The Telepathy Tapes - S2E28: Dr. Mayim Bialik: Science, Skepticism and the Boundaries of Proof | Talk Tracks
Episode Date: May 6, 2026In this episode of Talk Tracks, Ky Dickens sits down with neuroscientist, actor, and podcast host Dr. Mayim Bialik to explore the tension between science and skepticism.With a PhD in neurosci...ence and a career shaped by both scientific rigor and cultural storytelling, Mayim has explored the questions on the edge of scientific understanding and that which can’t be quantified. From near-death experiences and spontaneous healing to telepathy, savant abilities, and the limits of measurement, she reflects on where the scientific method holds and where it begins to fall short.As more people share experiences that don’t neatly fit into existing frameworks, this conversation asks: what counts as evidence? And is it possible to build a framework that allows both skepticism and wonder to coexist?--------------Right now, Batch is offering 30% off sitewide — and yes, that applies to subscriptions too, so you can lock in that discount on your monthly supply. Go to hellobatch.com/TAPES and use code TAPES at checkout.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hey everyone, I'm Kai Dickens and welcome back to the Talk Tracks. In this episode, we're sitting down with
Mayam Bialik, someone that many of you may know from her decades-long career in television, from her roles in shows like
Blossom to the Big Bang Theory, where she played a neuroscientist on TV. The incredible thing about
Myam is that in real life, she actually is one. Myam holds a PhD in neuroscience from UCLA with a focus
on psychoneuroendocrinology and obsessive compulsive disorder. She is also the host of her own
podcast, Maya and Bialy's breakdown, where she explores the intersection between science and
spirituality. This was a super fun conversation, and Maiam and I have a lot in common, so I hope you
enjoy it. Hi, everyone. I'm Kai Dickens, and I'm thrilled to welcome you to the talk tracks. In this
series, we'll dive deeper into the revelations, challenges, and unexpected truth from the telepathy tapes.
The goal is to explore all the threads that weave together our understanding of reality, science,
spirituality, and yes, even unexplained things like sci abilities. If you haven't yet listened to the
telepathy tapes, I encourage you to start there. It lays the foundation for everything we'll be
exploring in this journey. We'll feature conversations with groundbreaking researchers, thinkers,
thinkers, who illuminate the extraordinary connections that may defy explanation today, but won't
for long. If you want to see our incredible guests in person, we have a video version of this episode on
the telepathy tapes YouTube page. I do always think it's good for people it get to introduce themselves,
because people know you often for your acting, or as a neuroscientist, or for
for your podcast. But how do you want people to think of you? Yeah. Most people know me from my acting
work. I was in beaches, which a lot of people remember was one of my first kind of big things when I
was young and then I was on Blossom from the time I was 14 to 19. And then I left acting for 12 years
and I did my undergraduate in neuroscience and Hebrew and Jewish studies at UCLA. And then I got my PhD
also in neuroscience also at UCLA. My specialty is psychoneuroendocrinology. I studied obsessive
compulsive disorder. And I had two children around the time that I got my doctorate. I returned to
acting after teaching neuroscience and Hebrew and piano. And I was on the Big Bang Theory for nine years,
played neurobiologist. I was nominated for four Emmys. I've never won. But I feel like I might
as well say that I was nominated. And it's a big deal. And my fifth Emmy nomination was for co-hosting
Jeopardy, which I was also very excited to do for two seasons. And I have my own podcast called My
Bialx Breakdown. And I do that with my partner, Jonathan Cohen, and we talk about the intersection
of science and spirituality. We talk about sort of science communication specifically around mental
health and also alternative and holistic healing. I love it. And, you know, being a child actor,
like you probably had a weird school situation, I would imagine. At what point, were you always interested
in science and neuroscientists? Or when did that become such a passion that you're like,
I'm going to leave everything? You pursue it. Yeah, I'm a late bloomer to science. I actually
you know, was raised, I was born in 1975, and the sort of going notion for girls was that
girls are not good at math or science and boys are, and the boys frequently reminded all the
girls of this. And so, yeah, I struggled. I didn't learn easily those subjects. I was fascinated
with quantum mechanics. I was fascinated with physics and I really like marine biology. You know,
I loved the mammals of the ocean. And I never thought that I'd be able to achieve it. And it wasn't
until I was on Blossom when I had different tutors for every subject because my parents were
both teachers and they wanted me to have as good in education while on a set as I could. It was the
first time I had a female mentor. She was then an undergrad at UCLA and she answered an ad for
like Hollywood teen needs a science tutor. It was literally posted on a bulletin board at UCLA and she
was at that time an undergrad, a dental student at UCLA. And it was the first time I had a one-on-one
instructor for, you know, something science-related. And I think having a female mentor and someone who had
a really interesting path and journey helped me. It helped me get the confidence and the skill set,
which you need both of those things. Sometimes you have the skill set, but not the confidence.
You can have the confidence, but not the skill set. I needed both. And so it wasn't until late in high
school. Like, that's a late bloomer for science. And I even had to do some remedial work in college
to catch up because I hadn't really been that dialed into chemistry, especially on a set.
it was hard. But even so, there are many, many students who get to college and what you call us
is doctor, the same way you call the top of the class doctor, but some of us do need a little
extra help. And at the time, affirmative action was in place at UCLA. And what it meant is that
if you came into college needing some extra support, it may take you a couple more quarters,
but you'll get there. And that's what I did. Wow. Now, when you chose neuroscience,
instead of marine biology, was there something you wanted to understand about the brain or
like a case you came across. Yeah, at the time I was very interested in, you know, we called it
nurture versus nature back then, topics like homosexuality, topics like mental illness, schizophrenia,
bipolar disorder. These were things that were already in the cultural conversation of, is this,
you know, genetics or is this environment? Back then you could ask that, you know, polar question.
So I was originally interested in genetics. I wanted to go to med school. I wanted to be a psychiatrist.
At that time, that was the only way that you could get at mental health.
never occurred to me to like be a therapist. Like it was such a rare thing that I figured like I want to go
to med school. I want to become a psychiatrist. I did not have the grades to go to med school is the
truth. And when I, one of my introductory courses was we learned about the brain and nervous system.
And when I learned about the electrophysiology of the neuron that specifically was the moment I
fell in love. All that action potential refractory period like all that stuff, sodium potassium pimp.
That really was like this is the level that I want to understand. And I'm
also, as you well know, neuroscience is it's the science of how we perceive. It's the science of how
we communicate. It's the practical, you know, molecular and cellular science of how, you know,
the sodium potassium pump works, for example, and how medications work. But also it is the science of
neuropsychology. It's the science of perception and misperception. So that was really the level that I
wanted to study. And yeah, I registered for an email address. I was nerd at UCLA.edu back when it wasn't
cool to be a nerd. And yeah, that was what I embarked on as my field of study. And as I'm a
vegan person, so I always knew I wanted to work with humans rather than animals. And so I ended
up working in the field of, it's called mental retardation. That's the clinical, you know,
kind of category. And I in particular studied Prader Willie syndrome and obsessive compulsive
disorder. So that was my specialization for my thesis. So you've obviously started a podcast. And when
you decided to do that, what were you trying to explore exactly?
Yeah, so when our podcast first started, you know, keep in mind, not everyone and their mother had a podcast.
You know, we're some 360 episodes in now. Like, we're years into something that when we started it, I had never even heard a podcast.
Like, I didn't even know what it was that we were doing. But I had wanted to, you know, from a science communicator perspective, start talking about things that many people who are not, you know, either able or having access to a therapist, right?
There are things that I think is a human right for people to know about, to know the difference between anxiety and depression, to know the difference between an anxiety attack and a panic attack. To me, I just feel like it's a human right for us to be educated about mental health. And I thought, you know, I go to therapy and I have all these things that I've gathered, you know, that my therapist has supported me with. Like there are certain things that should be just, you know, common knowledge. And we started this and then COVID hit. And it still seemed relevant, but it took on a different.
flavor because we had so many people experiencing anticipatory anxiety, right? People who were having
their sleep disrupted. They didn't know why they were feeling gross all the time and why they were
overeating or not eating. And we thought, gosh, how many people are experiencing a global pandemic
with no skills? And so the fast track way to communicate this was not through a TV show. It was through a
podcast. And so that's where we started with really trying to help people break down basic mental
health challenges and also to try and have people relate to either celebrities or experts, you know,
about kind of the basics of mental health. And what we discovered was that almost every single
guest we had on, whether it was a celebrity, a corporate person, you know, a professional,
they all kept circling around the same thing, which is having a relationship with something
greater than you is a source of strength. It's a source of recovery. It's a source of comfort.
and can also be a portal to understanding things outside of our current understanding.
And we kind of felt like, oh, this is a bit of a pivot. I don't know if it's a pivot and
evolution of understanding mental health in terms of physical health and spiritual health as well.
I love that because I've never heard what made your pivot.
Because, I mean, the first like iteration of your show was so necessary and beautiful and helpful.
And I love that this is like what it evolved into because of that need.
Correct.
Yeah.
Well, and also, we could.
deny that whether someone believed in God or didn't believe in God, they kept saying,
but what keeps me healthy is knowing that I'm not in charge of the universe, knowing that I can
take my hands off it. And we thought, gosh, these are all the same things that mystics have
talked about. And even when we got into physical health, right, this notion of like, oh, you can
create an environment in your body that facilitates healing. What? Yeah. That's not how you and I were
raised. We were raised that like, oh, your body does this and it'll get sick. And here's
the medicine to make it better. And then your brain and your mind do this other thing.
You know, instead of, oh, when you get a stomach ache because you're nervous, that's the mind
and body telling you they're connected. Yes, a hundred percent. That's the mind-body connection.
Yeah. You've now talked to a lot of thinkers, a lot of scientists, a lot of just average,
you know, people. What do you think is missing about our current understanding around consciousness?
I mean, I think that a lot of people don't understand how much is in their control.
In terms of their own state of being, you know, I think that there's still a lot that we don't know.
And that can make people feel uncomfortable about consciousness with a capital C, you know, about a sort of larger plane.
I think that what a lot of people don't understand also is that it's okay for us to be curious about the science, just like it's okay for us to be curious about the parts that maybe science can't explain.
We don't have to reject one or the other. And I think the real sweet spot of consciousness is respecting both of those. And I would even say respecting them equally, right? And not sort of playing who's more important here, right? The feelers or the scientists. And some of the people, I think, in this field that are really making headway are people who are not afraid to say, I don't know. And if I don't know, that doesn't mean it doesn't exist.
But I think we get into trouble when we have this kind of dualist, you know, I think very pessimistic and frankly cold, you know, perspective that if it doesn't have a number and it doesn't have an assay, it doesn't exist.
That's not true. We don't know what is true, but we know what's not true.
I mean, but it does sound like this has been tethering around like your own quest for a little bit and mine is this idea that the non-physical world shouldn't be ignored and there's a place for it in science.
I mean, would you agree with that? And if so, why?
Yeah, I think that the strongest, it's not even evidence, but like the strongest proof of that is how much we didn't know when we didn't have the instruments to record it.
So even the notion that bacteria can cause infections, right?
If you go back historically, it's not to make a direct comparison.
It's to show that the paradigm that we are sitting in inevitably will shift as technology increases.
and as our hearts increase and as that sort of capacity to expand the conversation also increases.
But to say, you know, microwaves don't work because I can't see the microwaves.
Well, we know that that's not true and they work and they will heat your food or whatever else they do.
The same, I think, is true at some level of what we call energy, right?
and the notion that some people have very elaborate explanations for energy bodies and things that I don't necessarily understand, you know, that I think will start being better elucidated, not only as our technology advances, but I think as our minds start expanding to include some of those things in the conversation. And I was talking to you before we started, I started watching Seinfeld again with my son. And, you know, there was an episode about very early on about one of them going to,
a healer and all of these things that were so crazy. And most of the things this healer did,
you could literally read about in the New York Times today. You know, things that, you know,
we're seen as so fringe and so out there. So we are evolving in terms of how we understand
many things that were previously dismissed as holistic, kooky out there. You know, even the notion
that Gabor Matae, you know, and Vandercoc, you know, talked about that trauma impacts the physiology
and that that is something that we can see.
We can see it passed on epigenetically.
We can see it passed on through generations.
This is something that sounds like it's out of a Star Trek episode, you know?
And the fact is there is science to it.
We can quantify it.
Is it as easy to quantify as how much caffeine is in a cup of tea?
No, but most things worth experiencing are not easily quantifiable.
Yes.
A hundred percent.
I think it's Rupert Sheldrake who has that quote and I think it's so great,
where it's like if you were to ask why music is special.
And it's like, okay, you could like pull apart a violin and be like, here's the splinters.
Like, this will tell us. Oh, no, that's not it. We're not getting the answer.
It's like, let's look at the ink on the, oh, there's black dots on white paper.
Like, well, this tells us why music is special. And like sometimes over quantifying and measuring is not.
I mean, yeah, you can see it in love and relationships as well.
You know, if you look at someone that you love, there may be reasons why you find them beautiful.
Does that mean they're objectively beautiful? No.
Sometimes you just stop feeling like yourself and you can't fully explain it.
And it's usually not just one thing, right?
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It's the point of sort of the conglomeration of things.
It's the elephant, you know.
It's if you have a bunch of, you know, people analyzing different parts of an elephant,
they could each have a decision about what this creature is based on the small region they're looking at.
It's only when we see the Gashalt, you know, when we see it in its entirety, that we say,
this has meaning or this has meaning to me, which is not always the same thing.
So we've been talking on our show a lot about, like, consciousness, is it something that our mind creates or is it something we tap into or is it both?
Like, do you have, do you fall, where do you fall on that?
I don't know that I definitively have a vote.
I think that there's a lot of attraction that I have to this notion that consciousness
creates us and that there's something before us, which, you know, I think is also kind of a
mystical and religious concept.
I'm one of these people, especially in who I get to talk to on my podcast, that, you know,
we speak to a lot of people who are experts in very specific perspectives.
And there are certain things where I definitely feel like that's not me.
Like when Stephen Pinker came on, I definitely felt that's not me.
I don't have that.
But a lot of times, especially with consciousness, you know, we'll speak to astrophysicists,
we'll speak to psychologists, we'll speak to healers, we'll speak to channelers.
And many different aspects of an explanation of consciousness at any given time can make sense.
But I do, you know, have a personal notion that I don't need to wonder what came before
the Big Bang. It's an unknowable wisdom. And I believe that's sort of the, you know, some sort of primal
consciousness, I guess, that that creates and created everything that we experience. So when
Stephen Pinker was in, like, what were the things that were you like, ah, that doesn't resonate
with me exactly? Which I think is okay. Like people have all sorts of things, you know.
Well, I mean, I think there's something about, and you know, I feel so bad picking on Stephen Pinker,
but I'm sure he'll be fine. I think also he thinks we might be distantly related. So, you know, I also
feels like a familial fight. You know, I think there's, there's a notion that there's something
very unscientific to me about anyone making a decision about something that we don't have
all the information about. Yeah. Meaning as a scientist, my job is to be skeptical and to form
independent and isolated hypotheses that I can test or that we, you know, as a scientific public,
can test and verify, compare with other experts and scientists, and draw conclusions. But to say
that sounds delusional, therefore it's wrong, it's a non-scientific perspective. And I think, you know,
and I kind of said this to Stephen Pinker, you know, I said that it feels like he's more fanatical
about their not being a God than I am about there being one. And to me, that's something that
even when we talk about things like you have, you know, introduced and continue to explore with your work, yeah, the scientific approach is to get more information, to understand it from all angles, and to understand it in a sociocultural context and not simply say, because this is not what color is it by wavelength, that we can understand it. And like I said, some of the best things worth understanding cannot be explained.
in the way that many dualists would like to explain things.
Yeah.
I think that's a really interesting point because, you know,
I've had come across a lot of really respectable scientists or thinkers that are so fundamental
almost and dogmatic in their belief that it almost feels like a closed-minded believer.
It's like you're coming from the same place as someone who might like believe wholeheartedly
that the earth is flat that you're going to tease, you know?
Like there has to be openings for.
Sure.
I also, you know, I feel like it feels like I'm engaging in a seventh grade argument when I say like, well, we used to think that we were the center of the universe, right?
But I think people very quickly forget. And I think people want to believe that we're much more evolved than we are.
People want to believe, well, since we have, you know, cell phones and computers and AI and all the other amazing things that there are, there's no way that we could not understand something.
or there's no way that I don't have the answer to what's happening here.
And I think that's what makes a lot of people feel comfortable.
And look, I'll be honest, the world feels a little bit scary in a lot of ways.
The country feels a little bit, a lot scary.
And people don't like uncertainty.
People don't like questions.
They just don't.
And I think that's what shakes a lot of people up.
It really does.
And they want to close the door.
Yeah.
You know, we've been talking a little bit about, like, how to measure things and things that can't be measured.
And is there space, maybe you could, like, break this down as someone who's gone through scientific, you know, training?
You know, because I think so often we're like, oh, it can only be proven if you can measure it and put in a lab.
But there's also things that we know of by, like, going into an environment.
Like, Jane Goodall went and spent time, like, in the jungle to really be part of a community of animals to understand.
Or, like, we understood that x-rays might cause cancer, not by putting people in a lab and putting x-rays on it.
by being like, okay.
Right.
And I think about that in terms of like anecdotal evidence.
Right.
I mean, we accept it sometimes.
Right.
But we don't in other occasions.
And I wonder like, is there any like vernacular for that in science?
You know, I think of all these parents of non-speakers and teachers like thousands at this point who are like this has been my experience.
Right.
Like at what point is something weighted enough to be like?
Yeah.
I think, I mean, I think it's a good question.
You know, in terms of scientific method, I do think that anecdotal experience is exactly that.
anecdotal experience, and by its nature, it's variable. And I think that is what butts up so strongly
against scientific method, right? Variability. And if we're studying variability and we see that things are
falling on a really nice, you know, bell curve, like we know what to do with that. And we know how to
say this is two standard deviations outside. But when it comes to the kind of human experience that we're
talking about with anecdotal reports, the problem, you know, and it's a lowercase P problem, but the
problem is it cannot and will not and does not want to stand up to the kind of lack of variability
that would be required for things like the scientific method. Now, I think your question, though,
is more precise and significant. At what point do we wait something? At what point does it
carry more weight? Yeah, I think we're there. I think we're there. And I think even having this
part of a larger conversation puts us there. But, you know, I'll be honest, even as a layperson,
which, you know, I'm not an expert on anything that your, you know, work has introduced me to.
I'm very saddened at how many scientists in particular will not engage.
That saddens me because I think that there is something to being open to trying to find ways, right, to quantify.
But as I've learned from what you've taught me, right, the very nature of the observation of this kind of ability, access, being.
does not always lend itself to observation in the ways that we want it to, in which case I don't think
it should be dismissed. I don't think it should be thrown out. But I think we also get to see,
like, how do we keep it in its appropriate box so that, and I think this is what you're trying
to do, right, so that it is open to an inquiry that would hopefully give it the kind of weight
that it deserves. You know, it's interesting. So one of the men who actually invested in our
documentary film and he's invented in a lot of consciousness studies and he's doing such good work
at like helping find answers and every once in a while he'll send me an email and he just was really
high up in the tech world and all that stuff and he sent me some conclusions he's made recently and he was
like I think that sigh abilities and for anyone just jumping in for the first time is like ESP abilities
right are shy and don't maybe want to be captured sweet and like they might be really excited at first
and then kind of go in and we again there might be a reason why
eventually we might understand that. But like is there, could it be the type of thing where, you know,
it's not like shooting baskets over and over. Or maybe you can compare it like that. Like maybe you're
really good at free throws and then when people can watch. Look, I think I don't know that I would
anthropomorphize it and make it shy. But I think what is true is that again, I think it comes down
to variability that the environment and the conditions in which we can understand siabilities, I think are
very sensitive. And I think they're sensitive. And I think they're sensitive.
in ways that we don't entirely understand. And they're sensitive in ways that a lot of hard
scientists don't believe in, which is not helpful. It's the equivalent of, you know, if you're the
kind of parent who says to your child, you shouldn't be feeling that, stop feeling it. That's one way
to approach it. The other way would be, I see that you're feeling something. I may not understand
it, but I see that it's significant to you. Therefore, it exists. It feels like that's kind of the
difference. And that's why I say that some of this dualist and sort of hard science perspective,
which is very dismissive of sci phenomenon, for example, it feels loveless. It doesn't feel like
there's heart to it. And I think there always has been heart to science. And I mean, even my own,
you know, I have a 17 and 20 year old who exists to always tell me that I'm wrong,
you know, even they will sort of say, well, where does love, you know, what's love got to do with it,
right? And the fact is there is an openness and a creativity to science. Quantum mechanics.
all of those physicists knew there's something going on outside of our realm of calculation.
Does that mean that everyone who believes in God should become a physicist?
No. Does it mean that all physicists need to believe in God? Absolutely not. But the notion that you can separate the heart, right? Or a spiritual component from science, it's never been true. And I don't think that's a sign of our evolution.
Yeah. And then I wonder if you've seen any patterns just in the guess you've talked to, when when people talk about something like remote viewing or, you know,
like in this case, like telepathy or some other maybe sciability or even the UAP phenomenon.
I mean, have there been things that keep coming up over and over where you're like,
there is overlap in these strange anomalous phenomena?
Do you mean in sort of like their practicality or in how we analyze them or?
Well, okay.
So for instance, for me, one thing that constantly is fascinating is how truly believing that
someone can do it makes a big difference.
Makes a huge difference.
Or Julia Mossbridge, Dr. Julian Mossbridge would say love is always fundamental.
And then when she's tested precognition,
she'll ask, do you love yourself? Do you love your day so far? Do you love the device you're doing this on?
The more people say yes to those love questions, the better they do.
Okay, so yeah, that's a great example. This notion of love as a universal or, you know, kind of common denominator,
which, you know, for anyone who's had a psychedelic experience, a transcendental experience,
there's this, like, feeling of being, like, suffused with, like, love. And those are the states that
people like Joe Dispenza and Tony Robbins and Bruce Lipton, and any manifester or healer is telling you,
resonate that feeling of love. Can you make it spread? Neural retraining programs use that. Any good
somatic healer will use that, right? So this notion of love, that is something for sure that is
kind of a common thread. I think one of the other things that from a science perspective also
interests me is the notion of not just meditation, but what does it mean to regulate a nervous
system, which we talk about a lot for trauma, for healing, all these things. What does it mean, though,
in terms of access to
sci phenomenon.
And so even, you know, I remember this was one of my most favorite, you know, parts of
telepathy tapes, when teachers or therapists would say that they were communing somehow, right,
with their nonverbal, you know, students, the notion was they're not just like walking to
the fridge and getting a bottle of water and getting information beamed into them.
They are dropping in.
They're dropping into some space that is quiet, that is peaceful.
that is calm and that is receptive.
And who hasn't learned, right, that that's a place to drop into when you want to improve
immune function, when you want to pray for your highest good or that of someone else, this place
of dropping in and regulation is exactly what any doctor will tell you to improve vagal function,
to tone your sympathetic nervous system, to teach your body to self-regulate so that you are not
in fight or flight, but you're in rest and restore, right? That's the place that something
something Jonathan, my co-host and I, we kept picking up on. And you'll pick up on it if someone's
doing TM, you know, Transcendental Meditation, you'll pick up on it if someone is talking about
psychedelics. And you'll pick up on it in these healing spaces when we're trying to heal from trauma,
even rehabbing a part of our body. It needs a state of calm to be able to do that from.
I love, by the way, that you said that, because I do think that is such a thing.
thing. And so many more parents now is like it's going on and snowballing and stuff are saying it's
not really telepathy the way you think about it's joining in the same field. Correct. Well, and I think
that also the word telepathy freaks a lot of people out, right? Which, you know, with all due respect,
I think it's a great name for the podcast. But yeah, I think that those are the ways that we can start
getting into some of these fields to say, let's remove the word telepathy. What is it about when a healer
is tapping into their client?
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We've all had that experience, if we've ever worked with someone who does Reiki or any of these
things, even acupuncture, traditional Chinese medicine. And as you said, what the practitioner
believes can impact the outcome and some very, very early research into these fields discovered
this. If the doctor believed, right, in the methods that they were using, there's a different
outcome than if they don't. Like, what, how, what is that? How do we measure it? And the other thing
that is also a constant, and it gets a bad rap, the notion of a placebo effect, the notion,
right, the notion of placebo and nascebo, right? The idea that the mind is the most powerful
medicine cabinet that we have shows us that there is a power in intentionality and something that,
you know, we think of attention like, oh, am I paying attention? Or I have ADHD. I have a hard time
paying attention. In kind of neuroscience terms, attention is where your nervous system is oriented.
And what value it gives to that information. And guess what? Just like some people are good artists and other
people are good at math and some people are really good pianists and other people are good at sports.
Some people are better at tuning in to this frequency. And for those of us who can't do it naturally,
we don't know how to tune into it. It doesn't mean it doesn't exist. That would be like me saying,
oh, you are a good long distance runner. I'm not so it doesn't exist. Right. Like it doesn't even
compute. But when it comes to these kind of phenomena, like when Julia Mossbridge sits with me and
Jonathan and she's picking up on things. I'm like, where is she pulling this from? How does she
know things that we are not verbalizing? And I'm not just saying like, oh, she can tell we like each other.
I'm talking about deeper issues of how people function. Some people are better at that. Why shouldn't I
believe then that some people are better at tapping in? And of course, people who are teachers,
you know, healers, those people are leaning into those fields possibly because they can sense things that
other people can't. Right. Or you're drawn like to be a caregiver for some reason.
100%. It might be more open to...
Absolutely. Why? I mean, and it's it's a rare exception that you meet a pediatrician who's like,
I really fucking hate kids. I'm just so good at, you know, figuring out what's wrong with them.
Or a vet who says like, God, if I have to look at another pet, I just know what's wrong with
them. No, they're people who are intuitive. They're better at that than other people.
And I'm better at other things than other people. But that doesn't mean that if they don't
experience it. It doesn't exist. Yeah, I love that. And the other thing that you just said that,
you know, I've been starting to interview some non-speakers that are coming in, and often we have to
send them the questions in advance to give them time to start answering. And one young man sent,
you did with me. Yeah, right. Exactly. One young man sent me questions answers this morning where
one of the questions about love and his relationship with his girlfriend, who's also non-speaker.
And he said, you know, I feel like I can love in the purest form because it's more about
presence than performance. And I thought that was so interesting. You know, he's this about
feeling not talking. We don't need to talk and name it. It's just feeling each other being there.
I was like, that is so true. Because I think the closest I've often felt intuitively to my kids was when
they were babies. And I just knew what they needed. Sure. Now my 11-year-old, I was like, you just
don't want to look at me. You know what I mean? But like, also when you think about, you know,
moments of connection, even as adults with other adults, try not speaking to someone and see the
feelings that come up when you do that. If you've ever been told, like it is an exercise.
eyes, stare into someone's eyes for three minutes. You will feel like your insides need to be taken
out with a fish hook. It is so uncomfortable. But there are people who are more comfortable in those
spaces. Again, I'm thinking of healers. I work with a somatic therapist, and a lot of the session
is her looking at me and me being like, this is awkward. And she always will pull something out.
And what it is is that there are nonverbal spaces where people of different varieties have an understanding, a connection point.
Those should not be dismissed simply because not all of us can access them.
And that was actually, I was just looking at my questions and you answered the next one, which was like, are there certain characteristics of personhood that might make people more adept to sci abilities?
Oh, I mean, this is something, you know.
This is another common theme that we've seen.
people who have experienced trauma, people who have experienced hardship, people who have experienced
abuse are often forced to acquire an ability to dissociate, to, I don't want to say rationalize,
but to understand many sides of complicated situations. Those people often find themselves
as the people who are super feelers. I think of Elizabeth Crone, who was struck
by Lightning as a young woman in 1988, and she left her body, watched the entire proceedings
of what they did with her body, where they took it, what they said to her. She dropped back into her
body. And in her book, she reveals that experiences of abuse as a child taught her to dissociate
and watch her body. And she said, I believe that that was the universe giving me the opportunity
to learn how to step out of my consciousness, right? Wow. And what? And what? And what? And
What does that mean?
I know.
But that is something that many people report.
I'm a wounded healer, right?
I feel things that other people feel in a way that I cannot distinguish it from me and others.
And you'll see this also with a lot of kids on the spectrum, various places on the spectrum,
learning to distinguish between what is your pain and someone else's or even your joy in someone else's.
That's something that many kids need to learn.
And until it's taught, it feels very confusing.
It's very disregulating to the nervous system.
Yeah, 100%.
You know, I love that you brought this up because it is fascinating where, you know,
I've talked to victims of abuse, mostly women, who will say that's what turned on their gift of being able to astral travel or, you know, as a means of survival.
And I think of often this association, like you said, like leaving your body can be really helpful in those moments.
Interestingly, I've talked to a few men, also victims of abuse, but often more physical abuse from fathers and such, who said they have a heightened society that turned on, whether it be remote.
viewing because they said it was like a spiky sense. Is it going to happen if I go home right now?
Vigilance. Yeah. Like are they in a bad mood or good mood? If I go home, will be safe.
Correct. So yeah, what you're talking about is similar, I would argue, you know, neurologically speaking,
similar to a response from trauma in that the nervous system has ramped up its ability to monitor
and scan. So you're constantly scanning. And it looks different. It's going to look different
depending on the circumstances. But that makes sense to me that someone who is more in tune,
to scanning, right, to that kind of awareness.
They may not even be able to name it, but they can have this ability to be more open,
for lack of a better word.
Yeah, 100%.
And, you know, you brought up the woman who was struck by lightning.
And we spent a lot of time looking into near-death experiences in season two.
Yeah.
And, you know, I'm curious, I'm sure you've come across quite a few.
Yes.
And, I mean, to me, I feel like that's like a bridge, like a loophole that's often the
easiest thing for people to start to believe, and sometimes not.
But have you heard of one that you feel like is harder to explain away as a neuroscientist
or a few?
For sure.
What might be those things?
So the thing about NDE's is it really is one of the most studied set of anecdotal reports
across the world.
And, you know, the Department of Perceptual Studies at Virginia and, you know, the work
of Jeffrey Long and Jim Tucker and Bruce Grayson, you know, they put this on the map as
legitimate psychiatrists, MDs, who decided to say we cannot ignore what is happening, even if
it's anecdotal reports, right? The notion of NDE's, though, I think should be one of the places
we can have the most conversation with, quote, nonbelievers. Many are still very, very resistant,
speaking about the people in my home primarily. But I think that one of the things,
about NDE's that shows that kind of anything is possible. It's Anita Mourjani's experience.
And this was a woman who went into full organ failure. She was in a hospital. She had, you know,
terminal stage four cancer. She had tumors visible through her neck and chest. She experienced a coma
as a result of this organ failure. But she was in there the whole time. She had an experience where
she was presented with a set of information about how she got cancer and how she would heal from
cancer. And you might say this is a lovely bedtime story, Maya, thank you, and good night.
What happened was when she woke up from her coma, she said, I want you to stop all the treatments.
And the doctors said, what are you talking about? You just basically died. And she said,
I'm going to get better. And they said, that's crazy. And I'll give you the long story short.
Her tumors started shrinking. And she was discharged in two weeks.
It's so wild. It's a case of legitimate, verified, spontaneous healing that no one can explain. And her doctor has written extensively about this. But the notion being everyone can be an exception, as Ellen Langer would talk about. Just because statistically she should have died, there's always someone who doesn't die. However, that level of spontaneous remission and healing, it is inexplicable. But what is that information?
she shares in common with so many other NDE.
I mean, with most of the NDE reports we hear,
she shares a common journey.
She's the season premiere of our TalkTerex season.
She's next level.
It's literally, it's inexplicable.
And there are those NDE with things you can validate,
once they leave the body and they're describing what was happening in the room next door.
I mean, look, there's always going to be people who are like,
there must have been an air conditioning tunnel that was funneling the information.
Bruce Grayson, the reason he started studying NDE as a psychiatrist, was a woman described to him from her bed where she was in a coma what was happening in the cafeteria with him.
I mean, he said, okay, this is my life now.
This cannot be explained.
I will spend my life studying it.
And that's exactly what he and Jim Tucker and Jeffrey Long, you know, I've done.
Well, and it's interesting, too, I would love your thought on this because I think I was talking to Dean Radin just about like how to capture like,
an airtight till he does, you know, if it's possible.
And he talked about the whole idea of like a purple unicorn, that like if you see a purple
unicorn, one, you capture one purple unicorns, it's proof purple unicorns exist.
There don't have be petrillions.
Correct.
Horses don't eat meat, except if you see one horse eat a hot dog, some horses eat meat.
Yeah.
And so I thought that was so interesting, you know, because I think often it's like, oh,
like, are all NDE's real or could it be this or whatever?
I think in that case, though, we have to be careful what we're trying to verify, right?
So like NDEs happen, yes.
Can spontaneous healing happen?
Absolutely.
Can we use that to explain much of anything around it?
Not necessarily, but when there's hoofbeats, it's usually horses.
That's also true.
And science knows that to be true.
However, it could be zebras.
because it could be someone who has generated the sound of hoofbeats using AI.
Like, but it's usually horses.
Yeah.
Right.
Yeah.
It's interesting.
I just think it's, I mean, I think the whole way we study stuff and like where the
burden of proofs plays and all that stuff has become so fascinating to me.
Absolutely.
One thing that really was a mindbender in our season two as well, we talked about Savant
skills.
And kind of this debate about whether or not they're latent in all of us and something can
happen just turns them on.
Like we're all really good at math somewhere.
We're all great.
Or music.
Or is it something you tap into?
And then there's Savants like Derek Amato.
I don't know if you know his story.
He crashes his head into a pool, just a random accident.
And then he started seeing like these shapes around his head.
And each one carries like pockets of music.
And he can like play by seeing them.
And when he does so, it's like a symphony.
I mean, what on earth?
Yeah.
So, I mean, there's a couple categories here.
that I think are important to speak about.
You know, injury is the best way
that neuroscience has to learn about anything, unfortunately.
Injury, disease, tumors, wars.
That's unfortunately where most of that, you know,
kind of phenomenal information comes from.
And I'm by no means, you know, an expert, obviously.
But I will say even from a layperson's, you know, perspective,
there are a lot of inhibitory mechanisms
that the brain has to utilize
so that we can have this conversation.
So the fact that I have clothing,
on my body is actually disturbing to my nervous system. But my brain has a way to quiet that down
so that for the most part, I can focus on this. If you've talked to someone who has the inability
to filter that, their clothing will bother them to a significant extent. And there are things
that we can do to condition them. But for the most part, the brain is constantly saying,
not this, not this, not this, not this, so that we can do this. What we know, and in many cases
it is from psychedelic experiences, transcendental experiences to some extent, but I'll go ahead and lean
into some of the science behind psilocybin, behind some of the MDMA research, even the LSD research.
We know that a lot of that inhibition when you release it, there's a beauty in there. There is a consciousness
expanding, not just like, ooh, this feels so good, which is more like pleasure principle,
but a deeper desire to connect with a larger consciousness is revealed. And in some people,
they can access that without drugs.
And it's really, really amazing.
When you talk to someone like Michael Singer, who was kind of touched, right, just literally
in college, had a moment of like, oh, there's a voice in there.
What?
But in terms of other savant abilities, I do think that there's variability that is exceptional
in certain brains.
I'm an okay pianist, right?
I don't believe with 10,000 hours I will be any more.
I'll have more experience, but I'm not going to reach the love.
level of Rachmaninov. Like, I'm never going to be that. But I do think that there are certain
brains that when there's a distribution of resources that usually would go towards, fill it in,
speech, certain cognitive abilities, certain spatial abilities. I think that it does open up
other pathways in ways that we also do not understand. I wish that I could be, you know,
a concert pianist that way. But I think that certain brains are different. And there's enough lack of
ability that we can all function. We can have this conversation. But looking at these special
cases reveals a tremendous amount. Yeah. And it's, it's worthy of us leaning into that, of course.
Yeah. Well, I find, I mean, Savant skills seem like such a best way, like such a concrete thing to
study because science has embraced that they're real. Correct. But you cannot explain them exactly.
Well, right. So one of the rotations I did as a graduate student was I was interested in studying perfect
pitch. So this is one of those things that actually does have a genetic basis. It does run in families,
but not in the same way that like brown eyes are going to be dominant, right? It's a lot more
complicated and elaborate than that. Also, is it about the environment? Where does that feed in?
And so I think that's some of the complexity of studying these things. And it's very hard to find
two savants with the same exact brain, same exact set of interest and ability that we have in
sort of being able to, again, kind of quantify that. So that's the variability that, again,
makes it a little bit hard. And there's so many other things we have to control for. And that's the
other thing, you know, from our conversation about like scientific method. We need to be able to
rule out things that might be causing things, causation and correlation, right? So, you know, when I
studied obsessive disorder, I had to find a group of subjects who were really, really similar.
And also, we're not on too many medications that might be influencing the cortisol and
oxytocin of asapress and I'm looking at in their blood.
So that's a lot of complexity of working with savants, working with people with special needs,
working in savant communities or even autism communities.
There's often a lot of comorbidities.
There's often a lot of other things that need to be treated, medicated, regulated.
Where do those, you know, fall into what a statistical analysis is going to require,
which is that we can rule out these kind of, you know, outlying influences?
Yeah.
It's fascinating.
I mean, I just think there's the savant stuff is such a loophole because I think about Dr. Penancey Powell's major thing, which was like, look, if a science can understand or believe that certain things can happen and we don't know how that information got into a brain, right? Like, how can someone recite pie to the 30,000 digit when calculators can't even do it? You know, like how? You know, so why can't ESP be in that same list of savant skills with calendar computation? And I think if we could just do that, it would normalize.
so much. Yeah, well, I think that's also, you know, part of what telepathy tapes has accomplished.
It's seeing extrasensory perception as an ability, not as a, you know, freakish anomaly, but as something
that has some sort of substrate, even if we don't know what it is. It has a substrate. There is a
mechanism. There has to be a mechanism because that's how we're seeing it, right? And there has to be
a way for us to try and measure it. And I'm also a fan of there may be a collection of things that do
not have the same kind of verifiability that we have with, you know, the amount of caffeine and a
cup of tea, for example, just something I had to do in chemistry in college. But there can be,
I think, a conversation about do we have to have this notion that it either is or it isn't?
Maybe it also is, but not all the time and we're not exactly sure. And one day hopefully we'll get
there. Yeah. No, 100%. I love that. And I think being comfortable in that. Like,
space where we don't know. We don't know and we're not going to know for a very long time.
I feel like so many of the non-speakers I've met have been so wonderful in trying to disseminate this,
you know? And I think you're right with the sensory regulation and filtering and just perception
of everything that's around and how that can be really awful if you can't filter everything out,
but it can also be a blessing in a way that some other things are more able to be tuned into.
Yeah, but I think also what makes people uncomfortable and I think what makes
a lot of people uncomfortable about the telepathy tapes and even this conversation, you know,
imagine that for all of human history, we have not given any validity to the possibility that people
who are nonverbal have a conscious experience. And we come from a very dark and tragic history of
the ways that we have treated people who did not fit the norm. And I'm not just talking about
all of the brilliant friends I know who were placed in special ed classes when that
actually wasn't where the resources needed to go, right? I'm talking about, you know, in my own
family, people who were institutionalized because in the 1950s, no one knew what to do with these people.
And I'm friends with someone named Perry Finkelstein, who is nonverbal. And she talks about,
and I actually recorded a TEDx talk for her. I was her voice. And she talked about being a child and hearing
people talk about her and saying to herself, I'm in here. Like, you don't know that I'm in here.
And I think that makes people very, very uncomfortable because it does show centuries, if not
thousands of years of a problem with institutionalizing humans that did not always behave the
way we wanted them to. It brings up a huge conversation about what we call mental illness.
Because as we know from things like the, you know, Premonitions Bureau, there are people who
see things before they happen, they also see other things that don't happen. But if they are
predicting things that do happen that kill hundreds of people, what does it say about the people
who are in our institutions, who we call crazy? Makes people really uncomfortable. Or that other
cultures have names for those people, and they're often called shamans. Yeah, right. And in Western
culture, they're not called shamans. In season two, we started talking to more indigenous cultures,
And I was so surprised how the Kunta Nawa people talked about in Brazil.
This is wild.
Like, they talked about Tulape is their technology.
And they said it's more powerful than any technology you have that can connect you to people or ideas around the world.
Sure.
We can do it too, but we can also connect with ancestors and, like, plants and the span.
So, like, our technology is better than yours.
Ours is just more ancient.
It makes people very, very uncomfortable.
Yeah.
I mean, talking to pretty much.
much any indigenous population. The stuff is not wild. It is. You're a shaman or you are a medicine
woman or man or you are really able to like inform on the hunt. Like all these things used to be relied upon.
And I think also the notion that you can get in touch with that by like, you know, doing an ayahuasca
journey on your weekend and having a great time. It's an interesting and lovely notion. But I think
what's also important to realize is that there's an entire culture.
around that kind of understanding of these phenomenon.
And I think that's what's hard because we don't have that structure around it.
In neuropsychology, we talk about these things all the time, right?
And it's more kind of commonplace to be wondering about consciousness, to be thinking about what it means.
But once it's introduced to the lay public, it very quickly can get commercialized.
It can get dragged down. It can get diluted.
It can get confusing.
And I think that's where many people say it's not legitimate, right?
And I think that's not fair.
Yeah.
Obviously, there's been such cool, amazing, transformational research going on our own psychedelics and how it can help people with mental illnesses.
However, one thing that I don't think we're equipped to handle at all is the fact that people are talking about these spiritual revelations in it.
And they are feeling a sense of oneness.
And they do want to know where to go from there.
And when we look at these cultures, and it was in Western history, too, the use of psychedelics to try to open up.
your mind. It was an entire, there are rights around it. There are people that are leading these
things. It was an absolutely beautiful, spiritual experience. And I fear like when you do it in a lab,
we're not honoring it the way it was maybe meant to be with us, you know?
I think it's a good point. It's a complicated point. And it's, I think, gets right to the
heart of the challenge here. Because it is only when people like Rick Doblin,
could kind of push for like for legislation and for, you know, being able to provide this proof,
right, that you can publish a paper and you can search it on PubMed and you can see,
oh, use of psychedelics, this, that, the other, right?
Oh, it works in PTSD.
It's a shame, right?
But also it does sort of, I think, lend itself to the kind of legitimacy that a lot of people look for.
And it is incredibly different and should be held distinct from,
indigenous use of especially these kinds of medicines. But, you know, I think that the history also
of psychedelics, the government deciding that people who are so in touch with their consciousness
and something bigger than themselves do not easily want to go to war to kill people that they don't
know. It is part of the story as well. There's a politicization, right, of access to consciousness.
Yeah. Yeah. So I'm curious to know how researching paradigms and kind of,
consciousness and talking to all the people you've talked to has influenced your faith because I know
some people where when you start to ask these big questions, it freaks them out. And they're like,
you can't even ask those? Or this idea that like can you form and grow a deeper faith or like a more
real version of faith for you that might be outside of the bounds of what you're raised with?
Right. I think that these questions of consciousness of sci phenomenon, I think they are very challenging
to a traditional notion of a religious experience.
And I'm kind of speaking Judeo-Christian Foundation.
You know, for me personally, I come from a tradition that lends itself to a lot of
unknowability.
And I think that's been a very convenient landing place for me because that is our tradition.
You know, I was raised Jewish and there's a, you know, an enormous and very rich, you know,
traditional tradition that goes along with our liturgy. Many people are not taught it, but it doesn't
mean that it doesn't exist. There's kind of like little bits and pieces of it, but, you know,
I was- Kabbalah Judaism. Yeah, I mean, like, Kabbalah is one sort of branch, but even this notion that
there was a darkness that had no name and no form before anything was created. And I don't use the Old
Testament as a science book. That's not what it is. But the notion that whoever wrote that down,
going to go ahead and say that. Whoever wrote that down was living in a time where this was a
comfortable conversation that there's an unknowability and a mystery that holds everything. And that
mystery contracted before it expanded and that we are living in a world that is a projection. Right?
It is. It's a projection. Like for me, that's comfortable. And it's where a lot of my sci phenomenon
get thrown into that bucket. For people who don't have that, I would imagine it's a little more.
or challenging because how do you reconcile this, you know, with a lot of traditional beliefs?
And I am a very traditional person in that sense, but I think that there's a lot of grace.
There's a lot of grace to be had when you see that all of the things that we comprehend are part of a
consciousness that is held by a larger consciousness.
Does it ever scare you?
Yes.
I get scared all the time when I hear about things that I can't explain.
Yeah. It's very scary. Because we've even had internal meetings when we're talking about an episode or going through notes. And one of our beloved staff members really gets upset when stuff will come up about like a simulation. Or we get a lot of feedback from people where it'll be like, you know, the more we go into these depths, like the more it erases God. And I always think of like the example of the rainbow. And Newton and Keats were in a big argument around this. Like if you unweave the rainbow, you're unraveling God, which isn't true to me.
Yeah. My answer to that is you need a bigger God.
You need a God that can hold all of this.
And, you know, if you're looking for certainty, you will not find it in these realms.
And the comfort that you don't have to figure it all out for me is a highly religious concept.
I'm not God, right?
If I was, I'd be controlling a lot more, you know?
But you need a bigger God.
Yeah.
Because there is nothing that we are experiencing that is not explainable.
in the universe that holds our ability to fathom it.
Right.
You know, there's literally nothing.
And, you know, there's a mystical concept in Judaism that if God stops thinking about us
for even a fraction of a millisecond, we don't exist anymore, right?
That our existence is predicated on something bigger than us holding us, right?
And whether that's gravity, whatever you want it to be, that's what's holding all of this.
And to me, it's like, this is the undisional.
peeling. This is the peeling back of that onion, right? And it's infinite. It's infinite. And what an
amazing capacity we've been given as human beings to be able to have these conversations, to be able to
love, to be able to be afraid, to grieve, right? All of these experiences. And I think, you know,
in terms of this stuff, like, it's the same notion as if you want God to be good all the time.
And you want to say, this is good and that's bad. I got sick when I wished I could go on that
date, that's bad. It all just is. It's just happening. And it's not that I don't believe that there's
forces of darkness and lightness, but the notion that you can ascribe any of that to the world we're
living in to me is it's setting yourself up for a very rigid perspective. And so when things like
sci phenomenon come in, it doesn't fit the paradigm and it's stupid and it's ridiculous, which is why
atheists fall into the same, I think, the same challenge. Well, and I also think there's a,
hubris that maybe us trying to understand the stuff would be like a nat trying to understand
like how to get to a mall and go shopping.
Like there's just no, there's no context for it because it's so outside of your everyday life.
And how do you get comfortable in that?
How do you not reject it?
How do you not push back against it?
How do you say there's things that I won't know and I can be okay with that?
You know, if you've ever had one moment in meditation of forgetting that you're thinking
about the fact that you're meditating, like that moment is what we're chasing.
Right? And it's fleeting and you'll get like little bits of it. We're living from like that moment to the next one.
Yeah. Is there anything that's on their highs in scientifically that you're really excited about? Maybe something that's just come across your path where you're like, holy cow, we're talking about that now.
Oh, gosh. I mean, conversations about consciousness, like reaching the mainstream of science, I think is really, really special. I think talking about special abilities. I think talking about really all of this stuff where a lot of my podcast also kind of resides. That's exciting. I think the fact that we can talk about diagnoses without shame is really miraculous. I know that there are a lot of things I should know about regarding AI and technology.
But honestly, it really scares me. I'm an intentional Luddite. And so I know that there's a lot that I don't understand that is happening. Like Greg Braden, you know, tells us that like we're all going to be like fused with microchips at some point. I get very nervous about that. I tend to stay away from it. And I just sort of am like, what am I eating for dinner, you know? So there's a lot that, again, because I'm not also in like current neuroscience, you know, fields I don't touch on. Yeah.
I guess the final question, and one that could either give me hope or not hope, is like,
do you think science is slowly changing?
Like, I do think, like, 50 years ago, these questions would be considered just absolutely so fringe.
You'd be apps thrown out.
You could never get tenure.
You would just could never get published.
Like, in 20, 30 years, do you think the landscape will be different?
Yeah, I think we've come a long way.
And I think even though I get down about the dualists, we've come a tremendously long way.
And the fact that even we're talking about placebo as an example of a shift in perception,
a shift in agency and a shift in attention as methods to help us heal, that's already astounding.
I think the fact that near-death experiences are becoming something we talk about, that there's
information to be gleaned from that, I think, has already shown how far we've come.
And, you know, even when Jonathan and I had Lee Harris on the podcast, who literally thought we were punking him,
He's like, why would you want to speak to a channeler?
Like, I'm not even in this realm.
And I think the fact that, like, people are open to saying, what does it feel like in your body?
Like, where are you dropping into, right?
That's shown how far we've come.
And I have to believe that it's going to continue to expand.
I wonder what world our kids will be experiencing when they are our age.
I hope that I'm proven right just because moms want to be proven right.
and I want my kids to be like, she was right. Yeah, I think we're going to open up more and more.
I think we're going to find more comfort in our lack of ability to quantify things the way other people want.
And I do think we're going to start seeing ways to visualize what is not yet seen.
And if there's a paradigm on the horizon, I might replace the current one, I mean, is there any, has any paradigm you put your money on?
No. I mean, and I say no because, you know, my tradition, T-Rise,
is that there is a messianic age when we will all love each other and when we will all have
tremendous compassion for each other's suffering and each other's challenges.
I remain hopeful that even if that is delayed, that that is on the horizon.
Like we were not placed here to hate.
I'm certain of that.
And no matter how challenging the political situation is how challenging the scientific community
feels by telepathy, I have to believe that there will be an increase in love, openness,
rights, and yeah, an expansion of belief.
Yeah.
Look at me being hopeful.
I know.
I am so happy about your hopeful ending.
I was like, this could go one or two ways.
We're going to leave you.
I feel sad.
Oh, I usually make people feel sad.
Okay, that was great.
Thank you.
Myam for joining us.
Thank you.
This is really great.
That's it for this episode of the Talk Tracks.
but new episodes will be released every Wednesday.
So stay tuned as we work to unravel all the threads,
even the veiled ones that knit together are reality.
And please remember to stay kind, stay curious,
and that being a true skeptic requires an open mind.
Thank you to my amazing collaborators.
Producers Catherine Ellis and Selena Kennedy,
technical directing audio mix and finishing by Jeremy Cole,
opening and closing music by Elizabeth P.W.
And original logo and cover art by Ben Condora Design.
I'm Kai Dickens, your executive producer, writer, and host.
