
with the co-pilot, so you're safe.
So you've created a distance.
I'm explaining in detail, and obviously you train, and it's all in the book,
and it's all. I've got an app that explains it to, but this is the mindset that I have trained
myself to come into so I can go into an acute trauma in that mind. I'm still crying. I'm still
freaking out. But I'm freaking out in this zone where I now know, because I know that I need
wisdom. I need to be able to tap into that. And I cannot get through this chaos if this chaotic
brain and body and mind unless I've calmed it down. So I have to get through this because I'm stuck
in that black tree and I'm stuck in this chaotic brain. So that would be considered, would that be
considered like fight or flight, whether it's someone cutting you off in front of you on the street
in the car or someone yelling at you or someone, whatever, an event happening, which is causing
you to react in fight or flight, whether it's a massive T trauma or little T trauma, right?
Exactly. Exactly. Or an acute trauma, which is the blind siding stuff, the stuff we don't expect,
that just hits us out the blue. Yes, absolutely. So you're going into a level of fight and flight.
So everything physiologically, 1,400 neurophysiological responses are activated to help you focus. But they
can't work for you unless you do what I'm telling you to do, which is to shift your
perception.
So this is the how-to, because as soon as you shift your perception in an instant, because
I told you within seconds, I brought the glucose monitor down.
And I mean, I didn't even expect it to work that fast.
I was amazed.
And as it cycled through the 12 hours of the trauma, I was able to manage it more and more.
So, I mean, this is not the first time.
I mean, I've done this my whole life.
But it was just so interesting seeing it in real time.
Sure.
And seeing the reaction.
Okay, so step one is to get the co-pilot state of mind to land the plane.
That's the preparation.
You haven't even got to step one.
Okay, so land the plane first.
Yeah, so that's it.
So you recognize that you remember there's a co-pilot, which is your wise mind,
you're the crazy pilot going all over the place, land the plane.
Let the co-pilot tell you, okay, land the plane.
And you land the plane where you need to, which is at the issue.
And what drew you into land the plane to find the issue was your emotional.
So this is step one.
You're going to gather awareness.
and gather means you controlling it.
You're not sitting under the apple tree
and all the apples are hitting you on the head.
You are standing back and you're picking the apple.
So there's control.
There's a sense of autonomy, a sense of agency.
So in the midst of chaos, you can create agency mentally
because your mind's driving it.
So you stand back and you say, okay, I pick that apple.
So that's my emotional warning signals.
Terror, despair, utterly traumatized,
like whatever they are.
You pick those apples, you put them in your baskets.
You're gathering.
Then you gather awareness.
This is gathering kind of your awareness, this is how I'm feeling, this is what's happened,
this is what's, this is the event.
Yes, this is gathering, it's almost, yes, it is, but you're gathering in very four little
distinct packages, because the more organized you are, the more, the less chaos.
We can be being very systematic.
So what are those four things?
So you gather awareness of your emotional warning signals, so the despair, anxiety, whatever,
panic attack.
Then you gather awareness of your physical bodily response.
So here's your co-pilot saying, okay, how are you feeling?
Gather that apple, gather that apple.
What is your physical, fluttering in the heart, panic, tension, gut-wrenching, adrenaline,
whatever flights and fright, freeze mode you're in.
Then your behaviors, what are you saying?
What are you doing?
How are you responding?
How are you responding?
Yeah, action.
Yeah, what are you saying?
What are you doing?
What is actually happening?
And I'm grabbing this.
I'm grabbing this.
I'm grabbing this.
Get this.
So what is that?
And is it working?
I mean, just doing this changes how you do things.
It's amazing.
You immediately go into this different mode.
Fourth one is perspective.
What's your perspective?
This is doomed.
This is terrible.
This is sucks.
This is end.
Or, okay, this is bad butt.
You know, watch your.
So gather you gather.
Then as soon as you've got those, you're then going to reflect.
So it's very systematic.
And then as you've gathered and done all this preparation thing, you've got the two sides
of the brain.
We've got coherence again.
You've got blood flow back to the brain.
You've got oxygen back to the front of the brain.
When you've got low oxygen and low blood flow,
at the front of the brain, which happens in a trauma, in an acute situation, in those sudden
things, it drops, then you are impulsive, you're going to make bad decisions, you're going
to react incorrectly, you're going to create incoherence, your alpha wave in the brain drops and
becomes more active on the right side, and that's on the right side, which is not great
because that means that we now are not going to have insight. So by doing what I've just said,
you change all of that. You bring back coherence, you increase alpha, and it may not be excellent
yet, but you've started the process.
Then as you move forward through the five steps,
and I put all this brain stuff in the book
and what happens, and so I'm just giving you the overview.
So then you start now reflecting.
Okay, what have I got in my basket?
So number two, reflect.
Reflect is an incredibly beautiful word,
as is gather awareness.
Gathering awareness, I just want to point out,
in the earlier on I said that we mustn't be frightened
of despair and anxiety and trauma
and, I mean, and anxiety, depression.
Don't be scared of them because they are messengers.
They're helpful messengers that are telling you something.
And if you respond to them in that way, you then control them.
But if you respond to them in fear, they control you.
Ooh, yeah.
Yeah.
And then you're not going to move forward.
You're going to get very stuck.
And then stuck in rumination and the patterns will just get worse.
So get the control.
Even though you can be crying, screaming, swearing, I don't care what you're doing.
But just get the control.
You're at the tree.
You're doing the stuff.
So gather.
When you think of light going through a prism, it reflects all the colors of the rainbow.
So there's depth.
There's that one thing means a lot.
And so reflect is this process of being a detective.
Okay, well, why am I having that reaction?
Why am I?
Now, when it's something in the moment, we pretty much know why.
I mean, I knew why I was.
So I didn't have to do too much reflection, but I had to, the reflection in terms of why,
because I knew the cause.
But the difference was I needed to reflect to say, okay, if I react like this, this is going to happen.
So it was, it was questioning, what are you doing with that emotion?
What are you doing with that behavior?
Is that behavior helping?
So the reflect in that situation would be different to a reflect for someone who is having a complete and utter imposter syndrome attack.
And it's a pattern and they keep doing it.
So they're now working sequentially through the process.
So they're going to have to start finding why.
What does it track back to?
What sort of self-esteem issues are?
What is the origin story of it?
So the reflect in that case would be, you know, ask, answer, discuss, why do I feel this?
why, why, why.
And so it's a different, so there's, but reflecters to just, you know, get meaning, but in a
very comprehensive way, because there's all these patterns of meaning.
In that acute trauma, it's quick.
I'm doing the five steps quick.
If I'm working on a pattern over time, I'm going to spend longer.
Third step is you write.
And the writing step is, obviously, I was in the midst of a trauma.
I couldn't write, so I visualized.
So the quick stuff you can just visualize, or if you can write, write.
Writing, I recommend if you write, write in the form of a medicog.
I teach you how in the book.
and I have a video of a neuropycle app that goes with this.
What's a metacog?
A metacog is a pattern form of writing that stimulates, it looks like a tree.
You start in the middle, and you work on branches, and you put words, and you don't write whole sentences.
You basically just pour information, and you literally let it just come out in this pattern format.
But one of the key things is to group, as a thought, as something comes up, you put it on one area, and as something else comes up, you put it wherever.
So you have these clusters of information, and every word's on a line, and every one.
line goes out of the previous line. And that format is unbelievable. It just drags the two sides of the brain
together, digs deep and you start getting insight into what you didn't even know was there. And then
the fourth step is to then go and sort out that chaos that you've just written down. So the fourth
step is to, okay, I've gathered awareness, I've reflected, I'm writing, what does this mean? What's the
mental autopsy? What's the pattern, the activators, the antidotes? How can I reconceptualize this?
Beautiful word reconceptualize. And then you end off the cycle with a little action.
And that action, if it's in the moment, like in that five seconds or whatever, it's okay,
I'm going to actually take a deep breath and I'm going to act like this, or I'm going to
say that or I'm going to do this.
So it's a little action that anchors you back in a state where you can function in the next
moment, in that acute trauma or in that imposter moment and imposter syndrome moment and
you've now got to go and into a business meeting and you're feeling like you can't because
you're in, you know, the imposter syndrome fraud sort of set up.
So in doing it in the quick moment by moment, you're going to have a simple quick action.
In the big stuff where you're working out the pattern, each day you do your work for a limited
amount of time.
And I say do the work because it's not a quick fix.
If you're looking for a quick fix, nothing related to greatness is a quick fix or mind.
It's time and you know that you experience that with your whole story.
So essentially you would do it for around 15 to 45 minutes a day when you're fixing up the big stuff.
And you would do it, Lewis, the big stuff you would do for 63 days.
So that's key.
Why 63?
Glad you asked that.
So we've all been told 21 days to build a habit.
Well, that's a complete myth.
I wrote about it in the book too.
It's not a neurosurgeon.
A surgeon many years ago was talking about the physical cycles of healing that our body goes through.
Like if you get a blister, it takes about three weeks for the stem cells and everything to form in the immune system to do its job to get rid of the blister.
That's assuming that your mind's not a mess.
If your mind's a mess, you can chop off 60% of that healing time.
It'll take 60% longer.
Wow.
60% longer.
If your mind's a mess, you increase.
If your mind is right, does it decrease the time?
It does it on time.
It does it on time.
And sooner.
It depends on the level of damage.
And sometimes you'll need one cycle of three.
Sometimes you'll need multiple.
That's for physical healing.
Mind healing, however, needs a minimum of three cycles for behavior change.
Really?
Is this scientifically proven?
So there's very little research in the 21-day myth.
So I decided to research it.
And there's a few studies.
There's one from University College London.
I put them in my book.
there's my one that I've just done recently over the in 2019, over 2020, we are tracked and
we tracked in the brain what happens. So 21 days, you get what we call gamma peaks, which
means that you've taken this, you've deconstructed it and you've reconstructed it into something
healthy. So you've changed this thought, but it's X, Y. So that's in there, but it's in a different,
it looks different. It's like if you take an ugly old house that you're going to renovate,
you take lots of photos of all the mold and all the ugly carpets and you bash it down,
you build a beautiful new house, you still remember how it was. But,
but you've reconceptualized it.
You're living in that new space.
You remember the old.
Okay, so that's what I'm talking about.
That takes 21 days.
So you create to break down and build a thought with memories
because a thought is a tree made of memories.
Memories are like a tree's made of branches,
thoughts are made of memories.
So to make something that's got a level of sustainability
takes about 21 days.
And in that 21 days, after that if you stop there,
it's a tiny little plant in your forest.
It doesn't have enough energy
to move from the non-conscious mind,
inner end, the non-conscious mind operates 24-7. It's where all your experiences are stored in
thoughts, all your belief systems, you're nurturing, everything about you. And that is influencing
your conscious mind. Conscious mind's only awake when you're awake. So right now as I'm talking,
everything that I'm saying is stimulating thoughts from your non-conscious mind to move into
your conscious mind to make sense of what I'm saying and to build all this new stuff into thoughts
in your trees. So a non-conscious mind, for a thought to move from the non-conscious to the
conscious, through the subconscious. So non-conscious, subconscious is the bridge. Conscious is
when you're awake. Non-conscious, 24-7, infinite, huge, massive, and where our wisdom is as well.
So the wisdom is through the middle. If you want to imagine a forest, you've got the beautiful,
dark green strip, which is all your instinctive wisdom, survival stuff, wild-for-love stuff,
optimism, bias. And then everything we experience in life is around the edge. Little trees, big
trees, dark trees, green trees. The smaller the tree, the newer the experience, or the newer the
memory, the weaker the memory. That's big, established trees.
are the ones that influence.
So those things are powerful.
So if it's a big dark tree and it's influencing,
it's going to jump into your conscious mind
and influence your view.
So backtracking, to get something that's good
that you've rebuilt, to actually influence
how you view something, it has to have more energy put into it.
Energy's never lost.
Energy's transferred.
Quantum physics talks about energy.
These things are proteins with energy vibrating
in the little protein structures.
So you want that they're weak.
So you've got to strengthen.
You've got to water it.
You've got to feed it as a fertilizer.
Totally.
And all you do is it's so easy.
Oh my gosh.
It's so easy.
From day 22 to 40 to 63, you simply do step number five for about a minute a day.
That's how simple it is.
It's 42 minutes over 42 days.
In my Neuicycle app, I've actually got an active reminder function that you can type it into.
It pops up on your phone and you can remind yourself to do this.
And you literally just read it.
And it keeps just reading it, reminds you to do it.
and then you're building your strength and you're turning it into behavior change.
So to go around, you know, the theme of your podcast, you know, to get your greatness requires behavior change.
So real behavior change, if you really want to build a good habit into your life, you're going to have to spend the 63 days doing it.
So not only is that 63 days, I mean, I've shown it scientifically and so on, not only is it for detoxing the patterns, the traumas, the toxic habits, the small tea, big tea, as you mentioned, the acute stuff, the bad habits we've done.
develop, but it's also to build new habits. So if you, if you know, you identify this is an area
that I want to grow in my life to go to the next level of greatness, whatever that is, you need
63 days at least. And sometimes more. Sometimes a trauma is so embedded and it's blocking your
greatness that you might need multiple cycles of 63. There's no cookie cutter design. But the more you do
that and the more you practice that in the moment by moment, the more self-regulated you become,
which brings us right back to the beginning of the conversation, which was that mind is always an
action. So you may as well control it. So here I've just told you how to do it. It's pretty
much the nuts and bolts. What does the neuroscience say behind positive thinking versus negative
or toxic thinking? And I think the, I don't know what the stat is. It's 60,000 thoughts a day
or something like that we have. And 80 or 90% of them are the same recurring thoughts. I'm probably
off there, but something like that. There's a lot of stuff like that out there. And you're not far off
in terms of what the, what the media is saying.
In terms of the people, I follow people that are heavy into understanding the numbers of, you know,
from a various neuroscientific perspective and I've done my own calculations.
We build around about 8 to 10,000 thoughts a day.
So we're building.
So that's sort of how many events we experience.
It could be more.
These are very, very, very, very average numbers.
It really is.
So it's somewhere between 8 and 18,000 that we build.
So we build in response to what we experience.
So whatever's new is built.
But then to build, you also have the thoughts popping up.
So at any one moment, so we can work in 10 second blocks.
That's what neuroscience shows.
It's just to give you some kind of tangible thing to hang on to.
In any one 10 second moments, you can literally have anything from 1 to 13 thoughts that will move from the non-conscious.
And maybe more.
And as well, and also build a couple of thoughts in that thought.
with one thought, but with multiple maybe 100 memories in that.
So there's, that's, that's 120 odd things happening in any 10 second block.
Wow.
And multiply that by 60 seconds, you know, it's time six, so in one minute.
So you can really see the numbers as they multiply.
So that's where we get anywhere between 8,000 rebuild and then probably about another 10,000
are coming up.
So 18,000 seems to be a more, but whatever the number is, it doesn't really matter.
It's a lot.
We have a lot of thoughts
And a lot of them are more negative
It seems like, right?
Not necessarily
If you look over
The only reason it feels like that
Is because the negative get more attention
Not because they are
Not because you're wired that way
But because they have created
Complete disruption in your brain
So we see
It's stronger physical reaction
Right
And you've got to get rid of it
It's against your survival
So you're going to pay attention
To whatever's threatening your survival
Think of it
If someone's at your front door
and they're trying to bash your front door down
and you've got your family to protect.
You're going to pay attention.
You're not going to sit and watch TV.
You're going to pay attention to what's a threat to your survival.
That's why we, so it's not that we have more negative thoughts.
When we're relaxed and calm, we're not thinking,
ah, I need to fix this.
We're just relaxing and hanging out,
but it's when there's a thought that's negative,
we put a lot of attention on.
Exactly.
It's the big tree in the forest.
It's whatever you think about the most will grow.
So you may have, if this huge infinite forest of green,
the strip through the middle is the,
wise mind that can't ever change. The majority is green, small trees, big trees, and you're
going to have clusters of the black in between. Some people will have more because they've had
more abuse, you know, as I said, 30, 40%, well, some 20, 30% of the population, depending on where
you are in which country would have more experience, more trauma, socioeconomic, you know, abuse,
war, et cetera. So war-torn countries, you'll find more PTSD, a higher percentage than in
somewhere like less war-torn country and that kind of thing. But on average, the forest is mainly green,
that whatever's getting the most attention in your life,
if you're living in war-torn something,
or if you're living in an abusive situation,
or you're living in with a bullying boss,
or you're living under the threat of someone in your family who's really ill,
that's what's going to dominate.
So it's not that we have more negative thoughts.
It's because that is survival.
It's threatening our survival.
It's creating brain damage.
We've got to get rid of it.
We've got to manage it.
It's a call to management.
Paying attention to the toxic is a call to management.
It's created disruptions in the gravitational field.
think of those those I need to get an image there's a movie and I don't know which one it is but it's those you know you get that ripple effect it's moving through like a like a field or something and you can almost you know they create with the movies they create that ripple effect you know what can you visualize something like that okay that's what's happening with the mind so we've got these ripples it's not just trees that are standing still there's these ripples but even on then that ripple is toxic so it's like it's going to be very disruptive and that sends out this this it upsets the neuro the the
in the non-conscious mind, and it's linked to a physical, so this gravitational field wave
disruption storm is linked to one of these in the physical brain.
So it's in the storms there, somewhere there, so maybe it's there, and then it's also
there, this thing in there.
So those are linked, and those are threatening your survival.
So they will get your attention.
And your attention is to go fix.
So if we suppress...
So if we suppress in terms of what?
Not pay attention, not be aware?
Medicaid, take drugs, drink, whatever the addiction is to cope, as opposed to address it, what happens?
Well, so essentially, I'm glad you brought that up.
So addiction is not a disease.
We're not caught by the chemical, and the chemicals do change your brain.
I've just explained that, but your mind can override any biological change because your mind's more powerful than your brain.
And that's how we, you know, you can always draw on that internal survival instinct,
which is that internal strip of green trees, just for the analogy's sake.
Addiction, isn't a disease, addiction is a response, like depression.
It's a warning signal.
It's trying to take something that's painful and taking something to numb the pain.
So, as you said, the sex, the pornography, the alcohol, the drugs, the smoking, yeah.
So you often find, exactly, so if you find someone who was talking to someone yesterday
who had a tremendous battle with cocaine and alcohol, but it wasn't those that grabbed them,
we get the impression that, oh, your brain's diseased, therefore your voice.
vulnerable to those and you can't control it.
Nonsense.
That's taken all the hope.
People are dying from lack of hope, Lewis.
That's what that statistic I spoke about earlier, the reversal of trends.
People are dying from lack of hope, deaths of despair.
When you take away people's sense of agency, you're taking away the most core dynamic of
who you are as a human.
Your mind is all about agency.
Think, feel, choose.
You control that.
And you remove that agency from someone by saying, hey, you can't control the fact that
you're addicted to alcohol or that you're addicted to.
that's terrible, but if you say, okay, I see that that is where you're finding your coping strategy
at the moment, that having the alcohol is numbing the pain, having, taking, having the, you know,
the pornography, the repeated, whatever, the abuse of, whatever, abuse of anything to hide it,
the opioid addiction, it's just to numb the pain. So once a person is in a loving, supportive
environment where they can start seeing that change, then they can start, seeing why, then you can
take them through the process of okay well let's see maybe that signal has got a cause and let's
start finding and when you start working through the neurop cycle they i can tell you now most of
the time they're still addicted to something because the pain's so bad and they're denying this is
a disease because it's easier to accept that initially but they deny no i don't i'm not addicted
to alcohol i know i'm not addicted to to whatever the cocaine i'm not addicted but once you start
lovingly showing them okay well let's talk about forget about the the substance let's
about you, what's going on, what's happened. And when you start doing that, then I'm depressed
and this and this, and then the things start coming up. And as soon as you start getting that
cycle happening, then the person is more able to say, oh, I see, I've been trying to numb my
pain. And then you can start getting the release. 86 to 93% of people that are addicted
get out of addiction through choice. And that choice is stimulated by a super supportive
of loving environment that helps people to see what's going on because it's very hard to face
that stuff so we can live in a state of denial. And so that's what takes a lot of good supportive
and good therapy and good environments, you know, supportive environments. But to tell someone,
I'm always an addict is one of the worst things you can say. You're saying, okay, you have no power.
Right, right. I'm a victim to this chemical imbalance or whatever might be. Yeah. But that's not the
case. And it's, and it may take you years. I mean, I was speaking to someone the other day who was
as I said, a cocaine battling with, I mean, all kinds of stuff.
And now is one of the most amazing people, helping other people doing the most incredible work.
That person had been raped multiple times as a child, came from a very wealthy family.
And babysitter who looked after him when he was, parents were so busy working,
was repeatedly raping this child through his childhood.
And then got, I mean, it happened again at university and this and this in different work environments
and in different parts of the world when he traveled to the different parts of the world.
And that's where, so he had to get to the point where he realized he was numbing the pain.
You know, so that's, so, can you see we have to shift the narrative?
Absolutely.
You know, that this is, and these are extreme cases, but there's also the day to day.
I mean, we've got to live with ourselves.
Someone the other day said to me, well, that's all in well, relationship, big extreme.
What about just sitting here with myself?
And I can't sleep at night.
And I'm worrying about, like, you know, the things that aren't, I can still get through life,
but I'm ruminating and I'm overthinking and I'm stuck in anger and, you know, that too.
We've got to manage all of that.
That was my, that was 25 years of my life because I talked about being sexually abused when I was five and having anger and resentment and frustration and rage for 25 years until I was, until I actually started opening up and talking about it.
Until I did therapy, until I did, you know, EMDR and.
Yeah, I mean, I did every type of therapeutic experience I could do.
And it, it really truly gave me the, the environment of love, support, and peace to.
begin the path of setting me free, setting the pain and the trauma free by giving it a voice,
by expressing it, by doing the work. And it didn't happen overnight. It's eight years later,
it's still an ongoing thing of healing. It will be. Yeah, it's much easier. And I can have a
conversation about it with ease where eight years ago I would, you know, be crying talking about it.
That's X, Y. That's the X plus Y because X, Y. You've re conceptualized. You're able to,
sorry, I didn't interrupt you, but that's what you've done. You've been,
You've been neurocycling without knowing it.
Now, if you formally start neurocycling, if you start a daily program, you're going to start
unwiring it even more.
You're going to get even more control over the accumulation of all the things that happened.
I mean, that's just what I would recommend that you try it out.
For sure, for sure.
So what should we be thinking when toxic thoughts about ourselves?
I'm not good enough.
I'll never amount to anything.
I shouldn't try this.
this person doesn't like me, drama, stress, anxiety, whatever it is, when we have a toxic
thought that doesn't support our dreams, that doesn't support the betterment of our future
and our vision, what should we be thinking in terms of replacing that, in terms of the process,
or is that something we shouldn't be rejecting negative thoughts?
We should be analyzing and being aware, but how do we do it without consuming our life?
Okay, so you kind of answered the question, the second part, that's what you do.
the only way to get control is to embrace and to process and reconceptualize and you do it in a very
accepting manner so it's like get into the helicopter and be the messy pilot and be the co-pilot
yeah and get into that state of mind because then and then it's very non-judgmental
that you start by telling yourself like the very first thing as you're getting in the helicopter
whichever point in you in is to say it's okay it's okay there's been a million billion
people who have been in the same position as you that are battling in fact
most people battle with self-esteem.
It's very few people that don't, for some reason,
battle with self-esteem.
For example, just take that example,
or thinking I can't do this, why I am a shame,
because every toxic experience we have
completely rips at the core of who we are.
And the core of who we are is, I'm needed, I'm valuable,
and I have something to contribute to the world
that no one else can contribute.
So when someone tries to take that away from you
through an abuse or that has to attack the core of you,
So you kind of hide amongst shame.
And self-esteem comes out of this.
I shouldn't be feeling this.
But especially a young child, like five, to be abused,
you don't know how to process that.
So the most immediate thing is because it's so against survival,
because the adult in your life who's supposed to be the protector,
everything's a sort of.
You don't have the language.
You don't have the brain power yet, the mind power yet to process.
So your coping strategy will be, well, this made me feel bad, so I am bad.
So you tend to have this pervasiveness, sexual trauma,
tends to create a pervasiveness of shame, and that comes out in all kinds of behavioral
manifestations, whether it's withdrawal, whether it's being difficult, aggressive, and it's
pervasive, and that attacks self-esteem because something at the core of you are has been
attacked, and that's why it takes time, as you spoke about, to go back and find that.
So in terms of what do you say to someone, the first thing is to get to the point where we have
to change our narrative. We have to forget what the world said about all these scary words
and see those as very helpful.
It's a complete 90 degree or 360 degree change.
Despair, anxiety, shame, thinking I am shame, thinking I have no self-esteem, thinking I can't do this, that's okay.
Because as soon as you say that's okay, as soon as you can admit you're feeling that, you've controlled it.
You've now promised neuroscience.
You've got the power back.
You've shifted the power balance.
So instead of, this is now in the non-conscious, it's this former, it's the five-year-old, it's
gone through the years, whatever, and there's been this, and I'm not saying you did this,
but there may have been a period that you suppressed because you didn't know how to process
until maybe 15, 16, 17, when you were getting more metacognitively able and sort of seeing
things, maybe it was older. Very often it hits around between 18, 22, the early childhood trauma
where we start seeing those patterns manifesting and a bit of awareness coming. So now that,
when this comes into consciousness, in the brain, this thing is now weakened. So these protein
branches, which are the memories and the emotions, the data of the event, which was that,
is now weakened.
So the minute I, through my tears, say, okay, I feel, I feel shame.
I feel like I've got no self-esteem.
I feel like I'm useless and I'm ugly and I'm this and I'm that and I can't ever achieve
anything.
The minute I can accept that, I can look at that objectively pilot, co-pilot, and the
co-pilot can say, what do you feel?
I feel, okay, let's now see if that's real.
And that whole calm, just the way I'm speaking, calm, it's okay.
Own it's fine.
It's okay.
Now we can fix it.
That's weakened these chemical bonds, protein bonds.
I've sort of changing the structure in my brain.
I've now shifted 1,400 neurophysiological responses to work for me instead of against me.
I've now sort of recreating balance in the brain.
I've increased blood flow.
So I'm setting myself up to be more resilient to do the very hard work of unpacking.
And it gets worse before it gets better.
and one of the really good things that I have presented in my work and in this book is to know that scientifically I've shown that even if you feel worse, which you will, when you unpack this and you start seeing stuff that you suppress, it's terrible. It's heartbreaking. It can make you feel like you just want to die.
That's how I thought.
When I started talking about it, I was like, this is the scariest, hardest thing that
I've ever done.
I'd almost rather die.
Like, it's the feeling that you have, you're like, if anyone ever knew these things about
me, if I had to truly face these things, it's the most scary, challenging thing I've
ever emotionally had to deal with.
And it feels like you're dying.
I don't know.
Maybe that's too extreme.
Maybe it's too extreme, but I think you're thinking or feeling like I'm going to die
Because if I processed this and if people knew this about me, how could they ever accept me?
How could they ever love me?
I'm going to be alone for the rest of my life.
Like, your mind, my mind went through these thoughts.
Yeah.
And there's like no meaning and there's no purpose and what can you do and it's a waste of time
and I can't live with myself like this and it's so terrible.
And I just can't do this and then you start rejecting people around you or you make wrong to say.
It's totally normal.
That is normal.
You need to accept that about the process.
It will get worse before it gets better and that's okay.
And that's totally what you've gone through is normal.
And we can't go and label that and medicate that.
Then I invalidate your experience by you being able to talk about your experience,
this format of having a podcast around the world now where people are being much more vulnerable and opening,
it's bringing this into the open and it's enabling us to then be able to weaken that.
You've shifted the power balance.
And it does get worse.
As you said, you want to die.
It's so bad.
But then the shift starts happening because look where you are today.
A shift happens.
at some point when it really gets down where you may even have tried to commit suicide
or you may even have got to the point where this is that I'm out of here
or something traumatic, really traumatic.
Then you suddenly, there's that shift, there's that awareness and then you can start rebuilding.
And, you know, that is a time process.
And that shift is real.
You asked me about what would you say to someone who's in that state?
Where do you start?
You start by giving yourself permission.
You start by getting into the co-pilot pilot seat.
by letting that pilot fly like a maniac and, you know, crash the plane, it's a time capsule,
you can get that plane going again, but helping, leaning on the power and the comfort of the co-pilot
to say, I'm really scared of that, I don't want to land my plane.
You land, but I will, and you land your plane, and there you take out your spades and you start
the process of getting to eventually digging this whole thing up and slowly as you're ready.
That's why I say, 15 to 45 minutes a day, you don't do longer.
You do a little bit at a time and you do as many cycles as you know.
need and eventually it gets to the point where you have reconceptualized.
How do we, I mean, how do we truly heal the trauma of the past that causes a lot of our
thoughts?
Because I hear like the, I'm hearing you say that I'm feeling the traumas, the memories of
the past that we had from the event, and we're holding onto the memory, the idea,
the thought of the event.
And sometimes we, we, and a lot of the times I would go to say, you know, I'll speak for
myself and I'm thinking most of us probably, an event happens.
and our memories, after decades and years, build it up into something bigger and more extreme
potentially than the event actually was.
And we're holding on to, now our mind is coming up with memories that weren't even real
that caused this reaction in us.
So how do we really, is it healing the trauma of the past?
Is it healing the memory of the past?
Is it healing all of it?
What is the process?
What should we do?
Is it only through therapy?
Can we do it alone?
You can do it alone.
can do it with therapy, you can do it. I would never do anything completely alone. I would make
sure you have some sort of support system. If you can get to therapy, it will definitely help,
but therapy is a catalyst. It's not actually, and it's your place where you can unpack the pain
and get the guidance for how to manage the next step. But you're still living with yourself 24-7.
You've got to do the work, yeah. You've got to do the work. And this is where having a system
of mind management is so vital. So what you've described is the whole thought tree. And that
thought tree, let's take the incident of what you went through as a child. And that would
have been, you know, what the actual incident would have been is the root. And then the event and
the details and the timing and the, all the, everything. And that then builds your perspective of how
you viewed yourself and how you viewed this whole, which this is your, your emotions and the
data. And that manifested in how you actually lived your life. Yeah. So that's a trauma from
the past. There's no guilt in this, even though it's toxic, because that's all.
you could do to survive.
It's a coping mechanism.
So this toxic tree is a coping mechanism.
So we've got this inbuilt thing in our mind and our brain that in a system that enables us,
because this should wipe you out, you shouldn't even be alive kind of thing.
If you look at the natural biology, but there's this protective system in place that kind
of cocoons it for a season until you're ready to deal with it.
So that's, you know, and then something will come in, an event will come in your life
where now you have to deal with it.
And sometimes we ignore that.
We ignored it a few times before we deal.
And then eventually, so there's kind of a cocoon, so it's protective, so it is damaging.
But because you're not ready to deal with it, it's not wiping you out.
It's still causing problems.
It's still creating a few shockwaves there in the ground and that kind of thing.
But when you're ready to, you know, then suddenly something will happen in your life.
And it's being, it's slowly infiltrating.
It's the slow infiltration.
So it's sending out little tendrils, you know, it's growing, that you're still surviving, but things are getting worse and worse.
And eventually this cocoon starts breaking down and it explodes in your mentally, physically,
in something, in a relationship, in a work environment, it builds, it cascades and little things happen
and eventually it's a big explosion.
That's this thing the cocoon's starting to come off as you are maturing and getting older
and doing more with your life and experiencing more.
This has to then get sorted out.
So your body gets to a point where it has to reject it.
It has to, the pus has to go, for want of an awful analogy, but it's a good example.
point you can't stay there anymore. And that's when it explodes. These are all the
memories. As you recall it, this is the concept of the abuse as a child. That's the thought.
This is the detail of the story. And that's how you experienced it. And so you've got to go from
the warning signals back to the data here. How you experience it back to the actual moment, yeah.
And then you reconceptualize. So how do you make it play out in your future? That's always part of your
story. But you change how, like you've already done it. You said it earlier. You can
talk about it now without falling apart, but at some point you could not talk about it at all.
No, no. You rewrite the script. Yeah, you rewrite. And that takes time. That takes these cycles of
63 days. You literally re-conceptualization is rewriting the script. So eventually this goes,
you then have this, and that now, instead of being toxic, is can you see some of these leaves
are shining a little brighter than the others? Okay, so there is that in that. It's reconceptualized.
I can now talk about it. I can now, it's, that'll make you cry, but you've now, but you've now,
turned it into a part of your you've you've redesigned it you've it's the it's the beautiful new
space that's how it was but now you you've you've made it work for you instead of against you
so that is then the trauma of the past which is there's no excusing that there's no forgiveness
even in that but you need to be released because if you still connected to that trauma kept
there keeps you connected in the quantum world literally to the to the abuser so until we release
So there's a connection.
So you literally, here's your brain, here's that person, maybe 10,000 miles away.
But because of entanglement in quantum physics, there's no space-time dimension.
And because of that, it's a toxic entanglement, but when particles are entangled,
and you may have heard of this somewhere, or someone saying this,
but when two particles are put in a relationship in quantum physics experiments,
no matter how far apart, they are shot, they still are in relationship.
So this one turns this way, this one will turn this way.
So until you release, until you re-conceptualize, you're still connected.
so that will always be controlling you.
So when we talk about, people say forgiveness, I think release is a better word because how do you forgive?
These going through this process over time, as you re-conceptualize, you're slowly cutting the ties.
So by the time it's in this format, no longer is that invisible tie there.
You know that you've cut the tie when you can actually talk about it and you're not excusing that person's behavior.
That can never actually, what they've done can never be forgiven if you think of it, but you can release it.
So we talk about forgiveness as being part of a healing, but we've got to, I had this discussion with someone the other day.
We've got to be very careful of using the term forgiveness loosely because when someone's done something wrong, that wrongness, even whatever you've done to someone, that wrongness is always there.
What is forgiven is what should be done is we should release.
We should realize that that was a moment in time it was wrong.
The person needs to own it, but it's not your responsibility to make that person own it.
They have to unpack that wrongness and kind of works through that.
what you have to do is be released from it and to put that into your past.
And that's kind of the easiest thing to do because a lot of people keep getting stuck
because they think, I can't forgive, I can't forgive.
How can I forgive someone who's, how do you forgive someone who's raped you?
How does your parents forgive someone who's hurt their child?
You know, how do you, how does, when someone's murder, you know, that, I'm not saying
that you have to keep that and not, you know, you have to get, you have to release yourself
from that.
Yeah.
And you have to accept that that event.
maybe that person was operating out of trauma.
So the reason for them doing that was trauma-driven.
And it doesn't make it right.
It makes it, but we can't ignore it.
And what I think we've also tried to do with a lot of sort of psychological approaches is,
oh, forgive, especially in the religious community, forgiveness, it's all gone.
It's all gone away.
It hasn't.
It's still there.
It's part of a story.
I think the Kinsugi principle explains it the best.
Do you know the Kinsugi principle?
The Japanese art.
Yeah, go ahead, sure.
When a vase shatters to the ground, and it's in a thousand,
pieces. They don't sweep the pieces away. When you were raped as a child, your life was shattered,
but you didn't sweep the pieces away. What they did was they collect every piece and they
meticulously rebuild the vase with gold, lacquer and platinum. So now you have this beautiful
new vase with all the gold and platinum represents what you've gone through. It's enriched you
who you are as a person. Now you are helping others through your story. You are teaching others.
you have you as a leader are one of the 3% only that are enabling others to talk about their trauma
only 3% of leaders are talking about mental health 3% globally that's terrible
so if we as leaders don't talk about it how do we give permission to those that are following
to talk so as a leader as you talk you've now taken the kinsugi principle you are showing us
your gold cracks the shining light in the leaves and it's the trauma is shocking we never forgive
that is wrong. We can never say that's right. It's never right. But what you've done with it
is right. And now you can turn it into helping others go into greatness. That's kind of the
transformation. Wow. I'm curious, how do we, what's the process of protecting our mental
health on a daily basis? Whether we've, it sounds like first we need to be aware of and do the
process of healing the past or the traumatic memories of the past, however you want to call it.
but what's the process of protecting the present in the future
so that we don't fall back into a dark space
that kind of keeps us there for so long?
Absolutely.
Is there a process you recommend?
There is, and it's self-regulation.
It's being very, very self-regulated.
We see from neuroscience, and I actually have a little quote in the book
where I think I've got it, I think I actually had it open
because I actually did it a little alive on it today.
I can tell you what it is.
10 seconds, here it is.
I thought I had the page open.
Every 10 seconds, you can be consciously aware of what you're thinking, feeling, and choosing.
Mental peace and keeping yourself in a state of mental peace comes from being aware every 10
seconds.
Now, I'm not asking you to sexual watch and your time on your phone.
I'm just saying that translate that out.
That means all the time.
That when you're awake, you need to be standing back and observing your own thinking.
You need to be thinking, okay, what am I thinking in the sense?
moment? How am I reacting this moment? I wake up, I feel great. And then I read an email,
I feel lousy, or I wake up feeling on edge. Why? I'm talking to this person. How am I
reacting? How am I responding? I'm doing this email. I'm doing this work. What's my,
it's constantly monitoring and that may sound exhausting, but it's not. It's the most natural thing
in the world. It's one of the most brain healthy things you can do. So that's the one key is
self-regulation. As you neuropsychol, as you get into the habit of neurocycling, your self-regulation
skills are trained to a level where it changes your life.
Honestly, if I had to say what protects my mental health, it's my increased self-regulation
from constantly living a life of neuropsychling.
Then the other thing in the neurocycling that is phenomenal for protecting mental health,
which no one speaks about, I don't happen to anyone except me speak about this,
and it's called brain building.
And there's a whole section in the book on brain building.
And that's taking the five steps of the neuropsychal to learn new information.
as humans.
What does that mean?
A new skill or a new...
Every day, new data.
So for me, I will take my scientific research.
Every day I spend at least an hour looking at neuroscientific or scientific studies related
to my field of work, studying new information, the latest.
So I study it to the point where I could actually give a lecture on it or I could write an exam on it.
So I take the five steps and I study information.
Every day when you wake up, you have millions of new baby nerve cells.
And the nerve cells look like trees.
and they are waiting for you to be, like lattices,
to strengthen the new cells, the new thoughts that you build
into the neurons of your brain, these little branches, these thoughts.
And if you don't use them, they become toxic waste.
So that affects your sleep at the end of the day
and affects your dreams.
And cumulatively over time, they affect your health of your brain.
So when you brain build, it's like cleaning your teeth.
If you don't clean your teeth every day,
eventually you're going to have a real problem with your teeth
and your brain because it's going to cause all kinds of issues.
and your body and so on.
Same thing with brain building.
Brain building builds mental and physical resilience.
So by learning something, we actually think deeply.
When you neuropsychle to brain build, what I'm doing is getting you to think super
deeply.
And when you think deeply, you make all these great things happen in the brain.
The left, right side, oxygen and all that stuff.
And that's the only way you can actually grab those new baby dendrites.
They respond to deep thinking.
They don't respond to shallow thinking.
They don't respond to scanning through headlines and hurry sickness and run.
rush, rush, rush, and data capturing and never doing anything.
They respond to, oh, that's, I scan the headlines, that interests me, let me read that article
and study it, as though I'm going to write an exam.
Well, I'm reading this great book, or take my book and study it, you know, study that
every day for an hour.
You'll get, you'll not only get the tools, but you'll be building your brain.
Whatever, take anything you're interested in, if you love cooking, if you love whatever you
are interested in, self-help books, anything.
Don't just read, study them.
Use the five steps, take an hour a day, if you can do more, do more, and you will try
Transform your mental health.
All my patients, when they came into my practice, I would obviously evaluate and do all that kind of thing.
We'd work out sort of where the issues were, but we would always do brain building first.
Sometimes for a few sessions, I would only do brain building and get them to a state where I could recognize they're starting to get more resilient and self-regulated.
Then we would start doing the trauma work and the learning disability work and the work with trauma, you know, working with traumatic brain injury.
Sure.
We would, and in fact, all the traumatic brain injury and stroke work that I would do with my patients, like if I was working with someone like what,
your dad went through, I would teach the patient and the family brain building. We would take
what are you interested in? And like if your dad was interested, let's say, whatever, let's say he was
interested in, I don't know, what was your dad interested in? He's into playing piano, singing,
sports, running, yeah. Okay, so you could take maybe sports and you could then use the brain
building. You can do this with him now. You can take the brain building and take sports and you
don't just read it, but you actually study it. You do the five steps and you study it as
So you are now going to give a lecture, Dad.
You're going to now teach this.
That's what I would do with my patients.
And then we would slowly restore function because that changes the, it orders the gravitational fields, orders the brain, changes in directs the neuroplasticity, and healing comes.
And you start transforming.
I had CEOs of top companies in South Africa have terrible car accidents and completely lose their functionality, not be able to function.
do this brain building in the whole over a period of time and go back and become something else.
So like the one guy was an engineer but went into management and became a CEO of a huge corporation,
had this terrible car accident, ended up going back and becoming a top engineer with brain damage.
So I mean, I've had pilots that at 82 that couldn't fly anymore that have become accountants.
I mean, I can tell you story after story.
When I'm in the most distressed state, like that night of acute trauma that I told you about,
besides the glucose monitoring, besides doing the
neurocycling, what did I do? I did
brain building. I sat there brain building
to calm myself down in that
state. So I would shift between
the management neuropsychol to
the brain building neuropsychol.
Trying to learn and understand something, yeah.
And that built resilience. So it calmed me down.
If I'm worked up, I'll go to brain building.
If I'm really out of it and I'm not managing
and I'm feeling like I'm getting super anxious or
depressed or something, I will even go
and do 10 minutes of brain building. I'll grab a study,
study it, do the brain building,
enough to immediately increase my resilience.
Does brain building only happen when you're studying and learning something, or is it more
of like, okay, I'm going to play ping pong or play a sport or do an activity to help
like hand-eye coordination?
Yes, no, definitely.
You can do that too.
So ping pong is fantastic for the brain.
You know, anything that really challenges the brain to coordinate is definitely going
to be a brain-building exercise.
So, you know, record ball, tennis, ping pong, you know, things that are challenging.
So do coos, whatever, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, you can do those too.
So do those, those are more physical related.
So I would balance, I would balance the physical with the mental so that you do the
cognitive as well.
Both are mental.
I shouldn't say that.
Sort of text and physical.
Make sure that you're brain-billed with a combination.
You know, I feel like a lot of parents in general don't have the tools to have conversations
with their kids around mental health.
You know, I don't remember much of my parents.
Although they're amazing, I don't remember us talking about mental health and these challenges that might arise,
these emotions and these feelings that might arise for us at different times in ways of how to manage it properly as like the tools that are now being discovered in research like you have today.
What conversations should parents be having with their kids around mental health in order to make them feel safe, seen, and loved with the confusion that they have maybe as teenagers or young,
adults in today's world.
I love your question, and it's so important.
We should be doing this from babies.
So when a child comes home from school and they may be three or four years old and
they sad, they don't have the language, but to be able to actually notice and validate,
I see you feeling sad.
Why are you sad?
And you know, give them toys to be able to act out the older they get, never overlook
a child's emotion, always validate, I see you sad.
Do you want to talk about it?
I see you.
So it's, I see you.
You notice I'm saying, I see you.
And you can find your own wording of that, but it's to acknowledge, which validates, and never to judge or say, oh, you don't need to feel like that.
What parents do a lot unintentionally, I'm a parent of four, I did it even with all my knowledge.
I have, so we make mental messes.
I say we make mental messes all the time.
But it's very important, not, someone, your child comes to you and says, I'm really worried.
And then you say, what are you worried about?
I'm worried about this one doing something that you think is totally irrelevant.
oh that's not so bad you don't have to worry about that
that is the worst thing you can do to a child
because what you've done is invalidate something that for them
is now they feel shame
so now they've got this confusion of worry
they don't know how to process it
and you know what parents do that in you haven't accepted there
feelings or their thoughts
that's it so it's very important even if you don't think
that it's valid you're not helping them saying
and I know it's done often with the intention of oh it's not so bad
it'll be okay calm down don't do that
It's rather sit down and embrace and say, okay, let's talk about how you're feeling.
Why do you think if you go through the five steps, I've actually got in my neuropsycho app,
I've got a whole thing on how to use neurocycling for children.
And I'm writing, I've written books in the past, but now we're doing the updated versions
of neurocycling for Burbany Tots, Neuracycling for young kids, teenagers, whatever.
So exactly how to have the conversations.
But it's openness.
One of the things that I have as a parent, and I mean, I used to do a lot of family therapy
you in our practice. And as the advice I always gave parents and that I've tried to apply as much
as possible is keep our environment open. Keep it, no matter what your kids, do your kids want
to talk to you about sex and things that you don't want to talk about? If you don't want to
talk about them, they're going to talk about them somewhere else. And that goes for emotions too.
We've got to allow our kids to say, I am feeling depressed. The other day, someone said,
how do I help my child not be a professor of depression? And it was quite an interesting way of
phrasing it. And my response to that was, well, help them process it. If they're a
professor of depression, what can you learn from them? If you feel that they are so good at
depression, that's a symptom or a signal of something going on. You need to acknowledge that
and say, I see you feeling depressed. Can you explain more? And then works through the whole,
get those, you know, the five steps, work through it systematically. You can use a lot of visuals
with kids. I mean, I'm ending this with kids when I was practicing and training in schools and
things as young as three. And I would take the brain. Listen, three-year-olds respond to this.
They will, and I'll say, this is in your brain and it'll take a tree.
Okay, so now this is the happy tree, the sad tree.
And you work through, okay, what are you feeling?
What's the sad?
And you give them the words.
And then let's see, what are you doing?
And you work through systematically through the process.
And you say, okay, so this is where it's kind.
And it might take a few days.
So it's the same process, but you're orientating them to their level.
And then what you're doing is you're modeling what to do.
At the same time, don't hide your feelings as a parent.
You know, there's so much.
Don't act perfect.
No, because it's in the mess that they see European grow.
Mess is how they learn.
So you make a mess, you get mad at your child for no reason,
and then you feel guilt and condemnation.
Don't do that.
If you get mad, explain why you're mad.
Say, I'm really mad, I'm sorry, I said the wrong thing.
I didn't mean to do that.
This is why I did it.
But the thing that we mustn't let a child grow up,
oh, you're the mother, you chose to have me,
therefore you've got to be perfect,
and if you fell, you've messed up my life forever.
That's not healthy for a child.
And that's what happens.
And it's bad for the parent and the child.
And with the parents pretending, oh, no, everything's fine.
And, you know, meanwhile, behind closed doors, you and your husband are having a huge fight
or you and your wife are having.
That's so confusing.
When my husband and I have an argument, the kids grew up knowing why.
We explained, okay, we were wrong.
We shouldn't have said this.
This is why we argued and this is our solution.
You know, and so it's that authenticity and that honesty.
And you know what?
They may not like it always because it can be quite scary, but life is scary.
And you've got to give people your kids the tools to.
to know that, hey, this is how I'm managing it, and I'm an adult, and I still battle,
so when they're an adult and they're battling, they don't think, oh, gosh, I'm an adult,
I'm supposed to be like my mother who was perfect.
No, my mother still cries, my dad still gets upset, but they've got a management plan.
So it's that authenticity and honesty.
Does that answer the question?
Absolutely.
I've got a couple final questions for you.
This has been fascinating, really inspired by all this, and I can't wait to dive in more in the book,
cleaning up your mental mess, five simple scientifically proven steps to reduce anxiety stress
and toxic thinking.
So make sure you guys get the book if you haven't got it yet.
This is going to be really powerful and helpful for you, for a family member, for a friend.
So make sure to check this out, really inspired by this.
Thank you.
You've been doing this work for, what, three decades now?
Nearly four, it's 38 years now.
So almost four decades you've been doing this work and research and as a practitioner as well,
applying this in the real world, what is the biggest challenge you still face today,
even knowing all of these practices and awareness around the brain, the mind, thoughts,
thinking, memory, all this stuff. What's the challenge you still face as a human being
with four decades of experience? The challenge that personally, it's, I wish I could
manage it 24-7, and that's my goal, because I know it works. And I get totally frustrated when
I think, why didn't I just use the neuropsychiles?
It's got to the point in our family where if I would, like, I actually went to my husband
yesterday, I was really like worked up about something.
He said, well, why aren't you neurocycling?
I want to, like, don't say that to me.
I don't feel like neurocycling.
I want to, I just want to have a moan, you know, that kind of thing.
But essentially it's true because I had to.
I actually got myself back under control.
So my greatest, the greatest hard, probably the hardest thing to do is to watch people in
pain when I know that they can, there's a way out. And I wish I could fix things. And that's
probably what you can't do. I mean, not probably, you can't do that. It's made me, my weakness is
I want to fix everything and everyone. And if I can't, I think, what have I done wrong? So I have
to keep reminding myself all the time that I can't, I can only, you cannot fix anyone else,
but you can only support them. So that's a very big challenge for me. Because I can see, hey, just do
this. Even to myself, do that. You'll be fine afterwards. You'll get through this. You know,
is that saying goes, this two shall pass when you know how to manage it.
So that's, yeah, that's for me a big challenge.
And in terms of globally, the narrative of mental health,
we just have to stop telling people that they are brain damaged
when they are just being normal humans.
That's a huge challenge.
This is awesome.
I'm really glad we had this conversation.
Thank you.
So am I.
This question I ask everyone towards the end is called the Three Truths question.
So I'd like you to imagine it's your last day on Earth many years away from now.
And you get to accomplish all your goals and dreams.
They all come true.
But eventually, you got to go to the next place.
You got to leave this earth.
And you've got to take all of your work with you, all of your research, all of your books,
your, you know, this interview, it's got to go with you to the next place.
Just interview especially.
Yeah, exactly.
But you get to leave behind three lessons that you would share with the world.
This is all we would have to remember you by are these three lessons or what I like to call
three truths.
What would you say you would share?
that the mind is something you can control the mind is real the mind is the source of everything
and that it's something that you can learn and develop and that i would leave the system behind i'd say
listen learn learn to manage your mind use the neurop cycle develop it further whatever but that's
what i would and and the fact that your mind is real that your mind is always with if you don't get
your mind under control everything else is just window dressing yeah we have to that would really
so that would be sort of the main thing and then
the how-to, I would definitely leave behind, do this and develop it, grow further,
make it even better than what I've done.
But this is what I can offer humanity is this has how it managed mind.
And then the philosophy, the third thing I'd leave behind is three words, three lessons
that a psychologist William James is quoted often as saying.
And that's three things in life are so important.
Be kind, be kind, be kind.
To yourself, to others.
And those three things, I think we'd be pretty well equipped to have a decent.
peaceful, realistic existence.
Absolutely.
Those are beautiful truths, Caroline.
I appreciate that.
I want to acknowledge you, Caroline, for a moment,
because this has been very awe-inspiring and eye-opening.
And I acknowledge you for the nearly four decades of constant curiosity,
constant research and dedication to understanding the mind.
And the complicated nuances of the mind, of the mind-body connection,
the mind-brain connection of quantum physics and all the things surrounding the energetic field
of the mind.
It's something I've been fascinated with my entire life as a young child growing up learning
about it, but it's something that I've been more curious about.
But for you to make this your life's mission and study it and then try to simplify the complex
in a way so human beings can understand their minds, I really acknowledge you for doing the
work, showing up consistently, and providing and having the passion you have to share this
information.
I think it's really inspiring.
So I acknowledge you for all of it.
Thank you.
That's so kind of you.
Appreciate it.
I want to remind everyone again, get the book, cleaning up your mental mess.
Make sure you check it out right now.
You are on social media.
You do a lot on Instagram.
I see Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, Dr. Caroline Leaf on pretty much everywhere.
and also your website, it's just Dr. Carolineleaf.com.
Or just Dr.leaf.com.
Dr.leaf.com.
It's got all your information, your books, all the different stuff over there.
So make sure people check out Dr.leaf.com.
It's a final question.
Yeah.
Go ahead.
I have a podcast as well for cleaning up your mental mess.
So that's another place.
Check out the podcast.
And I want to interview you as soon as possible on there as well.
I'd love to have your story.
It'd be fantastic.
For sure, we'd love to.
Yeah, I'm always down to do the work.
If anyone wants to analyze me and do sessions with me, I'm in.
Oh, you have such a wonderful story.
I appreciate it.
Thank you.
My final question is, what's your definition of greatness?
I think you know my answer to that.
My definition of greatness is when you start getting to groups with understanding how you think,
feel, and choose, then you start seeing greatness because there's something you can do that
no one else can do.
And when you recognize that there's something that you can do that no one else can do,
which is your mind.
It's what you're doing.
It's your perception.
Then there's no envy or jealousy.
There's no desire to be like someone else.
Competition goes because you can't be competed with because no one can do what you can do.
So everyone is in that same boat.
So suddenly now if you move from competition to enhancement, and that is key.
So when we enhance each other, that's when we really grows humanity.
I hope you enjoyed today's episode and it inspired you on your journey towards greatness.
Make sure to check out the show notes in the description for a full rundown.
of today's episode with all the important links.
And if you want weekly exclusive bonus episodes with me personally,
as well as ad-free listening,
then make sure to subscribe to our Greatness Plus channel
exclusively on Apple Podcasts.
Share this with a friend on social media
and leave us a review on Apple Podcasts as well.
Let me know what you enjoyed about this episode in that review.
I really love hearing feedback from you
and it helps us figure out how we can support and serve you moving forward.
And I want to remind you of knowing you of knowing.
No one has told you lately that you are loved, you are worthy, and you matter.
And now it's time to go out there and do something great.
