Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Dr. Jill Bolte Taylor: The 4 Brain Characters That Transform Habits and Critical Thinking | Human Behavior | E390
Episode Date: March 16, 2026Dr. Jill Bolte Taylor’s fascination with brain health and human psychology began with a personal question: why do people perceive the same world so differently? After growing up with a brother diagn...osed with schizophrenia, she dedicated her life to understanding the brain. At age 37, she suffered a massive stroke and watched her brain shut down in real time. That experience gave her rare insight into how the brain truly works. In this episode, Dr. Jill shares her whole-brain framework and explains how understanding our four brain characters can transform how we think, feel, and show up in life and business. In this episode, Hala and Dr. Jill will discuss: (00:00) Introduction (02:51) Childhood Curiosity About the Human Brain (10:14) Experiencing a Stroke at Age 37 (20:38) Warning Signs and Prevention of Stroke (25:13) Watching Her Brain Shut Down (33:45) The Four Brain Characters (44:05) Debunking Left vs. Right Brain Myths (51:19) Whole-Brain Thinking for Entrepreneurs (53:57) Why Society Is Left-Brain Dominant (1:04:24) Can You Control Your Brain? (1:09:25) Habits to Activate the Right Brain Dr. Jill Bolte Taylor is a Harvard-trained neuroanatomist, bestselling author, and adjunct lecturer in anatomy, cell biology, and physiology at the Indiana University School of Medicine. She is the national spokesperson for the Harvard Brain Tissue Resource Center and is best known for her 2008 TED Talk and memoir, My Stroke of Insight. For her groundbreaking contributions to modern brain science, Dr. Jill was named one of TIME Magazine’s 100 Most Influential People in the World. Sponsored By: Indeed - Get a $75 sponsored job credit to boost your job's visibility at Indeed.com/profiting Shopify - Start your $1/month trial at Shopify.com/profiting. Spectrum Business - Keep your business connected seamlessly with fast, reliable Internet, Phone, TV, and Mobile services. Visit https://spectrum.com/Business to learn more. Northwest Registered Agent - Build your brand and get your complete business identity in just 10 clicks and 10 minutes at northwestregisteredagent.com/paidyap Framer - Publish beautiful and production-ready websites. Go to Framer.com/profiting and get 30% off their Framer Pro annual plan. Quo - Run your business communications the smart way. Try Quo for free, plus get 20% off your first 6 months when you go to quo.com/profiting Experian - Manage and cancel your unwanted subscriptions and reduce your bills. Get started now with the Experian App and let your Big Financial Friend do the work for you. See experian.com for details. Bitdefender - Start protecting your business today with Bitdefender Ultimate Small Business Security. Get 30% off your plan at bitdefender.com/profiting Intuit - Start paying bills the smart way, not the hard way. Learn more at QuickBooks.com/billpay Resources Mentioned: Dr. Jill's Website: DrJillTaylor.com Dr. Jill's Book, My Stroke of Insight: bit.ly/DJBT-SOF Dr. Jill's Book, Whole Brain Living: bit.ly/DJBT-WBL Dr. Jill's TED Talk, My Stroke of Insight: bit.ly/DJBT-TEDTALK Active Deals - youngandprofiting.com/deals Key YAP Links Reviews - ratethispodcast.com/yap YouTube - youtube.com/c/YoungandProfiting Newsletter - youngandprofiting.co/newsletter LinkedIn - linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Instagram - instagram.com/yapwithhala/ Social + Podcast Services: yapmedia.com Transcripts - youngandprofiting.com/episodes-new Entrepreneurship, Entrepreneurship Podcast, Business, Business Podcast, Self Improvement, Self-Improvement, Personal Development, Starting a Business, Strategy, Investing, Sales, Selling, Psychology, Productivity, Entrepreneurs, AI, Artificial Intelligence, Technology, Marketing, Negotiation, Money, Finance, Side Hustle, Startup, Mental Health, Career, Leadership, Mindset, Health, Growth Mindset, Positivity, Human Nature, Robert Greene, Chris Voss, Robert Cialdini
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Yeah, fam, I have really exciting news. After almost eight years of running this podcast, I finally
was nominated for an I-Heart podcast award, which is like the Grammys of Podcasting.
I'm heading up against the diary of the CEO, acquired, earn your leisure, and all these amazing
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this show and you want me to win, the best way to help me is to write me a five-star review on Apple
podcast and also to subscribe to my YouTube channel and engage on our videos. I also was nominated for an
Indie Pack Award. It's the first ever independent podcast and creator awards. That's also happening in a
couple weeks and I was nominated for the best business and entrepreneurship podcast. I'm competing
against ice coffee hour and a number of awesome shows. And again, if you want to help me win
these awards, please write me a five-star review on Apple Podcasts and follow our YouTube channel and
engage on our videos. I appreciate it.
Any support if you guys have been to my free webinars, if you learn from the podcast.
And you guys know that I never ask you for anything.
This is the one time I'm asking you guys to support the show by writing us a review or engaging
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I hope to take home these wins.
And thanks again for supporting the show.
Brain cells are like people.
We're social.
They're social.
A single cell can have 10 to 15,000 connections in a network with other neurons.
It's 10 to 15,000.
That is a social network.
Talk about influencers.
Boy, it's those brain cells.
Dr. Jill Boltey Taylor, a Harvard-trained neuroscientist
who experienced the unthinkable.
She witnessed her own brain shutdown moment by moment.
Today's conversation will change how you understand your brain
and how you use it.
Running a business is very different than being an entrepreneur,
especially not in this day and age.
Entrepreneurs have to have
creativity. In order for you to do everything that you do, you have to have brain cells that perform that function.
We have four major modules of cells inside of our head, two emotional, the right hemisphere and the left hemisphere,
and then two thinking the right thinking and the left thinking. The value of the right hemisphere says,
I care about people. Creativity is in the right hemisphere. It is that left emotional brain that looks at someone and says,
You're different from me.
I'm going to push you away.
We are skewed to the values of the left hemisphere.
When you were 37, you had a stroke.
It took you about 45 minutes or longer to realize
that you were having a stroke.
And you were somebody who studied the brain.
How can we know if we're having the symptoms of the stroke
and what do we do immediately when we feel those symptoms?
So the warning signs.
Here are the warning signs.
I use STR O-K-E to help people remember.
S stands for...
Hey, app fam.
Welcome back to another amazing episode.
Today's conversation will change how you understand your brain and how you use it.
Our guest is Dr. Jill Boltey Taylor, a Harvard-trained neuroscientist who experienced the
unthinkable.
At just 37 years old, she suffered a massive stroke and she witnessed her own brain shut down,
moment by moment.
That life-altering experience became the foundation for the whole brain living, a powerful
framework that reveals the four distinct characters inside your brain that shape your thoughts,
emotions, habits, and decisions. And once you learn to recognize them, you'll gain the ability
to consciously choose clarity over chaos, intention over reaction, and calm over stress.
We're going to be covering this extensively in today's conversation, but first, if you're new here,
hit that follow button so you never miss a dose of wisdom. Dr. Jill, welcome to Young and Profiting
Podcast. I am so happy to be with you. Thank you. Likewise, I'm so excited. I'm so excited
I love talking about the brain.
I love understanding the brain more as entrepreneurs.
We're using our minds every day.
We need to make sure that we're optimizing our minds and our productivity.
And so very excited for this conversation today.
And something that really made me curious when I was researching you, Dr. Jill, or was
really eye-opening, is that you were actually studying the brain before you had this, like,
traumatic stroke.
And so when I had heard about you in the past, I thought that you had to have a
a stroke and then you got interested in the brain. But it turns out you were actually studying the brain
long before you had your accident, which I want to hear all about. But first, talk to us about
why you decided to study the brain. What were you curious about? What were the kind of questions
that you were trying to solve when you were initially, you know, being a scientist and a researcher
around the brain? Thank you. So yes, I have a brother who's 18 months older than I. And he would
eventually be diagnosed with the brain disorder schizophrenia. So as a child, I just noticed that this guy
and I, we were completely different in the way we interpreted our experiences. For example, if we're out playing
kickball and the ball goes flying out into the yard and my mom is on the stoop and all of a sudden
she jumps up and she's screaming at us, I interpret that as terror that, you know, her kids are going to
get killed if we run out into the street. But my brother interpreted her hollering as anger.
And that's a fundamental difference when we are not understanding and perceiving people's emotions
in the same way. So I just became really fascinated with what are the differences between me and my
brother and what is going on? And it had to be at the level of the brain because biologically, he's the
closest thing to me that exists in the universe. So I became fascinated with body language, social
relations, vocal languaging, all of that in what am I as a human being? I was just fascinated
with what am I as a living being. So that caught my attention. And then as I got older, I really
became fascinated with how does our brain create our perception of reality? What is what is
normal and what is not normal. So yeah, no, I grew up to to be a neuroanatomist. I study the brain
at a cellular level. So because fundamentally, I figured it was the differences between me and my
brother were going to be in the way our brains wired each other. Something I really want to
dig deep on is the fact that you are studying what our reality is, like what is perception,
how do we perceive reality and consciousness in itself.
So talk to us about how you thought consciousness worked before you had your accident.
Well, that's a big question.
I believed that, first of all, every ability we have is because we have brain cells that perform that
function.
And to me, the single-celled organism is just this, that is life.
That is the miracle.
And we just happened to be a bunch of cells stuck together for multicellular life, which is also fantastic.
But I was fascinated with the single-celled organism.
And how did the universe create a bunch of atoms and molecules that work together in order to become a blueprint for a living entity?
And then that living entity is defined by having a boundary, a cellular membrane that would be semi-permeable.
and things would be outside in the universe of that membrane,
and then that membrane would allow some things in,
and it would have perception of some things.
So I was very cellular.
I was very anatomical.
So my perception of consciousness was,
well, I do believe that a cell has a consciousness.
It's, of course, not like ours,
but it still, I believe, has an awareness
of the difference between itself
and that which is outsource.
side of itself. And you believe this before your accident, that each cell had its own consciousness.
That's so interesting. Why did you believe that? Well, because what is life? To me, the difference between,
you know, in order for a universe to be able to put all the atoms and molecules in the right
formation in order to come up with genetic material. And then that genetic material becomes
somehow, which is nothing other than atoms and molecules, I don't believe that we have the
construct of a human body and then consciousness happens to us. I think that we are a culmination
of consciousness and we have different levels of consciousness and different parts of our brain
work together in constellations of skill sets that then end up looking like separate consciousnesses,
which also end up looking like different personalities.
So I always had that construct, but I didn't, but I was really interested.
I was working in the lab.
I was teaching and performing neuroanadamy, gross anatomy, which is cadaver lab.
I loved my life.
I loved what I was doing.
And, you know, I had the same thinking pattern of really focused on at a cellular level.
what are the differences between me and my brain and my brother's brain?
So last question before we get into your accident and what happened.
Who were you back then?
Like who was Jill back then?
How did you self-identify and define success back then?
I was climbing the Harvard ladder.
And I had my PhD in neuroanatomy.
And I did a – my first postdoc was – so I went from Indiana.
I grew up in Indiana.
and then once I got my PhD, I went to Harvard Medical School for my postdoc.
I was studying in the lab of David Hubell and Nobel laureate.
So, you know, it was very alpha personality, go, go, go, let's achieve.
And then from David Hubell's labs, I moved from the Department of Neurobiology
to the Harvard Department of Psychiatry, because I wanted to focus my basic science research.
on the schizophrenia and what is the difference at a neuroanatomical level. So, you know, I was climbing
the Harvard ladder, doing what a girl had to do. And I was, I was an artist in my heart. And I chose
neuroscience to make a living. And so when I went to the labs, I said to all of my mentors,
I'm an artist in my heart. So give me projects that you care about. And,
aesthetic component to the science. And that meant the visualization of cells, neurotransmitters,
relationships between these. And let me make for you beautiful art and learn new things in the
lab at the same time. So you got to kind of combine both passions, which is great. Yeah.
So when you were 37, you had a stroke. Take us back to the morning, the day that it happened.
And what were some of the initial things that you realized were happening?
What did you think was happening in the moment?
And how did things unfold?
Yeah.
So first of all, I'm a PhD.
I am a scientist.
Of course, I have had neuro.
I have learned some neurology.
I certainly studied stroke at a cellular level.
I certainly studied all dementia, all kinds of neurological trauma.
But I was a girl, I was a lab rat.
So I'm not, my point here is I was not an MD. I was not a neurologist. So when I woke up on the morning of
December 10, 1996, I woke up as soon as I sat up, I had a major pounding behind my left eye.
And it was very unusual for me to experience any kind of pain. I was generally very happy,
healthy, knock on wood. But I had this pounding pain. And so I thought, okay, I'm going to
exercise and get my blood flowing and hopefully I would feel better. So I got up, but as soon as I got
up, I realized that the light coming in through the windows was really burning. It was uncomfortable.
And so I closed the windows, closed the blinds. I got on my cardio glider. It's a full body,
full exercise machine back in the 90s. And I was jamming away on this thing. And I looked at my hands,
and my hands looked like, literally looked like primitive claws,
grasping onto the bar.
And I thought, wow, that's unusual.
And the pounding kept going.
And I just looked at myself.
And it was as though I was observing myself having this experience
instead of being in the body, having the experience.
And the pounding in the head just wasn't getting any better.
And I thought, okay, enough of exercise.
So I thought, okay, I'm going to take a shower.
because at this point I'm still heading to work.
So I'm walking across my living room
and every step is rigid
and it's as though I'm having to tell my legs to move,
move, coordinate, move.
And as I'm getting into the shower,
as I'm lifting my leg,
it literally was this conversation
going on inside of my body
of, okay, you muscles, you contract, you muscles,
you relax.
And I literally,
lost my balance as I was in the shower. And I'm leaning up against the wall and I go and I turn the water on.
It was just pull out this nozzle. The water hit the tub and the volume was so amplified that I fell
backwards. It was like energy just knocked me over. I'm leaning up against the wall and I'm looking at
my arm and I'm realizing I can no longer define the boundaries of where I begin.
in where I end. I'm just atoms and molecules blending with the atoms and molecules of the wall.
And about this time, your audience is thinking, man, this sounds like some kind of a high trip,
you know, psilocybin maybe, that's what I usually get. But not having had that experience,
I can't speak to it. But if you've ever had that experience, it is the dissolving of the
boundaries of where we begin and where we end as a biological creature.
Because I am, we are this massive conglomeration of these cells in the energy of the life of those cells.
And a group of cells literally in that left hemisphere where the hemorrhage was happening, they had gone offline.
So I could no longer define the boundaries of where I begin and where I ended.
So eventually I get out of the shower and I go into my bedroom and I mechanically dress.
I just somehow get dressed.
And then I'm asking myself, can I drive?
Can I drive?
And in that instant, my right arm went totally paralyzed by my side.
And that's when I'm realizing, oh, my gosh, paralysis, a warning sign of stroke.
Oh, my God, I'm having a stroke.
And then the next thing my brain says is, wow, this is so cool.
How many brain scientists have the opportunity to study their own brain from the inside out?
So that alpha personality, it was just really saying, okay, we're having a stroke.
We'll do this for a few weeks.
We'll learn what we can learn.
And then we'll go back to work.
And then it took about 45 minutes in order for me to actually make a phone call and get help.
Wow.
Like, what a powerful story.
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but I'm also very curious, how can, like, could you have prevented this stroke to begin with?
Do you feel like there was anything you could have done to prevent this or that we can do to prevent
the same thing happening to us?
Well, there are.
So, first of all, there are different kinds of stroke.
Two different kinds of stroke, primarily.
One is hemorrhagic.
And when you have a hemorrhagic stroke, blood vessels come together.
They break, and the blood seeps out into the tissue.
And that was the kind of stroke I had.
And specifically, I had what we call an arteriovenous malformation.
And this is essentially a, you have an artery that is a high pressure system that comes in,
and usually then it tapers down to a very small space, and then all the red blood cells line up through the capillary.
And then at the other end of that, you have a low pressure vein, and that vein then literally absorbs liquid back to take it dirty blood back to the heart.
And I had an arteriovenous malformation that I was born with.
This was a congenital malformation that I did not know was there.
And essentially, an artery is directly connected to the vein without the capillary, neutral pressure.
And these usually blow between the ages of 25 and 45, and I was 37 at the time.
So no, I did not know it was there.
There's nothing I could do about it.
unless somebody had given me an MRI and said, oh, Jill, we have a problem, which we do now,
but in those days, we, you know, 97, we weren't given MRIs. But I had been diagnosed when I was
17, and I think this is really important for your audience. I was diagnosed with migraine headache
at the age of 17, 20 years before this thing blew. And I have not had a migraine since I had
surgery to remove the malformation. So if there is someone in your audience who experiences
migraine headache and none of the current medications which are really excellent for migraine,
if none of those meds help, I encourage people, go get a scan. Go get your brain looked at to
see what's actually going on inside of your head because knowing if you have an organic problem,
I think is really important. Yeah, being preventative. And now, like you said, like MRIs are available.
immediately when you said that I know one person who always gets migraines, he's in my life,
that I'm like, I need to tell them to go get an MRI scan.
If the meds don't work, then absolutely you want to go and see, okay, what else is maybe going
on inside of.
And I have had people write to me and say, I heard you give this advice on a podcast,
and it saved my life.
So who knows who out there, you know, we can influence positively.
Now, one more question. It took you about 45 minutes or longer to realize that you were having a stroke. And you were somebody who studied the brain. How can we know if we're having the symptoms of a stroke and what do we do immediately when we feel those symptoms? Yeah. So the typical type of stroke that happens is when a blood clot gets thrown in your body and it goes up into the blood vessels in the brain and those brain arteries get smaller and smaller. They taper. And so a blood clot gets thrown in your body. And so a blood clot gets thrown in your body. And so a blood clot.
blood clot will go into that tapering blood vessel and then, you know, when it's too big,
it's going to block the flow. So that's called an ischemic stroke. And so the warning signs,
here are the warning signs. And I use STR O K-E to help people remember what's going on.
S stands for speech. If you have any problems with language, all of a sudden,
and you're watching me, and I'm now letting me. And I'm now,
In my mind, I may still be hearing my language, but clearly what's coming out is a problem.
That's a huge warning sign.
S speech.
T stands for tingling or numbness in the body.
Usually this is going to be on only one side of the body, but not all the time.
So really paying attention to what's going on with your limbs and how you're feeling.
So S, speech, T, tingling, R is remembering.
All of a sudden are you having a problem, an acute problem with remembering your spouse's name or where you are or not where you parked your car?
That's kind of a common one that we all get.
But if you're having some major acute problem with remembering, that's a warning sign.
Oh, off balance.
If all of a sudden you're having a real off balance and off inside one-souths, one-substained, one-signor-one,
side of the body will droop, one side of the face may droop. You may be dragging your leg all of a sudden.
You may have a little bit of paralysis in your arm. You can't get it to go. These are warning signs.
And then K stands for killer headache. Throbbing, pulsing, like that caustic pain that you get when you
bite into ice cream, major warning sign. Usually one-sided, again, not always, but usually on one side or the other.
and then E stands for eyes or all of a sudden major problems with vision.
And stroke is, it's a stroke, boom, it usually happens.
It happens quickly.
And, you know, so those are the primary warning signs.
What can you do to help prevent it?
What are you eating?
Really, food makes a difference.
How much sleep are you getting?
Sleep is time period when new information.
streaming in shuts down. And this is when the cells turn on and the garbage cleaners go in
and they clean out all the waste. You have to consider your brain as like 800 billion neurons
that are talking to one another. They're eating. They're creating waste while you're busy. So when we go to
sleep, that's when we go in and we flush the system. So that's really important. How much rest are you
getting then? And how stressful are you? Well, the stress circuitry is a go, go, go, go, go, do,
do, go, go, more, more. Okay, I reached a goal, but I'll celebrate for this long, and then I want more.
There's always this driving force of that left brain that wants more. So there are things that we really can do.
And let me say this, Hala, about the brain and our vulnerability is if you look at a human brain,
you can see the blood inside of the blood vessels because the walls of the blood vessels in the brain are so thin, they're transparent.
So the pressure system, when we get angry and when we get mad, when we're going to holding it in or letting it out, but we're in that rage or we're in deep fear or we're just, you know, a feeling out of control, this is impacting the internal pressure.
system of what's going on inside of the brain. And, you know, it's not healthy for the overall
animal, the overall organism that we are biologically. Such good tips. I feel like that's so
helpful. So I want to go back to your story. So suddenly you found yourself, you had awareness,
but you didn't have any control, right? And you actually felt you were witnessing your brain
shutting down. What happened next? What was really interesting to me,
me was, you know, when we look at a human brain, it has these two hemispheres. And these two
hemispheres process different information in different kinds of ways. And the left hemisphere
has language. And language is me, my ability to create sound. Dog, dog is a sound. And then we can
comprehend what is that sound and what is the meaning of that sound. We can read, we can write,
we have mathematics, we can speak multiple languages. I mean, the left hemispheres is a
is very, very busy place.
And so the hemorrhage was happening in my left hemisphere.
And so that left hemisphere would kind of go offline for a little while,
and I would drift into the present moment.
Because the right hemisphere, it's just a right here, right now machine.
It is all about the present moment.
And in the present moment, my name is over there in my left hemisphere.
The boundaries of where I begin and end as a human being over there in the left.
hemisphere. But right here right now is the richness of the experience coming in through my sensory
systems. And it feels like euphoria. It's beautiful in the present moment because there's no
judgment of what's right, what's wrong, what's good, what's bad. It's just, wow, I'm alive.
So on the morning of the stroke, I would waffle, waft back and forth between being in the present
moment, oh my gosh, I'm alive, to, oh my gosh, I'm having a problem. I need to get myself help.
And so eventually I did make a phone call and I did get help, but by the time I got help,
I had no language, so I couldn't speak. And I thought I sounded like a golden retriever.
The person listening to me, he sounded like a golden retriever. And it was like, fortunately, he knew it
was me. He recognized my squawk, and then he did what he needed to do to get me help.
So you thought that you were barking? I've got her. Golden retrievers, they speak like
roo-ro-ro-ro-ro-war. I mean, they communicate. And that's how you felt like you were, like you
were trying to communicate, but. It made no sense. Were you afraid at this time? Did you have
fear? No, I did not. I was very fortunate that part of the
in that left hemisphere in the left emotional portion of my brain were swimming in a pool of
blood as well. And that would be my fear. So I was fine. I didn't really care. The right hemisphere
doesn't really care. I mean, it's, it's, it's, things life's great. It's cool. I was motivated,
but it had no information to be able to attach myself to normal reality and do what I needed to do,
engage in any way I needed to engage in order to take the steps to orchestrate my rescue.
But between I waffled in and out of these two hemispheres, fortunately I did not have fear,
but I did know I was in grave danger.
And after I finally made the phone call, I got on my button.
and I went down my steps and I unlocked my door and I just curled up into a little fetal ball
and I just heard inside my own mind, I heard myself saying, hold on, hold on.
And then I kept thinking, what am I holding on to?
What does that even mean?
You know, hold on.
And it was like, it was like, don't leave the body.
As soon as I'm out of the body, I felt like I had been.
become so disabled over a course of four hours that I was afraid that if I went unconscious,
then I would never be able to get this body to work again because in the consciousness of the
right hemisphere, I literally was energetically as big as the universe because we are energy
and there's no boundaries in the energy. And when you're connected to all that is, then it is
that which becomes of interest. And in that expansive openness, there were no details saying,
oh, my God, I'm going to die, you know, and all that. You just knew that if you left your body,
you wouldn't be coming back. I felt like I would be gone. So what happened next in terms of,
like, how did you get better, right? How did you get better? What did you learn from this? And I know that you
you realize there's four characters in the brains. I want to talk about that. But just talk to us
about, like, what happened next and how you got better. So I landed right as I was passing out.
I was in an ambulance arriving at Mass General Hospital Emergency Room. And I literally fell,
I was curled up in a little fetal ball. And I felt, I went unconscious. I felt, I described it as I felt my
spirit surrender. At that point, I had no say. I was gone. And so within a few moments,
and I mean literally moments, they take my gurney out. I'm in the emergency room, bright lights.
People are on me. People knew I was coming. And it was just poker and prodding, giving me IV,
here sign this consent form, which I do remember thinking, what's wrong with you, people?
You know, it's like, like, it was just consent, right?
And take her hand and make a scribble.
It was ridiculous.
But it was what it was.
And so they took me into a room.
They gave me anti-inflammatories.
They gave me steroids, which are anti-inflammatory.
They already had, at the first hospital that I went to, they already had a cat scan.
They knew I was having a hemorrhage.
They also knew that I was employed by Harvard.
They are all Harvard Department of Neurology.
So I was considered a VIP.
So I got, you know, I know that that helped me from their perspective.
So they stopped the bleed.
And then they decided I needed to have brain surgery.
surgery. And so two and a half weeks later, they come a head open and they removed the blood clot that was the size of a golf ball. And they sewed me up and sent me home and said, we have no idea how much you will ever get back. But, you know, that's now your job is to try to recover. And I have a mother who is an absolute angel in my life. And she dropped.
her world and she came to me and she she gave, she surrounded me in an environment of love and let's
watch and see what could I learn, what was in the way of my learning and what could she do to
rearrange and to literally teach me starting with, she recognized I was now an infant in a woman's
body. And we began with, I couldn't see color. She had to teach me colors were different.
She had to teach me how to make sound in order to be able to have language. She had to teach
me vocabulary. She had to teach me how to walk. I mean, she taught me everything. So that, yeah,
she reared me twice. Wow. And what did this experience actually teach you about consciousness?
I know that you feel like you learned a lot from it.
Talk to us and realize that, like, a lot of us don't think about consciousness at all.
So we're starting from, we don't.
We don't think about consciousness at all.
It's like we just, nobody knows how it works, like, really.
And so it's just something that is and nobody thinks about it.
So I think these are really hard concepts for people to grasp, like, really quickly.
So explain it to us, like, we're infants.
Like, what do you think consciousness is?
So we start with a single cell.
And that single cell has all the DNA,
blueprint that it's going to take to multiply itself into all these different kinds of cells
that will differentiate into specific functions. Like you're going to start with that single cell,
then you're going to end up with three layers of cells, essentially. One of those layers of
cells, the ectoderm is going to become the nervous system, spinal cord, brain, peripheral nervous
system as well as the skin. So it kind of envelops us. And then the mesoderm is going to become the muscles,
and then the endoderm is going to become connective tissues and other types of tissues.
But all of this is a groups of cells that are differentiated. So eventually we end up with this
magnificent human brain. The human brain is divided into two hemispheres. It has two, so the primary
difference between a reptile and a mammal is the addition of our emotional system, called the
limbic system. So reptiles don't have emotions, mammals have emotions, and the primary difference
between typical mammals and the human is this explosion of thinking cerebral cortex. So we humans,
we have four major modules of cells inside of our head, two emotional, evenly divided between
the right hemisphere and the left hemisphere, and then two thinking modules of cells, the right
thinking, and the left thinking. And most of us have heard, oh, the right hemisphere is emotional
and the left hemisphere's thinking, and that's simply not true anatomically. Anatomically,
we have two emotional and two thinking modules of cells. So the primary difference is,
then between the right and the left for me when I lost my left hemisphere was I lost one
linearity across time. So somehow or another, these amazing cells step out of the consciousness
of the present moment. I mean, this is, to me, this is the mind-blower. How did they even do that,
right? But the right hemisphere, it's a right-here-right-now machine. So the emotions of the present-moment
experience, what does it feel like to be alive as your audience is listening? What are they doing?
What does it feel like to be sitting or to be walking, to be moving your body? What does it feel like
as you dive into water? What does that feel like the experience? What is the temperature of the air
or the water against your body? Is it pressure against you? What's happening, you know, the glasses
on your nose. What does those feel like if you focus on that feeling, you can feel that,
otherwise you go pretty unconscious. So the right emotion is experiential. What does it feel like
to be here? And then the right thinking is right here right now. If I'm just in the right here
right now, all I'm aware of is what is in front of me. Whatever behind me doesn't exist. Whatever
happened before this moment in time doesn't exist, including what is my name? I don't know,
right here right now, unless I got a big name tag on the wall in front of me, but I don't have
that kind of language. So the right hemisphere is right here, right now, emotion, and connected
to all that is because I don't have that boundary of where I begin and where I end, because that's in
that left hemisphere. So we access these parts of ourselves.
the right emotion when we are experiencing something.
I come from Indiana.
We're big basketball, of course.
What does it feel like when you're getting ready to do a layout?
That feeling of lifting yourself up into the air,
throwing that ball, the movement,
the calculation of the brain of the arc
that you have to make with that ball
in order to get it to go into the basket.
So it's the experience of being.
And then the right thinking is,
is, oh my gosh, I'm alive.
And in this sense of, oh, my gosh, I'm alive,
is this incredible gratitude of, wow, I'm alive.
And there are people here with me who love me,
and it feels like love.
And I listened to a podcast where you were speaking about
how close you were to your father.
And when your father was ill and he had to go into the hospital,
your heart reached him,
and his love reached you, even though you couldn't be in the same space with one another.
And it is in that right thinking consciousness where we are beyond the limitations of ourselves
and we are enveloping one another in this feeling of deep love.
So the right hemisphere is right here right now.
And then the left hemisphere, it's not right here right now.
These cells in the emotional system step literally out of the consciousness of the present moment.
So I can say to you, Hala, Hala, what did you have for dinner last night?
I had Asian food.
Okay.
Where did you go in order to remember that, right?
You don't have the Asian food right here in front of you.
You have stepped out, you have left me here alone in the present moment.
you have stepped into another consciousness that is constantly running in the background.
And the beauty of that group of cells, those emotional cells, is that everything that I ever
experienced is running and it's running and it's always there for me to refer to.
And oh my gosh, let's say now something happens in this moment.
And let's say all of a sudden the ground should start to shake.
And as the ground starts to shake, your brain goes and it says, oh, my gosh, I'm not safe.
I don't care about Jill anymore.
I got to get out of the building because there's an earthquake.
And you know what the experience is because you have information about that.
So our emotional reactivity is designed to protect us in the present moment based on experiences we have had in the
past. So if I'm running a consciousness where I'm literally as big as the universe with the right
thinking tissue, and I'm running a consciousness in the right experiential, what does it feel like
to be in my body and to be engaging, and I'm running a consciousness in my left emotional tissue
that is reminding me of everything that ever happened in my past so I can protect myself in the present
based on that past. And then, oh my gosh, I have left thinking tissue, and that is my A-type personality.
It's my language. It's my do. It's my go. It's my value of I want more. Oh, let's do this.
Let's do that. So if we're running all four of these consciousnesses and we know all four of these
consciousnesses, then we can gain the power to pick and choose who and how we want to be in any moment,
gives us power to choose what life we want to live.
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It's so interesting. Like I've never heard of this before, right? All I ever hear about is left
and right brain. So let's bust some pop psychology myths about the left versus right brain.
What do we need to know? Well, number one is we only use 10%
of our brain. No, if it's alive and it's in your head, you're using it. Now, you have a huge life.
I mean, just consider for a moment. So here we have a population of entrepreneurs who aren't
generally thinking about their brain, right? However, in order for you to do everything that you
do, you have to have brain cells that perform that function. Some people say to me, oh, I'm not
creative at all. And I say, well, for some reason, you're using other cells to dominate the
circuits in your right hemisphere that open you up to the possibility. And creativity is in the
right hemisphere because it's not about the box of what's right, what's wrong, what's good,
what's bad, what has come before, and let's define it. That's the exact opposite of creativity.
So, but if brain cells are like people, we're social.
They're social.
A single cell can have 10 to 15,000 connections in a network with other neurons, 10 to 15,000.
That is a social network.
Talk about influencers.
Boy, it's those brain cells.
So they're busy in there.
And it's same for humans.
We are social creatures.
And what happens to us if we don't socialize?
Well, we become more rigid.
We become more firm in our right, wrong, good, bad.
and we kind of curl up in little fetal balls and we die.
And the same is true for neurons.
So number one, if it's alive and it's in your head, you're using it.
The other biggest one is right hemisphere is emotional.
Left hemisphere is thinking and it's like, well, it is true that the left thinking is
the rational, organized, analyze, linear thinking, methodical.
That is true.
do have emotion in both hemispheres. So let's talk about how each side of the brain perceives reality. I know
you've been talking about it. But again, like a lot of us are learning this for the first time. So hearing it
multiple times in different ways, I think is helpful. So how does the left side perceive reality? How
does the right side perceive reality? So as far as the medical, traditional medical world is
concerned, only one quarter of our brain is conscious. According to the traditional medical world,
only one quarter of our brain is conscious. And that's the left thinking tissue. Okay,
let's look at the condition of the world, right? We're kind of a mess. We're killing each other.
I mean, it is like what we value is just that one portion. So imagine the,
world we could live in if we actually didn't think everything else was unconscious and out of our
control. And so we didn't have to take any responsibility for it. Well, if I know what's going on
in these four major portions, modules of cells, and I have the power to recognize in any moment
which of those four parts I'm in, which character am I exhibiting in the world based on what those
cells, skill sets give to me, and in this moment I'm exhibiting, when I know all four, it's kind of
like a hand. If I just have a hand, and I'm flopping things and pushing things and smashing things,
and, you know, it's not very sophisticated. But as soon as I can differentiate between those four
digits of my hand, I have exponentially exploded my capacity to using that hand. And the same is true for
our brain. So whole brain living is about figuring out recognizing what parts am I using when.
Am I happy about that? Am I remotely in balance? Do I need a little more play in my life?
Because my left circuitry is running all the time and that's my stress circuitry. And it really
has interfered with my relationships. And it has, and it drive, drive drives me, but it's probably
interrupting my sleep as well in my overall wellness. So as we look at these different parts of who we are,
then we can spread the love essentially in, I'm not just a biological creature. I'm not a single-celled
organism. I'm not a reptile. And I am not a canine. I am a human being. And in the design of being a
human being, we have these four different wonderful groups of cells that serve us. And,
And if I want to be a whole successful human being, then I need to be capitalizing on the skill
sets of all four parts of who I am because they're a natural part of the design for a reason.
Yeah.
So I just want to recap the four characters for everybody, just so everybody's on the same page.
So you've got left thinking, which is about identity, planning, control, achievement.
You have left emotional, which is pain, fear, trauma, and memory.
You have right emotional, which is play, creativity, and connection, and you have right thinking, which is witness, wisdom, and peace.
Let's talk about these four characters as they influence an entrepreneur.
Because running a business is very different than being an entrepreneur.
And not always, especially not in this day and age.
There's a lot of overlap because now a lot of entrepreneurs are running.
businesses. But I think it's kind of, are you going from the left brain, left thinking,
here's my business, here's my brand, here's my product. These are the beans. I'm going to hire
my bean counters. They're all about how much are we going to earn. I'm going to hire a creative team.
They're going to terrify us because they're going to come in and they're not going to give us
any information about design other than we can guarantee you that if a woman is going to shop for this
and reach for the product, she's going to pick this one instead of that one.
And the left brain is going, oh, my God, that's terrifying.
We have to change our whole production because you think, and it's like, yeah, that's the way it goes.
So we end up all of our lives is about this relationship between the right hemisphere and the left hemisphere.
Entrepreneurs have to have creativity.
I mean, isn't that what happens?
I'm doing whatever I do.
I'm relaxed. I'm thinking about something. And it's like, oh, my gosh, here is a great idea. Great idea. I got a great idea.
And then it's like, well, if I don't act on that great idea, the idea just goes back into the idea pot and someone else may pick that out of that big that in the universe.
So I have to turn on my left brain. I have to figure out how am I going to do it. I have to organize it. I have to get funding for it.
I have to step through A through Z in order to set the business in order to be able to do it.
And then I have to be able to figure out how to sell it.
And I have to get out of my own fear because, oh my gosh, who am I to start a company when
I don't know anything?
I'm over here.
I've got the idea.
And now I've got to trust people.
Oh, my gosh, I got to trust people.
Nothing more terrifying than trying to pick your team and figure out who do I trust, who do I
not trust. Who do I keep? Who do I get rid of? Oh my God. I don't want to have to fire somebody.
I'm a nice girl. All of that. So that really does require a whole brain. And then you have to have
have the vision. And the vision is going to be that right thinking that comes in and says,
you can do this. You can do all these things. You have good, good, you have, have good intention,
you have good energy, you have good logical skills, you have good emotional containment,
and you're never alone. And that's the beauty of whole brain living, is to know that this part of
our wisdom, this part of us that connects us with others and connects us within ourselves,
that is always there. So every time I experience fear that says, who am I to do this?
Who am I to say?
The whole imposter syndrome thing, that little left emotional fear, there's always that wisdom-wise,
loving part that can come in and say, I got you right here inside of our own head.
I got you.
And that's not arrogant and it's not narcissism.
It's an awareness that I have fear.
And my fear is meant to be in formation.
it's not supposed to become a lifestyle.
So I'm not supposed to let those kinds of, excuse me, fears come in and take over and derail me,
and then I get all caught up in that.
It's like, no, my fear is a warning to take a bigger picture look at everything and know that I got this,
I'm okay, and I have this backfield of people who love me and who know me and who support me,
and we're all in this together.
Now, would you say society as a whole is like really left brain dominant?
And what part of the brain do you feel like if we all spent a little bit more time trying to understand and tap into, do you feel like would help solve a lot of the problems that you were just talking about?
Like the world feels, we are talking right now, it's like January, mid-January, the world is falling apart between ICE and Gaza and Iran and Venezuela.
Like it just seems like one after the next.
It just feels like we don't love each other anymore.
So talk to us about why we're so left brain dominant.
Yeah.
And how we can become more right brain dominant or what do you think society needs to do?
Yeah.
So you're absolutely right.
We are skewed to the values of the left hemisphere.
And this has been going on for a very long time.
It came in after World War II.
that great generation came in, and now it's like, okay, now we want to prosper. And what we value
is our family, which is right brain, but we also now need, we want to build our roots. We want
the all-American dream. We want to have a house. We want to have enough money in the bank to do
what we want to do. We want to have vacation. I want a nice car, all these things. And then
the great generation gave birth to the boomers, of which I will admit I am a tail end of the boomers.
And boomers, our parents wanted us to have everything, and they gave us everything that they could
give us so that we could live a better life than what they had to go through, because, oh my gosh,
they had to live through World War II, and wow, did that completely change the landscape,
especially of America.
And because the U.S. ended up influencing World War II in a way that that war was won because of the atom bomb, it put us at the top of the powers of the world.
So now the U.S. is going to kind of be a dictator of influence in the world because now we were thriving.
And so, you know, everything happens then.
but here's something else that you need to think about,
is that the great generation had two very different hemispheres,
and they had to show up and become disciplined
and become organized in order to win that war.
And everybody had to get on board in order to do that.
And so the men went to the war.
Many women did as well, but the women,
they organized in the U.S. in order to be able to take over all the jobs.
And so everybody became really very pragmatic and very left brain, and the whole system became
very left brain.
And then the war is over and everybody comes back.
And then the boomers happen.
And the boomers are also a left brain dominant because we get that now from our parents.
But then the boomers had children.
And the children are the millennials.
And the technology of what happened for the early.
millennials was the creation of really the first little robot. It was a little teddy bear called
Teddy Raspin. And this little teddy bear was the first little living creature that we would
stick in the crib with our little millennials so that they could hear a heartbeat, or they could
hear a humming, or they could have a little language speaking back to them. So the millennials end up
with a robot, essentially, a very, you know, or, you know, three circuits, but a robot has
their significant calmer, emotional contentment. And so then the Gen X, who are right behind the boomers,
between the boomers and the millennials, this is a group of people who are still very left brain,
but they are technologically savvy.
And they start making everything.
They just, you know, all my gens, I can always tell a Gen Xer.
And the difference between a Gen Xer and a boomer is that the Gen Xers, they just say,
just push buttons, just push buttons.
And the boomers are going, oh, my God, I can't push a button.
I'm afraid I'm going to explode it, right?
So these are huge societal shifts in populations.
So the Gen Xers come along and they're now making all this technology, all this technology.
And our millennial children are learning from technology.
And here's the difference.
If I give you a pad, an iPad, and I say, I'm going to teach you the timetables.
Well, anybody left brain, we learned timetables, we memorized them.
That's all we did.
We memorized them.
A two plus a two equal.
a four. A six times a six equals a 36. We memorized them. But what we did for the millennials was we said
two chickens plus two goats makes four animals. We gave you a visual and we started training your
right brain. So the right brain became dominant with the millennial population. And when you think about
in business, I have had so many millennials say, I don't get those boomers.
I mean, it is like my way or the highway.
And if I hate my job, I'm going to suffer with it for 40 years because, oh, my God,
it's a paycheck.
And the boomers are looking at the millennials going, I don't get these millennials.
If they're not happy with their job, they're going to leave.
And there's no commitment to the long term of the business, which is going to make them suffer.
So at the fundamental differences between these generations, it is huge right now about how these different age groups developed across time.
And so the millennials actually are more connected. They like to do things in groups. You want me to make a decision? I'm going to check with some of my team, right? Boomers weren't like that at all. Boomers were making decisions even if they were bad.
decisions. They were going to make the decision. So we end up during this point in our lifetime of the left
dominant skewed to the left value structure now. What that means is that the millennials, even though
they're different in the way that they've learned and grown and developed, they're still fitting themselves
inside of the boomer world. And the boomer world is one for profit. And all that matters is money.
My value is money.
You have learned that there's plenty of money.
The boomer mindset is some zero.
I get it or you get it.
Very different.
That's so interesting and it's so obvious now
why there's such differing politics,
why millennial and Gen Z are way more of like peace,
no war, you know, against genocide,
against apartheid, all those things.
Whereas a lot of the boomers,
are for all those things or believe everything they see on TV.
So let's not make that gross of an evaluation.
Let's say that the boomers are divided between their values.
The Democrats, when I think about politics, I go to one thing.
Taxes.
Where do I want my tax money to go?
What kind of things do I want my money to go to?
The value of the right hemisphere says, I care about people.
I care about social programs.
I care about food stamps for people who don't have any food.
I care about the mentally ill.
I care about reforming the incarcerated population so that these people can get back into it and get ahead again.
And so the Democrats are really looking at the value structure of what does the right hemisphere value.
And there are a lot of boomers who are Democrats.
The Republican brain comes in and says,
well, it's about me.
And me means I'm, if there's a me, there's a you.
And if there's a you, if you don't look like part of my tribe,
then you're not on my team.
And the left emotional brain comes online and says,
well, we're tribal.
And in that tribalness, it's me against you.
And so we fuel this with our sports teams.
We fuel this with our political teams.
We fuel this with any division.
It is that left emotional brain that looks at someone and says,
I'm blonde-haired, blue-eyed, I'm a female.
Okay, you're black-haired.
You have a different hue colored your skin.
And you're different from me.
And the left brain says, because you're different from me, I'm going to push you away.
And as soon as the brain says I'm going to push you away in racism, I'm also going to elevate myself, happens
naturally, to being superior to you.
So we're actually wired at the level of ourselves to do this.
The right brain comes in, though, and it says, you're different from me.
you have different color skin, you speak a different language, you eat a different kind of food
that smells different.
My right hemisphere says, oh, you're different.
I am curious about you.
I want to know you better.
So to me, racism really boils down to the circuitry because every ability we have is because
we're wired to be that way.
But there is a whole half of the boomers who, um,
are what they are evenly divided in what they value.
Yeah.
So would you say that like your, like, do you have control over which parts of the brain that
you use or which ones are stronger than the other?
Or is it something basically you're just born with or you, like it happens, instills in you
and you when your child?
Like at what point can you change it and when does it develop?
Okay.
because we are taught by society, by the traditional medical world, that only a quarter of our brain is conscious,
then that leaves three quarters of our brain as unconscious.
Okay.
Well, now you have a brain scientist who was at Harvard teaching and performing research about how does our brain create our perception of reality
and wiped out her left-thinking tissue, which was the conscious part,
and wiped out the left emotion, wiped out the right emotion.
So all I had left was the right thinking tissue.
So that's all I had.
So I learned, well, in the absence of all that, those other cells, this is what's going on here.
And then once I had surgery and I could then begin to function again and hold some energy
inside of my body so I could actually learn something, then I regain the skill set.
of the right emotional tissue.
So I'm really clear.
That was very different.
That portion of who I am,
that is a whole different level of consciousness.
And then it's like, okay,
well, if I'm going to function
like a normal human being in society,
I have to get my language back.
And so I used my right brain
to rebuild the skill sets
that I knew that I had lost
because I was a neuroanatomist after all.
I know, because I could say,
still visualize the language circuits. I could still visualize the emotional circuits. I just didn't
have any of them anymore. So it's like, okay, well, what do I need to do in order to reconstruct
and rebuild those circuits so they can become functional again? So then I regained a new, it was a new
reboot for the emotions, but I used what I had in my right hemisphere to rebuild those
skills in my left hemisphere. And so I learned what the, what's going on in these different parts of
cells. And so then it's like, okay, well, I have the power to choose. I can choose in an instant.
I can become very angry. I can hit those left emotional. I can become very analytical and do some
mathematics with you. I can become very experiential and playful and joyful and creative in an instant.
or I can pause and connect to the bigger picture and automatically right there.
I don't know if you noticed, but there was a skip in my language because the language shuts out
because I become actually in the present moment and there's no language there.
So because I had this experience, I gained this insight.
And then I gave a TED talk.
And it was the first TED talk that ever went viral.
It was in 2008.
And that exploded Joe Boltey Taylor into the world and Ted into the world.
So that became this really interesting thing.
And then I was chosen as one of Time Magazine's 100 most influential people in the world
because they recognized what this meant to the bigger picture of humanity.
And then my book, which I had already written, my stroke of insight,
ended up spending 63 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list.
So all of that happened, and I'm now riding this wave going,
little girl from Indiana who had a stroke all of a sudden exploding in the world,
and it's like, well, I didn't plan for that.
And so I had to ride that tsunami of a wave.
And then I actually, but I always felt like that TED Talk was a miss
because people walked away with a reverence for me.
And I didn't need their reverence. I was connected to the universe. I wanted people to have a reverence for
themselves and for their own lives and for the lives of others because that would have shift the value of
more, more, more into the relationships that we have with one another in our right hemisphere.
So my ultimate goal, there's nothing wrong with capitalism. There's nothing wrong with money.
But that's a quarter of who we are.
It shouldn't be all of who we are.
And I truly believe that the driving force power of us as human beings is our present moment
interrelationships with ourselves and others as humanity.
And then we have these brilliant left brain skill sets that allow us to do all these
magnificent things that they do.
So we have about 10 minutes left.
together and I feel like we should spend the last 10 minutes just talking about how we can
better use the right side of our brain. Like what do we need to do? How do we catch ourselves
when we're using our left brain and how do we just build the habits to naturally start using
our left brain more? Hala, what do you do for fun? I like to work out. I like to go out to dinner.
I like to go to the movies, spend time with my boyfriend. Okay. So you like to work out.
You like to get into your body. The right hemisphere is,
the relationship, the experiential. What does it feel like? Now, if you're off doing yoga and you're in your
down dog and you're thinking to yourself, okay, let's see, I'm going to have this conversation with this person
and I'm doing my yoga now. But these are the three things that, you know, I'm analyzing what I'm going to be doing
some other time. That doesn't count. You need to bring your mind to the present. So how do you
bring your mind to the present. And so if you're doing something physical, be physical.
Be there. Listen to music. Get your groove going. Get the movement. Get a collective whole.
Get the whole body awake. Because you are this magnificent biological creature. You're not
just a brain. So I really encourage people to do things that require them not just to go and
compete. If everything you do when you're in your body is competing, you're still in your left brain.
No, I want you to actually enjoy the fact that you have a body and that, oh my gosh, it can move.
And that, oh, my gosh, when the head goes one way, oh, isn't that interesting?
The hips go the other way. And oh, my gosh, my parts are interactive.
So get into your body. That's going to be the right.
experiential part of who you are. Play, laugh, have joy, be creative, be creative without a purpose.
Just be creative. So pay attention. And now all those left brains, that left thinking portion
of the brain, they're listening to this podcast going, that's a total waste of time.
Why on earth do I want to go and waste time? Well, the reason why you want to go waste time,
time is because that's where your genius is. Genius is in the right emotional tissue. The left
brain, it's just do, do, do, linear, linear, linear, to do, cross it off the list, jabber more,
build more, make more, blah, blah, blah. Your genius is right here right now in the present moment,
willing to look at something and to do something in a way that is different from the way it was
done before. So that's number one. Getting your experiential, you know, when you're eating,
actually think about your food. Don't be just like watching a movie or doing something or being
on the phone and being distracted. If you're going to fuel your beautiful cells, think about what
you're feeding them. And if you're standing up and doing something else while you're eating,
that's not being in the present moment having the experience with food.
It's a pause.
This is the pause to the go, go, go.
So if you don't feel yourself pausing, and then some people are going, I don't like the pause.
The pause feels like death to me.
It's like, well, that's okay, you know, boom.
We're only pausing for, like, try for five seconds.
Think about your breath.
You know, this is why a lot of people do yoga.
A lot of people do breath.
Well, why? Because when we breathe, we breathe in the present moment. And in the present moment,
I can, really simple, I can increase the frequency of my breath, the amplitude, the depth of my breath.
I can hold my breath. Human is the only animal who can, you can say, hold your breath. So really
bringing your mind into the present. So that's the do-do. But then there's this spiritual connection.
And I know a lot of people say, ooh, the word spiritual, you just freaked me out.
And it's like, so call it whatever you want, but it's that sense of awe that I exist at all.
Oh, my gosh, I was born.
I have a life.
I have a voice.
I have manual dexterity.
I even have bladder capacity.
Oh, my gosh.
If I can't get excited about the fact that I have bladder capacity, then I'm not paying attention to the miracle of what we are as living.
beings and how grateful I am that I'm here in this world at the same time you are. And oh my gosh,
look at you and look at how wondrous you are and all the things that you can do. And wow,
I mean, wow, it's just a big wow. And it's the feeling that one gets when you stand on a
mountain top and you just look out over those mountains and the vastness and the openness. And it's
the part as we're standing on a beach and it's like, oh my God.
I'm alive and I have this time here in this form, in this place, and I can do anything.
I can do anything I want to do, what do I want to do, and who do I want to be with,
and how do I want to connect, and how do I want to bring my gratitude into my life?
And if I can hold on to that and I come from that place, then I'm going to
to be more consciously aware of what I'm building over here and how much time I'm spending
in that beautiful left hemisphere. This is not about be a right brain or be a left brain. This is
about being a whole human, being a whole brain and fueling all these different parts of who we are
and loving all these parts of who we are. After everything that you've lived through and been
through, what do you want people to understand about who they really are?
I want them to understand that every ability we have, we have brain cells that perform that
function and that this brain is this really precious, vulnerable thing. So I encourage people to
take care of it. We exist in a society where we do drugs and alcohol that just, you know,
I lost my mind. I lost so much of my brain, and I work so hard to rebuild it, that I, you know,
I'll drink a beer maybe twice a year and love it, but that's enough for me because I want to
preserve and protect what's going on inside of my head. And I think that if people really value
the all four skill sets of what these four different parts of their brain bring to their life,
they will see that they can truly live a life on purpose and that they can gain the power
to in any moment be who they want to be.
And to me, that's freedom.
I totally agree.
Well, this was such an awesome episode.
I feel like we learned so much.
It was just an influx of information.
I personally learned so much.
I did not know the major differences
between the left and right brain previously.
So thank you so much for your wisdom.
So I end my show with two questions.
I ask all of my guests.
The first one is,
what is one actionable thing
our young improfitors can do today
to become more profiting tomorrow?
So just an actionable tip,
and I know your expertise is around the brain,
so it can be related to that.
So I am.
And since your population,
is entrepreneurial and probably spends most of its time doing the hard work of the left brain.
I think that the actionable is to pause every now and again and ask yourself, which part of my
brain am I in right now? And what choices do I want? Do I want to stay there? And this is also for
if I become upset. Our emotional reactivity, we have the power to watch an emotion. We have a thought.
It stimulates the circuit of an emotion. The emotion stimulates a circuit of physiological response.
And from the beginning to the end, takes less than 90 seconds. So if I'm staying angry for longer than 90 seconds or sad or jealous or whatever for longer than 90 seconds, then I need to ask myself,
Do I really want to stay in that loop or am I ready to let it go?
I love that.
And that was also like getting outside of yourself like you were mentioning before.
And what would you say your secret to profiting in life is?
So profiting is can go beyond finance and business.
I truly believe that our number one job is to love one another.
And I think if we come from that and we have in our mind that whatever I'm going to use my energy on,
benefits all of us, then we all profit.
Dr. Jill, thank you so much for your time.
Where can everybody learn more about you and everything that you do?
Dr. Jill Taylor.com is my website, and off we go.
Amazing.
I'll put all those links in the show notes.
Thank you so much for your time.
It's been nice.
Thank you so much.
I was looking forward to this.
Yeah, likewise.
Well, yeah, fam, what an incredible conversation with Dr. Jill.
and I'm still processing everything we learned about the brain today and consciousness
be covered so much ground and it's something that I don't often think about.
But I do think about and study productivity and performance,
and I've always thought about optimizing my brain.
But Jill showed me that we've been missing three quarters of the picture.
We've been taught that only our left brain thinking is conscious,
but that left us running on a single cylinder
when we have four powerful cylinders or characters inside our heads.
And here's what really struck.
me. Your genius is not hiding in your to-do list or your relentless productivity. It lives in your
right hemisphere or right side of your brain in the present moment and play in creativity without
purpose like Jill said. When you're grinding through your day, checking off task after task,
analyzing everything, you're stuck in that left brain loop. You don't want to be there because when
you pause, get in your body and actually taste your food instead of scrolling through emails while
you're eating, that's when all your breakthroughs are going to happen. And I just don't
love how Jill explained our four characters. Once you recognize which one is running the show
in any moment, you can gain the power to choose differently in that moment. You can say, hey,
I want to use more of my right side of my brain right now and I know it's my left side,
dominate it. When that left emotional fear kicks in, the imposter syndrome, the who am I to do
this, you can tap into your right thinking wisdom that says, I got you. You could do this. And that's
not arrogance. That's just accessing your whole brain. That's whole brain.
living. For my fellow entrepreneurs grinding nonstop, remember what Jill said. Your drive and your
ambition are beautiful, but they're just one quarter of who you are. The magic happens when you
balance that hustle with presence, play, and connection. So get out of your head and into your body.
Move without competing. Create without analyzing. Breathe in the present moment. And here's something
crucial. You also want to know the warning signs of a stroke. Speech problems, tingling, memory issues,
balance, troubles, severe headaches, vision changes, these are all signs.
And if migraines won't respond to medication, get scanned.
Your brain is precious.
We want you to protect it.
Thanks for tuning in to this episode of Young and Profiting.
If this conversation opened your eyes to a whole new way of thinking about consciousness
and success, then share it with somebody who needs to hear this message.
And if you learn something valuable today, please drop us a five-star review on Apple,
Spotify, or CastBox.
Your reviews mean so much to us.
If you want to watch this episode as a video, head over to YouTube and search a young and profiting.
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You can also connect with me on Instagram at Yap with Hala or LinkedIn by searching my name.
It's Hala Taha.
As always, I got a shout out my Yap production team.
Shout out to the guest outreach team.
Shout out to my scripters, my production support, my YouTube team, my social team.
You guys are all so hardworking.
I appreciate everything you do for me and the show.
This is your host, Hala Taha, aka the podcast princess, signing off.
