TrueLife - Frank Forencich - Activism Is Medicine
Episode Date: November 10, 2024One on One Video Call W/George https://tidycal.com/georgepmonty/60-minute-meetingSupport the show:https://www.paypal.me/Truelifepodcast?locale.x=en_US🚨🚨Curious about the future of psych...edelics? Imagine if Alan Watts started a secret society with Ram Dass and Hunter S. Thompson… now open the door. Use Promocode TRUELIFE for Get 25% off monthly or 30% off the annual plan For the first yearhttps://www.district216.com/🎙️🎙️Aloha, everyone! Today, we’re diving into a profound and exhilarating exploration of health, evolution, and purpose with none other than Frank Forencich—a visionary educator, martial artist, and fierce advocate for the human spirit. With a BA in human biology from Stanford University and over thirty years immersed in martial arts, Frank’s journey is a fusion of physical mastery, ancestral wisdom, and deep philosophical insight.Frank is more than just a martial artist with black belts in karate and aikido; he’s an explorer who has traversed the landscapes of Africa in search of our origins, uncovering truths about the human condition along the way. His passion for understanding who we are and where we came from has taken him to stages at Google, the Ancestral Health Symposium, and Stanford University, where he’s reshaped conversations about health, stress, and the role of activism in our lives.Today, Frank brings us a revolutionary idea—Activism is Medicine, both a concept and the title of his latest book. In it, he challenges us to see activism not as a weight we must carry but as a pathway to resilience, purpose, and collective evolution. Frank believes that, through engagement with our world and the causes that resonate with us, we can find healing, strength, and an awakening of spirit.Prepare for a conversation that will stir your mind and heart alike, one that connects the threads of human history, personal empowerment, and the call to action. Frank Forencich is here to remind us that our evolution is far from over—it’s just beginning.https://humananimal.earth/frank-forencich One on One Video call W/George https://tidycal.com/georgepmonty/60-minute-meetingSupport the show:https://www.paypal.me/Truelifepodcast?locale.x=en_USCheck out our YouTube:https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLPzfOaFtA1hF8UhnuvOQnTgKcIYPI9Ni9&si=Jgg9ATGwzhzdmjkg
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Darkness struck, a gut-punched theft, Sun ripped away, her health bereft.
I roar at the void.
This ain't just fate, a cosmic scam I spit my hate.
The games rigged tight, shadows deal, blood on their hands, I'll never kneel.
Yet in the rage, a crack ignites, occulted sparks cut through the nights.
The scars my key, hermetic and stark.
To see, to rise, I hunt in the dark, fumbling, fear.
Hears through ruins maze, lights my war cry, born from the blaze.
The poem is Angels with Rifles.
The track, I Am Sorrow, I Am Lust by Codex Serafini.
Check out the entire song at the end of the cast.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome back to the True Life podcast.
I hope you having a beautiful day.
I hope the sun is shine.
Hope the birds are singing.
Hope the wind is at your breath.
back. I got an incredible show for you today in the first day of the after the election.
I'm sure many people are happy to be done with all the rhetoric and the craziness that was that
that whole cycle of the election year. But we can get into some of that today. But before we start
diving into the world that we currently live in today, let me go and introduce the one and only
Frank Forinsich. We're diving into a profound and exhilarating exploration of health, evolution,
and purpose with none other than Frank Forinsich. A visionary,
educator, martial artist, and furious advocate for the human spirit. With the BA and human biology
from Stanford University and over 30 years emerged in martial arts, Frank's journey is a fusion
of physical mastery, ancestral wisdom, and deep philosophical insight. Frank is more than just a
martial artist with black belts in karate and akito. He's an explorer who has traversed the
landscapes of Africa in search of our origins, uncovering truths about the human condition along the
way. His passion for understanding who we are and where we came from has taken him to stage at Google,
the ancestral health symposium and Stanford University, where he has reshaped conversations about
health, stress, and the role of activism in our life. Today, Frank brings us a revolutionary idea.
Activism is medicine, both a concept and the title of his latest book. In it, he challenges us to
see activism, not as a weight we must carry, but as a pathway to resilience, perfect.
and collective evolution.
Frank believes that through engagement with our world and the causes that resonate with us,
we can find healing, strength, and an awakening of the spirit.
Prepare for a conversation that will stir your mind and heart alike,
one that connects the threads of human history, personal empowerment, and the call to action.
Frank is here to remind us that our evolution is far from over.
It's just beginning.
Frank, thanks so much for being here today.
How are you?
I'm doing.
Well, I'm happy to be here.
I'm delighted to be talking to you, and I'm also suffering from the events of last night,
and I'm sure we're going to talk about that.
So, yeah, it's kind of a mixed bag for me this morning.
Why are you suffering, man?
Like, what's there to suffer about?
Oh, boy.
Well, the way I'm seeing this right now is as a form of collective trauma,
and the outcome of this election is going to completely reach.
shuffle and reorder our society. And it's not an outcome that I would have hoped for,
to say the least. And I'm looking forward to metabolizing this experience. Let me put it that way.
Yes, it's going to be a while before we can really process this trauma, if you will,
and then we can formulate, I think, a pathway going forward.
So maybe I can shed some light on that today.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's interesting.
You know, I know leading up to it, there was a lot of rhetoric on both sides
talking about the last election or this is going to happen or that's going to happen.
And, you know, for me, and I think a lot of people that that I speak to,
one of the thing that's never really gets addressed in our politics is this idea of
foreign policy.
I'm not sure.
Do you think that our foreign policy is going to change at all?
It seems like people don't really get an opportunity to vote in what our country does or where we send our money that's not in the United States.
Do you think that part's going to change?
Oh, I don't know.
I'm really not an expert on foreign policy.
I have opinions, of course, like everybody does.
But for me, the biggest missing element in this entire political season,
this conversation is the natural world, the biosphere, the state of the planet.
Nobody talks about it in top leadership circles.
And for me, that's just a yawning gap because that's what keeps us alive.
That's what sustains our bodies.
And in turn, our civilization and everything else.
So we're not even talking about our life support systems.
And if we don't talk about it, we're sure not going to do anything about it.
So for me, that's the biggest flaw in the whole system right now.
Yeah, but it's quite a conundrum when we start talking about that because I, you know,
we talk about global change.
We're making these broad changes about saving the planet.
But shoot, we can't even take care of our own neighborhoods, man.
Like, we can't even take care of each other.
You know what I mean?
Like, I go down, I just move to the Bayer.
There's so many homeless people.
And like, we can't even take care of that.
Like, how in the world are we going to change attitudes?
throughout the world.
Like, doesn't it seem like a giant sort of a problem?
Like, shouldn't we take care of each other before we start taking care of the planet?
Well, yes, and it's not an either-or choice.
Totally.
It's something where we can and must do both.
Yeah.
And, but what you describe here is an incredibly unprecedented, stressful situation.
And that's something I think a lot about is the amount of stress.
that people are under right now, and the degree to which it's chronic. And that is unprecedented
in our history as animals. Because for most of our time on this planet, stress has been episodic.
We have a little bit of stress, and then we go back to camp, and we recover, and there are these
spikes in our autonomic nervous system, our autonomic experience, and we recover. But now there are no
spikes. It's just one horrible plateau of stress. That is fundamentally abnormal. So I think that
that's a valuable orientation because it explains a lot of our behavior right now. Stress is not
just an individual phenomena. This is something that's coursing through the entirety of our society
right now. So we can talk more about stress. Yeah. Well, I think it's a good segue.
into, you know, what you've probably learned and mastered through martial arts.
Like on some level, to achieve the level that you have in martial arts, you have to really,
you have to really be in tune with your awareness, whether it's the idea of stress, whether it's
the idea of overcoming stress, whether it's the idea of grounding yourself.
But maybe you can talk about what you've learned from martial arts and how we can apply
that to maybe the bigger picture. Like, is there something that you have learned in self-mastery
that will allow us to maybe start mastering our environment in a way that's less stressful.
Well, first of all, that word mastery is a little bit tricky because it means different things
in different contexts. So in the East, the idea of mastery is contained in this phrase or word
Wu Wei. Wu Wei is simply a high level of skill that somebody brings to their experience in the
world. And Eastern traditions are full of references to skill development. That's something that a lot of
people don't realize. We think of Buddhism. We think of Taoism as being something having to do with
acceptance of reality and being calm and that kind of thing. And that's true. That's an important
part of it. But if you read the ancient text, like the Tao Te Ching and the Joanza, these texts,
there's a lot of references and metaphors having to do with skill, skillful movement through the world.
And that's the old martial artists.
That's what they trained for was this grace and adaptability to circumstances moving without effort.
And in that sense, it's very much like being a musician because you try to play your instrument and to move and to do it effortlessly.
Over in the West, in the meantime, mastery has a different meaning, right?
And the European tradition based on knowledge and scientific discovery,
and then knowledge and control of nature, a very different sense of mastery.
So I often think about that dichotomy between the two.
And, of course, I'm really interested in the skill angle of the East.
Yeah.
I like the way you describe that with grace.
and efficiency, you know, it does seem like the Western model has, and I would say with mastery
in the Western world comes dominance, where that might not be the same case in the Eastern.
I'd be like there's no dominance, there's balance, you know, those two things correspond
differently too, right?
Right.
And the, in the Western tradition, that emphasis on dominance.
Yeah.
has really become manifest in the modern world now with big time capitalism and this extractive
economy now that we bring to nature where we try and extract resources from nature and
resources from people, labor from people, all about extraction and domination and imperialism
over the world, a completely different idea than what arose in the east.
East. So we can learn a lot from, from Buddhism and Taoism, not just about how to be calm,
but how to relate to the world at large. Yeah, it's well put. Do you think it was like when we
look back at some of the, you know, what comes to mind for me in, in whether it's this, the, the
hardcore extract of capitalism, you know, I think a multinational corporations. And I worked for a
Fortune 500 company. And it got to a point where, you know, it was us,
versus them. It was the people that were employees versus the middle management and the higher
management and the board of executives. It tried to extract from the employees the same way an oil
company extracts from the from the ground. And it was just this incredible force of like, I don't like
these people. I don't like these people. It was the classic us and them. But my question, Frank,
is, was it, has all this been necessary so that we can get to this point where we do realize
the mistakes that we made? Like, hey, we've been treating each other pretty.
bad here. Was that all necessary in your opinion? Do you think that maybe we had to get here
in order to get to the next spot? Oh, perhaps, but this was a long series of small decisions
along the way. And I go back, one of my, I often wonder about the breaking of the world.
How did we get to this point? And I think about the Luddite revolution that took place in
in England.
Yeah.
What we had there was a culture of weavers and craftspeople, artisans who actually
had a culture.
They made a living, making fabrics and making crafts.
And the capitalist came in and basically took over that whole culture and dominated it.
And that was, in a sense, the beginning of the end.
It didn't have to go down that road.
things could have turned out quite differently.
And so now what we're seeing with indigenous people, native people,
we have to get back to that thing that we've almost lost.
And that's a way of living in harmony with each other and with a natural world.
And it is a possible thing to do.
But it's kind of fading into the rearview mirror right now.
So we need to keep that thing alive.
Yeah, I'm glad you brought that up.
I think the Luddites get a bad rap, man.
Everyone talks about the Luddites wanting to just destroy technology.
What they wanted to destroy was this incredible and cringing force on their freedom.
Like they were doing things their way and they were not going to be forced into coming into the factory every day for 15.
I don't want to do that.
They wanted to make it their own way.
They didn't need that, but they were forced into that.
So I'm glad that you brought that up.
I think another book that comes to mind when I think about this,
which I think ties in with your book,
Activism is Medicine,
is a great book called Black Elks Speaks.
And in that book,
like the indigenous leaders talks about how,
when the white guys came forward and manifest destiny,
they came to the indigenous people and they said,
we want to buy your land.
And in the story,
he says,
like,
that's silly.
You can't buy the land.
The land belongs to everybody.
You know,
it's sort of like that same sort of motif that we're talking about right here.
And,
you know,
in some ways, like I, I think that that is the beginning of activism.
Maybe that's sort of the foundation of why activism is medicine.
Yes.
And what I do is try and create a different way of thinking about this.
Because for most people who live a conventional life, activism seems incredibly stressful.
Because what it means is you're having to step up and expose yourself to
conflicted realities, conflicted relationships. And it's not safe. It's risky. And so activism being perceived
as risky and stressful, it's no surprise that so many people avoid it. But I'm trying to offer
a counter argument to say, well, yes, it is risky and it is stressful and there is exposure, to be
sure, but it is a pathway that is very rich and meaningful. So it's a way to learn about the world.
It's a way to establish relationships with really interesting people. And it's a way to live a life
of relevance. And that's what's so important. Even if you lose and there's a lot of loss in the
activist community, there's a lot of battles that we fight and that we lose. So you have to keep your
your focus on the journey. And when you do, you live this life of relevance. It works.
It's better for your body and it's better for your life in the long run. Safety is dangerous,
you might say. Hanging out in a very safe environment, 24-7, 365, ultimately diminishes
our experience and diminishes the human animal. So there has to be a getting out and,
standing up and using our voice.
It's really important.
And that's the premise for the whole book.
So the book begins with the encounter that we have with what I call the knowledge.
The knowledge is simply the understanding that human beings now are impacting the natural world in a catastrophic way.
And that's the knowledge.
And I pose the question, what happens when you have that encounter with that knowledge?
And people diverge there.
Some people take it on.
Some people ignore it.
Some people deny it.
And there's a lot of different styles there.
So that's how the book begins is with that encounter.
I can't help but see the similarities between the individual having a catastrophic relationship with themselves by fleeing the safety and the catastrophic relationship we have with our planet.
Like in some ways we're hiding behind this idea of safety.
Like to live a life worth meaning, to live a meaningful life is to get out there and fight for what you believe in.
You know, and to light that spark inside of you and watch it, blow on that ember and watch your relationships flare up.
And if we can fight for what we believe in, then we can also fight for the world we want to live in.
Are there some similarities between the fight for individual fire and the fight for living on a better planet?
Oh yeah, it's all the same thing. And it's, for me, it always gets back to the human animal because
we have systems in our brain that specifically the amygdala, that's a big part of it, that is,
that is like a smoke detector in the brain, right? And that is always vigilant 24-7 to detect
threats in the environment. And it's a very useful thing to have if you live in a dangerous
environment. And what happens is we detect fear, we detect stress, and a common response to stress
then is to revert to the familiar. And this is, we see it in humans all the time, but we also
see it in other animals when there's an ambiguous situation, that animal goes back to what
he or she knows, the last familiar place.
I'm going to go hide in the last familiar place.
And it's adaptive and it makes sense in certain situations, but the dose makes the poison.
So if that's all you do, you're going to have a problem.
And the analogy I use, I've climbed some mountains in my time.
And the way mountains were originally climbed with a series of camps.
So you go to the Himalayas and you set up a series of camps up Mount Everest.
And maybe you have Camp 1, 2, 3, 4, and then you make a break for the summit.
But inevitably, the weather gets bad.
And now you have this huge ambiguity that is a big challenge.
And what do you do?
Well, I'm going to either persist or I'm going to retreat to the familiar.
I'm going to retreat to the last familiar place, which is Camp 4 or whatever it is.
I'm going to go back to the last safe place.
That's my retreat to the familiar.
And that's the metaphor for how so many of us are living our lives right now.
And that means retreating to conventional culture.
It means retreating to consumer culture, what we know, what our friends are doing, safety
in numbers, all of these things.
And again, the dose makes a poison.
It's great in short, short amounts, small amounts.
but at some point you got to leave camp four and you got ahead for the summit and that's what's
going to make your life meaningful yeah do you think on the march up the mountain that which makes
you retreat to the familiar is the mountain or the rock in your shoe oh oh i love that because
i mean obviously it's both but yeah when you're in a really tough situation like that every little
detail matters. And so those little things can be incredibly significant. The rock in your
shoe might be the thing that forces you to turn around. So yeah, attention to detail is very important.
Yeah, I love the analogies and the metaphors. They're so telling and they seem to help people,
at least me, you know, think about the details in life or it just allows, it invites someone to
explore the significance in their own life.
And your book is rich in that particular type of language and so are the talks that you've
given.
Thank you for that.
I do feel like we are in a march towards the mountain.
And it seems to me on some level, activism is contagious.
Maybe the person that we see leading the charge becomes an inspiration to us.
But can you speak to the idea of activism being contagious?
Yeah.
I'm really glad you brought that up because what has happened, especially in the world of liberal
politics over the last, say, 10 years is that a lot of people have tried to put forward
reasoned arguments and facts and figures to try and educate an audience about some particular
issue, say it's climate or whatever it is. So we put forward these reasoned arguments
and in general they failed. They fail to persuade people.
And there's a lot of reasons for that.
But I think when it comes down to persuasion and trying to get people to behave in a particular way,
role modeling is what really moves people.
And in the world of activism, yeah, if you see your neighbors and your friends stepping up and taking risks,
that's going to move you too.
If your neighbors are not stepping up and not taking risks, then you're going to revert to the familiar
and you're going to be comfortable at home forever.
And that'll be it. So yes, absolutely. When I saw Greta Thunberg step up as a young person, as a student, and start speaking out on behalf of the climate, I was moved. I said, okay, she can do that. I can do that. And she inspired literally millions of people in that action. So, and I also remember from childhood watching the 1968 Olympics when the black athletes,
stood up on the podium to receive their medals and raised their glove fists.
And that was inspiring to a lot of people as well.
And to talk about exposure.
I mean, those guys took some serious risks to do what they did.
But it's contagious.
Everything we do as human animals is contagious.
So activism is no different.
Yeah, I love that.
I almost feel like there's a bigger language.
There's something calling to us, to inspire us, to push us,
or more importantly, like a divine attractor that's pulling us in the right direction
if we're willing to take a, if we're willing to listen.
And it's this idea of passion, you know, whether it's, whether it's the 68 Olympics
or whether it's MLK's mountaintop speech, you know, there's these things in our lives
that pull us.
a certain direction. And it's, it's, it's, it's, it's a bigger language than words alone. And I do think that
maybe where we've gone wrong with these analytical speeches or this very measured education
about how things should be, we're going to do this. I think when the instrument becomes the
institution, it loses its passion, it loses the sexiness that draws us to it on some level.
But I think, I think that what happened last night, I think this is an invitation to the world.
let's get inspired.
Let's find the new heroes out there.
Let's find the next people that are willing to change their lives,
the lives of their neighbors that are willing to stand up in the face of adversity
and take a chance, man.
And I think that your book can be sort of a menu of possibilities
or a sort of invitation to the next class of people that want to do that.
What do you say about this language that's calling to us,
is trying to inspire us, this activism is medicine?
Yeah, the language is very helpful.
And I know that one little bit of language that pulled me into this was I was reading a book about some inner city activists working on civil rights.
And this one leader was working with some at-risk youth.
And his favorite thing to tell these kids was,
the more you know, the more you owe.
The more you know, the more you owe.
Like that.
And that one really stuck with me because I've been extremely privileged.
You can see my bookshelf in the background.
I've been able to read most of my life.
I've read hundreds of nonfiction books.
And so I've been privileged to know a lot of things about the world.
And that little bit of advice resonates with me.
It's like, okay, I know some things.
I owe my ancestors.
I know I owe my culture for bringing me to this point.
And I need to spread that along.
I need to pass that along.
I have a duty.
I have an obligation to do that.
And that really resonates for me.
So I didn't just parachute into this world.
I'm the product of my parents and my grandparents and everybody else who formed this society and this culture, this civilization.
So I feel the weight of that responsibility to go forward.
So, yeah, the language, the language is huge.
Yeah.
Yeah, it is huge.
And I'm hopeful that people find a way to express themselves that is dangerously beautiful.
You know what I mean by that?
Like, yeah, like we should be doing.
There should be dangerous.
Like, I speak to a lot of people in the psychedelic movement.
And it's my opinion that we're like in the late 50s right now.
And you're going to see this explosion of hopefully day glow school buses and electric
Kool-Kulet acid tests and new ideas, maybe recycled, refreshed ideas.
But a new sort of renaissance, a new sort of love that sweeps over.
the world in a powerful, dangerously beautiful way. Do you think that's too imaginative? Or do you think
about that? No, well, that gets back to the old idea of crisis opportunity. And the myth there was that
this Chinese character symbolized both crisis and opportunity, which a lot of people have
repeated that. It turns out actually literally not to be true. It's not actually meaning that,
but it's a great metaphor, right? It should be true, even a.
if it's not. But yeah, absolutely. So what we've got now, especially after last night, is a genuine
crisis. And a lot of the boundaries that we are used to living with are going to break down,
are going to dissolve, are going to be rearranged. And that is a perfect opportunity for
creativity and art. And that's why I use this word artivism quite a bit. I think it's a great word
because artists are naturally drawn to these kind of conditions,
and we're going to see, I think, a big uptick in art right now.
And the energy that animated the 1960s,
that animated the Occupy movement a few years ago,
that energy is still out there.
But people are retrenching.
People are trying to say, okay, how does activism change now?
What does it get to look like now?
And once we get a sense of that, there could be a real big shift.
Yeah, I see it wholeheartedly.
And it's not, like, I don't really believe in coincidence.
And when I see the title of your book and I see what you're doing out there, like, I just see that as, oh, look, there's just another sign of it.
Like, this is bubbling to the top, whether it's artivism, activism, whether it is people living their best lives.
Like, I see it bubbling to the top.
We've got our first question coming and coming here from Clint Kiles from Arkansas.
And he says, you've walked the landscapes of Africa connecting with our origins and studying ancestral wisdom.
How do these primal experiences shape your understanding of the human spirit, especially in a modern world so disconnected from nature?
Yeah.
Yeah, that's the problem.
And the way I think about this and explain it, I've been also to Europe and I've been to Europe.
and I've been to some of the sites of the cave paintings.
Nice.
What's really interesting to me is that you go into the, they don't let you go into
the actual caves, but there are recreations of the caves.
And you can go in there and you can see the paintings,
and almost all of the paintings are of animals.
And the idea here is that for ancient people who lived a wildlife in nature
with these big and powerful animals around them,
they were just captivated by the animals
and they believed these animals to have supernatural powers.
So in other words, they were in awe of nature constantly.
They were in awe of the animals.
They were in awe of the weather and wildfires,
thunderstorms, all of these things.
Now, what's happened is modern research done in laboratories,
believe it or not,
they've discovered that having a set of,
of awe is really therapeutic for the body.
So I think what they do, they bring people in the laboratory and they show them different kinds of videos and they measure their physiological responses.
So it turns out that having a sense of awe, an experience of awe, actually it changes your physiology, makes you calmer, but it also makes you more pro-social and it makes you more humble, which are ideal qualities for making our way in the world.
So anyway, that is a prelude to what happened with agriculture, because when we started to till the land and domesticate animals, a lot of that awe went away.
And now living in the modern world, we hardly even see animals.
We hardly even see, we're not exposed to the weather or awe at all.
And so we try and find awe in our electronic devices or whatever, but it's a really weak substitute.
right? And so you might look at modern humans as being awe-deprived. And I think that's a fair
thing to say. And that's dangerous. That puts us in real trouble. So that suggests we got to spend
more time in nature. We've got to go out and make ourselves small in comparison to the big
outdoors that's out there. So that's what I try to do. Yeah, I like it. It makes me,
I've always wondered, I think maybe you just gave a great,
example of how this happened, but I've always wondered how the word awful became such a pejorative.
Like, shouldn't something that's full of awe be something great? Like, maybe that's how it happened.
Maybe we went from seeing these pristine landscapes and these giant beasts and this living in these
miracles that was full of awe to this representation that became awful. You know what I mean?
Like, wait, that's just awful. It's not even that good. Right, right. Well, that reminds me of another
language thing because if you if you read some historical accounts by rabbis and other historians who look at the
words in the Bible and one that comes up a lot of times in the modern world is that this phrase fear
of the Lord and we're supposed to live in fear of the Lord right but you go to these rabbis and
these historians and they say no that's a misinterpretation of the original language
What it was is awe in the face of reality.
In other words, we should live a life of radical awe to be radically amazed at the nature of life.
That is the spiritual path to be radically amazed.
So this mistranslation of these old documents led us down the wrong path to this world of fear.
It's, well, awe is the way.
Aw is the path.
Yeah.
Yeah. It also brings up this idea of surplus.
You know, we talk about agriculture, and I think one of the oldest structures on the planet is the grain tower at Jericho.
And that symbolizes the first time there was a surplus, you know, and when you have a surplus, you stop really living in the moment.
And you start thinking about the past, you're thinking about the future.
And I'm not saying surplus is a bad thing.
Like, who doesn't want to have more?
And you can, you have the opportunity to really work on some, some really fine things.
you have a surplus. But at some level, you know, that surplus can become a weight around your ankle
a little bit. What, do you think that maybe there'd be something there with agriculture and
surplus? Oh, totally, totally. And it also dovetails with stress because a common stress reaction
is because your face was this ambiguous future and this possible loss of control. So what do
we do? A lot of us, anyway, tend to hoard. And hoarding, I think, is a common
stress reaction. And it's not just the crazy people we see on TV who fill their house with
newspapers or whatever it is. No, we hoard in other ways. So we hoard money. We hoard power and
control. We see a lot of affluent people who are not satisfied with having enough. And a lot of
that, I think, is a stress reaction. So if we could, if we could help people with their stress,
they wouldn't be so motivated to consume at such a high level.
And they would relax and everybody would feel better.
So, yeah, yeah, the whole thing with surplus was it took us down a very strange path.
For the Bushman of the Kalahari living in a wild outdoor environment, the habitat that they
lived in was their affluence.
And there was no need to store anything because you just go for a walk.
you can find food.
So it's a very different, very different experience for them.
Yeah.
On some level, when I think of surplus, I think of like, it does allow us to walk down
this incredible path of abstraction.
You know, try explaining life insurance to a Bushman.
Like, listen, you're going to get, you know, you're going to get this much vacation.
And then you're going to get some life insurance.
What are you talking about?
There's no such thing as insurance and life.
But like we that live in the Western world, like, I don't have health insurance, man, I'm going to die.
I can't believe I don't have health insurance.
Like it's such an abstraction to think about these incredible things that give us, you know, the idea of wealth or the idea of freedom, but may in some ways be really confining us.
Right.
And the whole insurance industry, I think, grew out of the original shipping and maritime world, insurance ships to go across the Atlantic, right?
And it always promised this illusion of safety, spread out the risk across a whole bunch of people, and then you're going to be, you're going to feel safe and secure.
And there's, again, the dust makes the poison.
There's something to that.
There's nothing valuable there.
But safetyism runs out after a while, and then it confines us.
We lose our vigility.
I don't know if you know that word.
Vigility.
I don't know, no.
It comes from the world of wildlife biology.
Vigility is simply the ability of an animal, a human, to walk around the landscape freely.
And so if you think of Bushmen living in Africa, if it's a wild area, they can just go wherever they want.
The only constraint on their movement is maybe a river or a mountain or wildfire or.
the animals, that's it. But they have maximum agility. And that is where our bodies and our
spirit grew up in that condition of being able to make choices and go wherever you want.
But now people have almost no agility. I mean, even if you have a car, you go out to sit in
traffic, you don't have much agility at all. And if you're sitting in an office all day,
you have almost zero agility. That fact alone is really dangerous.
for the human animal because we're built to move.
So if you take that away, you've got a real problem.
Yeah, it's like castration on some level,
especially to the human spirit if you're not free to move around, right?
Like you can't, what are you going to do?
It's like the dog that's chained up in his yard all day and he can run to the end of the street,
but that's it.
Pretty soon you take that chain off and he won't even run to the yard because he knows
that he can't.
You know, it's this self-imposed sort of limiting beliefs that keep us content.
in this false structure.
Right.
And speaking of the dog and the chain on the dog,
that brings up this whole idea of learned helplessness.
I'm sure you've run into this, right?
Famous experimental world of psychology
that if you take a non-human animal
and you subject that animal to a series of defeats,
and there's a lot of ways you can engineer that,
a series of defeats,
that animal eventually comes to assume defeat, assume helplessness.
And these are non-human animals.
They just make an unconscious assessment of their situation of the world.
And they say, well, you know, if I'm faced with a challenge now, I'm probably not going to succeed.
And so you can really, you could take the spirit out of a dog or human by exposing them to a series of defeats.
and eventually they will come to assume helplessness.
And I think for a lot of people in the modern world,
that's what we're experiencing now.
Because there's so many frustrations,
a lot of people simply assume helplessness,
assume powerlessness.
If you ask them to be an activist, they say,
well, I have no power.
I have no voice.
I have no money.
I have no political power.
So I'm not even going to try.
And that is the source of a lot of our problems.
You know, we assume we're powerless and you're, where do you go from there?
You can't really go anywhere.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's interesting.
You say that.
Like when I, when I think prior to COVID, I think about all the uprisings that were happening, whether in the United States or the yellow vest or the Middle East, Middle East of Mid-East, mid-East of Spring.
Like, there was all these just uprisings that almost seemed like we were living in a Diego Rivera mural.
You know what I mean?
Like, there was just uprisings every year.
And like on some level, I think that that was a beautiful thing to get to see the human animal react to the cage that it was in.
Like you saw things flaring up.
And then all of a sudden things kind of got tampered down.
But I still think that that fire is raging.
And that's why activism is medicine.
Like this this idea of learned helplessness is no longer going to be tolerated by the next generation.
I can see it in some of these young men and women that are out on the college campuses that are doing these things that are standing up.
but it's pretty inspiring to see what's your thoughts on that?
Oh, absolutely.
And I know some young people.
I'm part of a climate group here in Bend, Oregon.
And yeah, I love it.
I love to see what they're doing.
They are struggling with strategy and knowing where to put their efforts
because that's not at all clear now.
I mean, what are the leverage points?
And they run some marches.
They run some protests.
It's not at all clear that those are effective.
And they look to people like me, they say, okay, where are the leverage points?
What do we need to be doing?
And if we can harness their raw energy and put it in the right place, that that's going to be really effective.
So I encourage them to work at the level of language and presentation, trying to make their case in public forums, that kind of thing,
learning how to be a good public speaker, for example, I think is a really good form of activism.
And that's something that they're learning how to do.
Yeah.
If we can shift gears for a moment on the idea of climate change and activism, you know, I think
that there has been a giant monkey wrench that's been thrown into the system.
And it's when I was growing up, I'm almost 50.
And when I was growing up, there was this huge problem with pollution.
I remember I grew up in San Diego.
And there was times when the winds came down from like L.A.
And you couldn't even breathe.
It'd be like, whoa, the smog was so deep.
You know, and I remember so many people in my age have asthma, you could say it's probably
because of that.
But in some weird way, we've switched from, like, pollution to climate change.
And climate change seems to allow for multinational corporations to buy some carbon credits,
you know, move some things over here.
Like, it seems on some way the messaging.
And when I think about multinational corporations and climate change, you know, I can't
can't fathom the idea of a multinational corporation whose profit margin is based on excess
consumption, caring anything about the planet. But here they are. Hey, we're leading climate change.
We're getting, no, you're not. Your model is excess consumption. You don't care one bit about the climate.
But we've allowed these, we've allowed them to lead the charge in some many ways. How do we fix this
sort of giant conglomerate problem? Right. Well, at the biggest level, that would require
rejiggering the law and constitutions to hamstring the power of corporations.
And people are working on that.
And there's people who are working on eco-side law and rights of nature legislation.
I think these are really good.
But the other thing that I would point out, you mentioned air pollution in San Diego.
For me, another touchstone goes back.
to leaded gasoline. And that was a success story back in, I believe, the 1970s, because what happened
was the scientists went to the policymakers and they said, look, you've got lead in the gasoline,
that's a neurotoxin, that's making a lot of people sick, it's going to degrade their brains,
and we have to get that out of the gasoline. Well, back then, people listened to scientists. And they
said, okay, we're going to adjust our policy. We're going to adjust the formula for the gasoline.
we're going to take the lead out of the gasoline and problem was solved.
But now, would that even happen?
I think people don't trust scientists like they used to.
There's so much misinformation in the system.
There's so much skepticism and mistrust in the system right now
that people don't even believe scientists,
which that's a huge red flag and a conversation that we need to have.
Yeah, it's very difficult to find the line between science and company science.
You know, when we start looking at, you know, who funded that science?
Like, that should be, that should be on the front page of every report.
Who funded this?
Let's see who funded it.
And then you can begin following the money there.
Right.
Right.
And there is bad science.
And there are scientists who are working for some pretty nefarious causes, to be sure.
But still, the method is sound, and by far the great majority of scientists are honorable people doing good work.
And that is a path also because having a scientific view of the world means being willing to revise your own personal beliefs in light of new evidence.
And that's a wonderful path.
That's an honorable path to live.
And we can't forget that.
You know, science is a useful way to live, too.
Yeah, without a doubt.
And I'm hopeful that this revolution we are trying to inspire
and that we see happening all around us
and underscores the idea of activism as medicine is,
I'm hopeful that while we value science,
I think on some level, it's beginning to come back around
to see itself in the mirror and see spirit.
spirituality, if that makes sense.
Like we're getting to see that thing sort of come back together as a whole instead of two pieces.
Maybe you could talk about that idea a little bit.
No, I love that because I've often thought about the scientific journey and the scientific enterprise as being sort of like Joseph Campbell's hero myth, hero's journey, right?
Because the young person leaves the town, leaves the village, goes out on this grand adventure.
and has all these experiences,
learns all these things about the world,
and it comes back to the village and say,
here's what I learned.
But they also, along the way,
discovered that native people,
indigenous people,
had a very sophisticated understanding
of how the world actually works.
And so now we're starting to see sort of
that you might call it a green-red alliance
between science, modern science,
and native science coming together
and it makes a lot of sense.
The key word in all of that is interdependence.
I mean, native people are always talking about interdependence.
And scientists, ecologists now are talking about interdependence all the time.
So, yeah, that's a natural brotherhood, you might say.
Yeah, I think it's necessary, too, to, you know, have,
if you want to have reverence for the planet and if we want to,
we have to believe in something bigger than ourselves.
You know, we have to believe that we're part of something that goes on forever, you know,
whatever word you want to put behind that, whether it's God or Gaia or Jesus or Muhammad or
what are the word you want to put behind that powerful entity.
It's something bigger than ourselves.
And once you believe in something bigger than yourself, I think it opens you up to new
ideas that become possible and allow you to overcome the small-mindedness of, of, of, you know,
individualism. If we can move past that, I think we can have better relationships with everybody
around us. Is that, do you think, what do you think? Oh, yeah. In fact, I follow a guy named
Paul Watson. He was one of the founders of Greenpeace, and he's recently been arrested for his
activity as part of Sea Shepherd and, you know, protecting the whales. And what he advocates for,
he calls it the Church of Bocentrism. And, you know, he's pretty much a secular guy. And, you know, he's pretty much a
secular guy, but he calls this the Church of Bocentrism. And the idea being is that human beings are
nothing more or less than one species on the planet, one participant in this vast biological drama.
And what we need is a dose of humility. And that's going to be the key. But it's,
it goes against the modern grain of civilization where we like to think.
think of ourselves as the greatest animal that's ever lived. This is the doctrine of human supremacy,
and that paves the way for all kinds of exploitation of other animals and habitats and people.
So I think it's a great idea. I love this idea of biocentrism. There was a writer named Aldo Leopold,
who wrote a book called Sam County Almanac. That was very biocentric. And that's an idea that I think
needs to have a lot more exposure.
It's a very powerful idea.
Yeah.
It's interesting that we talk about new ideas
and we've referenced Joseph Campbell.
Is it possible that we are beginning
to find ourselves outside of the hero's journey?
Sort of a more robust myth,
maybe like Nietzsche's camel to the child.
Maybe we're moving into a new sort of mythology.
where, okay, the hero's journey, let's close this.
We all have that.
We've all read that story.
Let's close that one and open up this new mythology.
Is that possible?
Can we move into a new mythology?
Well, I guess I would call it a new slash old mythology.
I mean, Native people have had the mythology of participation for a very long time.
And I'm reminded of a native author named Sherman Alexi.
And he's kind of not on the radar any.
more. I think he got some kind of trouble, but he was a poet and a writer of some stature,
and he was giving a presentation at a bookstore, and he was speaking to a wide audience,
and people were asking about, you know, the modern predicament, and he was saying that, you know,
things are going to get hard for you. And speaking about himself and his people, his red people,
He said, you're going to need us.
And that really struck home for me.
I was like, yeah, you know, us white people, we're pretty lost.
And we need that old story to be revived.
We need to remember that.
The story has been there for a very long time.
And we need to remember about participation in the world.
And that's why I'm trying to repeat that story as much as I possibly.
can. But from another point of view, other people have talked about the power of storytelling to move
human beings forward, and they've talked about a myth gap. Because we don't really have a good story
right now. The way I put it, we have a couple of dominant stories. The first one is the Star Trek
narrative. And the Star Trek narrative simply holds that we're going to, we're going to electrify
everything. We're going to have every kind of push button technology that we ever need. We're going
to mine lithium all around the world. We're going to build all these batteries. And everything is
going to work flawlessly. That's the Star Trek narrative. And it's completely a fantasy. That
cannot happen. But the other narrative we hear a lot, and this is what I call the paleo narrative.
And this comes out of the paleo fitness movement where a lot of people say, well, the
modern world is hopeless, and the only recourse is to go back to our lives as hunters and
gathers. That's the paleo narrative. And that's also absurd because there are too many people,
there's not enough land, and we've lost the oral tradition of knowing how to navigate as hunters
and gathers. So that's not really viable either. So we need a new narrative, a new slash old
narrative and that's why we're looking to storytellers to give us some guidance there and to see
if we can coalesce around a narrative. Yeah, that's, I love that way you put that.
You know, when I was a young man, I was pulled aside by one of my mentors that I didn't know
as a mentor yet. And he said, me and my friends, listen, you kids, first thing you guys got to do when
you get in trouble is get your stories straight. You know, I always think about it. Yeah. It's a
great advice. Right now we're in trouble. We need to get our story straight.
That's a great way to put it. Yeah. And by and large, our leaders, our political leaders
are not offering any kind of story at all. None. The dominant story is all economic. And that's
top of mind for voters. Okay. But we have this leadership vacuum at the top. And so people
who are not at the top need to step into that role and start telling some kind of plausible
story that will pull us forward. And that's what we're doing today. Yeah, absolutely.
You know, I, there's a great book called The Fourth Turning. And in that book, they talk about
the way in which generations have changed, you know, the course of, of the story and the course.
They all have these different roles and stuff. But sometimes on my darker days, you know,
I feel like what may be happening in the world right now are the unrealized dreams of a giant
class of people that are knocking on the mortality experience.
You know, when I look at so many of these leaders that might be in their 70s or 80s,
you know, I am thankful for the great ideas that have got us where we are.
But on some level, man, you got, these people have to step aside.
Like some of these ideas are so foolish and so silly and so outdated.
it's just driven by ego.
Like these are not relevant ideas anymore.
And I fear that if people don't step out of the way,
you're going to see a younger class of people.
And maybe power has never given up.
Maybe power has never relinquished.
It's always taken.
But on my darker days,
I fear this uprising between the youth just saying,
okay, I had enough of you guys.
Get out of the way.
Do you think that that's a possibility?
Yeah, it's similar to the divide between rural and urban.
Yeah.
And a lot of people have talked.
talked about that recently. I think that's a real thing. But yeah, the young, old divide is definitely
out there simmering waiting and it's going to express itself one way or the other. And hopefully
we can side with those people. That's what I try to do. It's like I'm on my way out. These people
are on their way in. How can I help them? How can I help young people to give? To give.
get a voice and to express themselves in a way that makes sense.
Because, yeah, I just got a few more years.
They got their whole lives out.
I think that this is something that's worth talking about.
Because I think when we look back to mythology or the oral tradition,
one thing that we're missing in the West is the handing down of wisdom from people that
have lived a life worth living.
And, you know, so many people that I care about that are,
that are getting older,
they're really focused on how do I live longer?
And my answer is like by sharing your knowledge,
by sharing your knowledge with the next people,
by giving all that you have to give,
what you give in life you get to keep,
what you fail to give,
you lose forever.
And I think that's what the book you're doing is,
is like,
here's what I've learned.
I hope there's some nuggets in here for you.
That's why you're on the podcast tour.
That's why you're out here activating.
He's like,
I have,
here's these things that I've learned.
Hopefully these tools are something you guys can use.
But I think we're missing that
in a ceremonial setting, in a ritual setting, in a rites of passage setting.
Do you think we can regain that?
Yes.
And this is another native, indigenous idea that really struck me.
An anthropologist writing about a tribe where he observed that people revered the elders,
number one, and that young people looked forward to being an elder because that's where
the respect and the power was.
and then the elder in turn felt this sacred duty to pass along knowledge to the young people.
And so it made a perfect circle.
And we've lost that because now we trash the elders.
We say, well, you're no longer a viable member of the workforce.
You're no longer productive.
So we're just going to warehouse you in some facility.
And we don't care what you say.
We don't care what you think.
You have no value to us as a producer anymore.
That alone is a catastrophe because we're not harnessing the wisdom that these people have generated over the course of their lives.
So we have to have a new relationship with young and old. Absolutely.
Yeah. I think that speaks to the idea of death. You know, when we spoke about the East and the Western traditions, we do warehouse our old. We hook them up to machines and we use words like palliative care, which means to hide away.
Like this fear of death that we have is so, while, you know, I should, I should, I should, I should, um, premise it with, look, I'm not currently, I don't know what it's like to be staring down my own mortality. You know, I don't know what it's like. I don't know what it's like to maybe to have my children's not called. I haven't faced a lot of these things that I will face when I become an elder. But I, I do know that I am completely horrified by the way we treat our elders. Like my grandma.
was hooked up to a machine. She died a long time ago, but she was kept alive in palliative care.
I'm like, do you think that we can, part of this activism could be pointed towards our ideas about death in the West?
Oh, yeah. And once again, native people, because they participated in nature on a daily basis, they saw death all the time.
And they saw death as, well, they call it the great journey, the great transition, whatever it is.
It's not really, it's not so final.
It's just a process.
It's a transition.
That's all it is.
And we can learn from that too.
But this idea of warehousing older people is, it also points to another industrial model in our society where we segregate people by age.
And that's what we do in schools.
That's what we do in the workplace.
That's what we do with elder people.
And it's a completely flawed model because in a native or even a lot of rural towns in America,
we have multi-age populations, multi-age experiences where you go to school and there'd be older kids in school.
Or you would see older folks around your town all the time.
but now we're isolated and we're insulated from people of different ages.
And that's crazy.
Just crazy.
Yeah.
And you may, I'm curious to get your thoughts on this.
I know that in the Western tradition, like they say that the road to hell is paved with good intentions.
And we on some level, we thought, hey, look, if we all participate, the state can take care of us.
You know, we can, we can have these different ways of segregating things.
We don't need to have multi-generational families.
Because we can each be set off, but we send our kids to school, the parents went and worked,
and we sent our old folks to an institution.
And in doing that, we destroyed that handing down of knowledge.
We destroyed that form of teaching, that circle of life that helped us really be holistic on some level.
Maybe that's what's coming now.
Maybe all this experiment was necessary for us to retreat back to a way that's more holistic in some ways.
Right, right.
And there's one sort of perpetrator that I put.
point to in this in the way that we've industrialized our human societies.
Right.
And this guy's name was Frederick Winslow Taylor.
And he was, today we would call him a management consultant.
And this was back in the 1920s, I think.
And he would go into factories and he would look at how people worked.
And he'd say, well, it's really inefficient the way you're working.
And he was the first guy to come up with a metric for like,
shoveling coal or something. And so he's got the metric and he says, okay, your workers should be
able to do so many shovelfuls per hour, whatever it was. And this guy was influential and he really
caught on and he pushed this idea of metrics and industrialization of all these processes,
which in a factory is one thing, but he also went on to apply to schools and everything else.
And so this idea of efficiency became dominant in all these processes.
And it was it was like another takeover of the Luddites because these workers, they had culture too.
You know, these men who would go into factories and work, they had cultures.
And this efficiency drive basically took them, took those cultures away and just said, nope, it's all about metrics now.
Yeah.
And I think that that was probably the first algorithm or one of them.
You know what I mean?
Right, right.
Exactly.
Yeah.
And, you know, now we measure keystrokes of workers instead of how much coal that they, they load into the furnace every day.
But it's the same thinking that got us there.
So we need to weigh, lighten up on the efficiencies and the metrics and all of that and get back to what's really human.
Yeah, I think that that's, you know, when when you look back to when cultures got into trouble, you had like the Renaissance when they turned back and we're like, okay, what are we doing wrong over here?
You know, and on some ways, I think we're talking about Terence McKenna's idea of an archaic revival, sort of turning back to a time, you know, not so much the walk down to base camp, but at least turning back to different ways of navigating that that seem to help the human animal thrive.
instead of being neutered in so many ways.
Right.
And in fact, my next book project is called Honor the Animal.
I love it.
And the idea is simple that we've stopped honoring the animal.
We've stopped honoring the animal's life support system.
And so, of course, you're going to have trouble.
But by honoring the animal, I mean, giving the animal the conditions that it needs to thrive.
and trust in the animal to make good decisions in those nurturing environments.
And going with that, giving the animal a voice.
And right now, the animal really doesn't have a voice.
Even in the health and fitness world, not so much.
That's kind of a different enterprise, really.
Yeah.
You know, I've been seeing this sort of,
idea about rewilding happening.
And I'm a big fan of it, you know, whether it's rewilding the environment.
In some ways, I see the individuals rewilding.
You know, when you see so many youth today turning towards combat sports, you know,
they're learning how to fight in a way.
I think that that has radical ramifications in the future.
It's sort of like the youth today are the stone that was thrown into the pond and
they're the first ripple.
But when that radiates outward, like you're going to see these kids come up that are willing
to fight.
that embrace combat in a way that's respectful.
And I think that that changes the nature of authority in some ways.
That might be the sort of rewilding we need.
What do you, we just take on rewilding?
Oh, I love it.
And I'm a big advocate for the martial arts,
teaching people how to fight skillfully in a social setting
where the emphasis is on a progression of skill and mastery
in a certain context.
I think that's really important.
I think young people need to discover what their physical capabilities are.
So there needs to be adventure.
There needs to be exploration.
And children, young people need to have that opportunity.
I was really fortunate because I was able to do a lot of climbing in my youth.
And that's something where I was able to learn about my physical capabilities.
And wow, that's a big eye-opener because you,
you learn that your body can do a lot of things you didn't even imagine.
So it's good stuff.
And I would, yeah, I would recommend rewilding in that sense.
Yeah.
And it's not just, you know, the word wild has a lot of different meanings.
And we tend to think unruly and dangerous and all of that kind of thing.
But it really means living with a lot of.
vitality in the way that humans have always lived.
So it's expression.
And that's something that I think we're often missing as well,
that ability to express our feelings of who we are,
which I'll bring up a whole other model is the West African drum culture.
And this is something that I've been exploring recently.
And I'm just really excited about it because
West African people have understood this stuff for a very long time, and they've developed
actual practices that built community, give people the opportunity for expression, and the ability
to feel wild when you are drumming like crazy, you definitely feel wild.
And it's a beautiful model, and they're trying to bring it to the world.
So something to put on your radar.
Look for that West African drum scene.
Yeah, absolutely.
And I think it speaks to the idea of frequency and vibration.
You know, our words are frequencies and vibration.
And if you can get that right sort of, you know, whether it's the same beat as a heartbeat, you know, a drum, a drum goes a long way into helping you and to even alter states of consciousness or, you know, rhythm and music around us.
It's, it is pretty beautiful.
Right.
And it also builds community.
And that would, what I find interesting.
is that you hear therapists all the time telling people, well, you have to build community.
You have to build community.
And the West Africans know how to do this.
You get people in a circle, you work on a drum together.
They know how to build community.
So it works.
Yeah.
Yeah, you know, another interesting idea about rewilding.
And this is far out there.
And it's more of a thought experiment.
then I guess maybe in Europe they're doing it in some spots,
but when we look at the way the world works specifically,
and this would probably be super unpopular,
and it's just a thought experiment so people don't get super mad at me.
However, like, do you think that maybe damming up all these rivers
has fundamentally changed not only our ecosystem,
but change the way the lifeblood of our ecology works?
Sometimes I wonder, like, what if we didn't have the dams?
You know, how much have all these dammed up rivers
in some ways I see them as artery blockages.
You know, if the rivers aren't flowing their natural cores,
aren't those like blocking major arteries and causing parts of us to die?
Oh, absolutely.
And these planet metaphors that we hear more and more now.
So we hear about the Amazon rainforest being the lungs of the planet
and the rivers being the circulation.
Those are valuable metaphors.
And as to how real they are,
Well, that's a big conversation for around the damfire.
But if nothing else, they're good, solid metaphors for connecting people with the world.
And as far as dams and the rivers go, you've got to turn to Edward Abbey and the whole controversy around the Glen Canyon Dam.
Because that was the birthplace of Earth First, the Earth First movement.
And Edward Abbey in his book, The Monkey Wrench Gang, talked a lot about that dam.
how tragic it was and how much habitat it destroyed, how much precious habitat is now destroyed
underwater.
And for what?
To build Las Vegas?
It was, the whole thing has to be seen now as an epic fail.
It was even a Darwin award because what we did was all that energy, building that dam, building
in Las Vegas stringing up wires to make it all happen for what.
It's a real tragedy that we did that.
Yeah.
I think there's a real chance that, you know, I don't think it's a coincidence that these metaphors are being put out there.
They're really causing people to think in ways that like we spoke already are bigger than
themselves.
And I think that we're going to see a lot of changes coming in the future.
And I'm hopeful that this class.
that we're bringing up of fighters will find ways to fight for causes that create a better
life for them. But man, Frank, this is a conversation. It's been over an hour and I feel
like it was like two minutes, man. But before I even land this plane, man, I just wanted to give you
some time to talk about what you got coming up, where you're going to be at where people can find
you and what you're excited about. Right. Well, first of all, go to my website. It's all there
and all the books are there.
You can type in exuberantanimal.com.
It's there, but you could also type in humananimal.
Earth, and you'll find it.
Or type in my name.
I'm sure it'll come up pretty quick.
So that's easy.
Like I said, I'm working on this new book called Honor the Animal,
and I'm really excited about that.
The premise behind that book is I'm looking for commonality,
anybody who works with the human animal.
So it could be coaches, trainers,
teachers, therapists, any of these people are engaged in what I call experiential design.
So you have your human animals, you have your people.
What are you going to do with them?
You're going to design an experience for them based on what you know about their biology
and their psychology.
And I'm really excited about that book.
So look for that probably next sprint.
Yeah.
I hope you reach out to some of the people in the psychedelic community because I think that
some of these coaches or therapist or, you know, psychedelic science 2025.
There's so many cool people that I think are beginning to understand more about the human
animal in that particular sense.
But ladies and gentlemen, if you're within the sound of my voice, if you're within the
sound of Frank's voice right now, go down to the show notes, check out the links, check out
his book.
He's got some amazing ideas.
And I think he's sort of leading the charge and being a wisdom keeper and beginning
to hand down information to the next generation that can be cool tools for you to use
and transformation.
And whether it's today, tomorrow, or five years from now, the show notes and the links will be down there.
Frank, hang on briefly afterwards.
But to everybody else, I hope you have a beautiful day.
That's all we got, ladies and gentlemen.
Aloha.
