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Gabor Mate: The Childhood Lie That’s Ruining All Of Our Lives. | E193

November 07, 2022 / 01:59:38

This episode features Dr. Gabor Maté, a renowned expert on addiction, stress, and childhood development. The discussion covers topics such as the impact of childhood trauma on mental health, the relationship between parental stress and children's physiological responses, and the societal implications of mental illness diagnoses.

Dr. Maté shares his personal experiences, including his early life in Hungary during the Holocaust and how it shaped his understanding of trauma. He emphasizes that trauma is not just about what happens to us, but how we internalize those experiences, affecting our mental and physical health.

The conversation also touches on the increasing diagnoses of ADHD and the role of environmental stressors in children's lives. Dr. Maté argues that many children diagnosed with ADHD are simply responding to their stressful environments rather than having an inherent disorder.

Additionally, the episode discusses the importance of awareness and authenticity in healing from trauma. Dr. Maté highlights the need for a supportive environment in schools and homes to foster healthy emotional development.

Overall, the episode provides valuable insights into the connections between trauma, mental health, and societal structures, encouraging listeners to reflect on their own experiences and the broader implications for future generations.

TL;DR

Dr. Gabor Maté discusses childhood trauma, ADHD, and the societal impacts of mental health, emphasizing the importance of awareness and supportive environments.

Video

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Financial stress on the parents translates into physiological stress in the children they didn't inherit
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anything in terms of a disease they're just reacting to the environment people call Dr gabomate the people whisper
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legendary thinker and best-selling author he's highly sought after for his expertise on addiction stress and
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childhood development the evidence evidence linking mental illness and childhood adversity is about as strong
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as the evidence linking smoking and lung cancer and the average physician doesn't hear a word about that it's astonishing
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I can give you the example of a Donald Trump I mean his father was a psychopath you are the enemy of the people go ahead
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for him these were not choices so much as survival techniques and that's the
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mark of a traumatized child a denial of reality what do I have to understand about your earliest years to understand you
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my grandparents were killed in Auschwitz and my mother and I barely survived and then my mother to save my life gives me
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to a stranger in the sense I guess that I'm being rejected and abandoned because I'm not good enough how did that rear
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its ugly head throughout your life in a number of ways it's the traumas I Define it is not about what happens to us it's
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about what happens inside of us as a result of what happens to us it's costing us in terms of our physical health our relationship our mental
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health and so on how does one go about correcting that it's a multi-layered answer first of all
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before this episode begins I just want to say a huge thank you to all of our new subscribers 74 of you that watch
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this channel didn't subscribe before and we're now down to about 71 so that helps
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us in a number of ways that are quite hard to explain but simply the bigger the channel gets the bigger the guests get so if you haven't yet subscribed to
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the Diary of a CEO if I can have any favors from you if you've ever watched the show and enjoyed it it's just to please hit the Subscribe button without
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further Ado I'm Stephen Butler and this is the Diary of a CEO I hope nobody's
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listening but if you are then please keep this yourself [Music]
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my dear little man only after many long months do I take it
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in hand the pen so that I may briefly sketch for you the Unspeakable horrors of those times the
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details of which I do not wish you to know those are words that your mother wrote
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into her diary in the 1940s during the Holocaust
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in April of 1945 three months after the Soviet Army expelled the Nazis from
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Budapest which is where we live so she was referring to the previous year and the beginning of
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that year late 1944 and early 1945. and in those diary entries she's addressing
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many of them to you directly as a baby sure to Dairy to me directly um as if it was like a account of my
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life addressed to me you talk so much in in your in all your
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books um and much of your work about the importance of that early context it's really been I mean the center point of
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all the writing that I've read recently and I know because it's it's so evident in everything that you've done that that's been a key your
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own early context has been a key inspiration for why you've taken such a an interest in these topics what was
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your early context what do I have to understand about your earliest years to understand you so it's just a fact about human beings
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that the template that forms us will affect how we see the world how we understand
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ourselves how we relate to other people and um the early template is earliest
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months even in Europe already in the womb we're being affected by the environment but certainly in the early
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years when our brain is being formed and our personality is taking shape and so that forms our world view now my
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worldview was in my sense of self was shaped by the fact that at two months of age when I was two
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months of age the German Army occupied Hungary Hungary was the last country in Eastern Europe where the Jewish
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population had not been exterminated and that was our turn the day after the German Army marched
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into Budapest which was March the 19th to the 1944 the day after my mother called the
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pediatrician to say would you please come and see Gabor because he's crying all the time and the doctor said of
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course I'll come but all my Jewish babies are crying and so that the fact is that when
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mothers are stressed or in pain the infant feels all that and takes it personally and it becomes part of their
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template for how they view the world so that was that year that's when that year began in which my grandparents were
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killed in Auschwitz and my father was away in forced labor and my mother and I barely survived and
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a story I've told many times but that's where my brain is developing and that's when I'm forming my sense of
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myself and then my mother to save my life gives me to a stranger and I don't see her for
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six weeks the sense I get is that I'm not wanted then I'm being rejected and
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Abandoned and because I'm not good enough that's how my life began
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so your mother gives you away for five to six weeks yeah in order to sort of save you from starvation and you know
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ghetto that that she was going to right that's right this is after after your
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grandparents were killed in our switch by yeah the Nazis
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um how do you know in hindsight that that that moment of those six weeks created that sense of Abandonment in you
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I wouldn't say it's just about that one moment children very much view themselves
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through their interactions with their parents now first of all I had no father because
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he was gone I hadn't hadn't seen him except very briefly I'm one of the month
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old but there was no father in the picture my mother was grief stricken and terrorized and full of Woe and worry
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about what's going to happen to us and just the the task of surviving each day
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she's not playful with me she's not smiling at me very much she's worried looking she's stressed looking
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the infant takes everything personally that's just the nature of the infant as infants were a narcissist we think it's
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all about us so when things are great hey we're great but my mother is unhappy
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it's because she doesn't want me or I can't make her happy or I'm inadequate so that separation from my mother
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certainly set a template for some of my relationship interactions with my spouse decades later but the sense of not being
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good enough and and and and being responsible that was inculcated in me throughout
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that whole first year of life so much so that in this book The Myth of normal I actually talk about a an experience with
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psychedelic mushrooms at the with the therapist this was not that long ago seven years ago maybe
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um when I'm at least 70 years old and I'm in this therapeutic session with the
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cytocybin the the medicine and the therapist and I know that I'm 78
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70 years old and I know this is a therapy session and I know her name and I know
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who I am in the world but at the same time I'm experiencing myself as a one-year-old baby and she's my mother
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and I start crying tears come down to my my face and I say I'm so sorry I made your life so difficult
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now that was an unconscious memory of my sense of myself as a one-year-old that I
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made my mother's life so difficult because that's the way the baby interprets it
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so even if your mother loved you which mine did infinitely not that she always
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treated me the best way possible but she did love me and um can you imagine what a great Act of Love
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even giving me to a stranger in the street would have been for her you know but because of her own unhappiness I can
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only conclude that I'm not good enough and it's my fault
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it's 70 years old having that psilocybin experience coming to that realization or having that sort of
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um having that response to your therapist where they take the role of your mother and you're a one-year-old how does somebody at 70 years old go
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about correcting that that sort of interpretation you had of that traumatic
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early early event well by bringing up to the conscious level
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them and I noticed that sense of guilt or responsibility in me I say oh
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that's what it's about so it's it's a meaning see traumas I Define it is not about
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what happens to us it's about what happens inside of us as a result of what happens to us and so the wound in my in trauma means
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wounds the wound in this case is my sense of deficiency or not being good enough not being worthy enough once I
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realized that oh this has got nothing to do with anything except this
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interpretation that I made with my own experience all those years ago then when I noticed it I can no longer believe it
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I don't have to any longer be a a subject to that interpretation of myself in the
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world so awareness is one step it's not adequate but it's an essential step
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towards um letting go that one belief that you weren't good enough yeah how did that
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rare its ugly head throughout your life it um made me a workaholic physician
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because they had to keep proving my worth and it doesn't matter no I don't know if
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you ever had an addiction but the nature of it is that we're trying to get from the outside something that only can
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arise and fulfill us from the inside so when you're looking at from the outside
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it's addictive because you get it temporarily but then that internal emptiness that hole never goes away so
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it has to be filled over and over and over again it can only be done so temporarily so it becomes runaway
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addictive so then you know work becomes an addiction because I keep trying to improve my worth
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and it doesn't matter how many times you know I I may show up in a positive
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way at the beginning of Summer life at the end of somebody else's life or any time in between
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it never fills that emptiness that my sense of lack of worthiness creates
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so that's one major shows up another way it shows up is if um in my relationship
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I don't feel as satisfied my wife doesn't
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please me the way I like her too um then I get angry but why am I getting
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angry I'm getting angry because it's my sense of not being good enough that's being
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now revealed it gets uncovered this this this this this self-accusation
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um but I get angry at her because her job is to make me not feel that you know we get into this relationship
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four kinds of reasons some of them are conscious some are not some are positive some are come out of trauma in my case
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I want that relationship to prove to me how good I am so when it isn't proving that then I get
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upset with my partner you know well except the Gap is inside me not inside it's not coming from her so it shows up
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it should have been my parenting it shows up all over the place I mean I think both of those examples
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sound a lot like me especially the first one yeah um the second one as well but yeah what sense in the sense that I I'm definitely
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a workaholic and I thought I think in the earlier phases of my life I like sacrificed everything in this pursuit of
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becoming a millionaire and and having all this stuff and really getting this validation sacrificed meaningful
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connections everything in the pursuit of this one thing well part of the toxicity of the culture that I
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talk about in this book is that it actually rewards that kind of emptiness or that or that desperate
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seeking to to to to fill that emptiness because because you know you get
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rewarded you make a lot of money a lot of people admire you you get to feel good about yourself mind you my guess is
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that good feeling is only temporary at least if my example is any guy that you know that feeling good
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because somebody from the outside values you it's only a temporary self for the for the wound that's inside
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but the world actually rewards it you know so you're a workaholic doctor great you make more money and all these people
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respect you meanwhile you're holding yourself on the on from the inside and you're not available for your family you
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know so that that's part of the craziness of this culture and it's like the it's like the hedonistic treadmill
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in this in a sense because you just never enough is never enough as you say yeah so the last achievement needs to be
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surpassed by a greater achievement for me to get an applaud or a clap I've never really made the connection that
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the reason why I'm a workaholic is because I am trying to prove to the world that I'm enough but I think that
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it's entirely true yeah so in your class like like race and class in this Society
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of inequality are certainly traumatic potentially traumatic inputs as I pointed in this book and you know to to
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the degree that it affects people's physiology you know but also then I
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don't know your family version or what kind of relationship you have with your parents but there also may have been a sense like I got with my mom for you know
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reasons and and for whatever it might have happened in your family maybe you got the sense as well that even in your
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family origin you weren't good enough somehow so my mum would scream at my dad for like seven hours a
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day my dad would just sit there okay and so my early memories of like looking at my mum and dad are this kind of
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violent verbally not like physically this incredibly stressful screaming one
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person screaming at the other that's what I remember but from reading what you've written in this book and from what you've said now
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I actually might have learned sort of learned to that I was the problem to some degree your children
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interpret it that way that's just the whole point that's what I mean about kids being narcissists that I don't mean that in the negative sense I just I mean
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actually they think it's all about them so if your mother is unhappy it's your fault
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you know and you're not good enough so then you have to go out there and work to prove yourself to prove to the
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world and to yourself that you're good enough so that going back to your first question about how these things show up
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in our lives that's how they show up and so 12 years old you you emigrate to
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Vancouver yeah um by 28 you joined the medical profession yeah and you spend the next
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32 years roughly working in well at 28 I went back to medical school actually I I
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took a detour I was a high school teacher for and um and then I was 27 28 when I started
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medical school at age 33 I think I began my medical career of 32 years and in those 33 years
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what what was your practice what did you specialize in what did you focus on so I was a family physician
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which meant I delivered a lot of babies and I looked after people's problems from beginning to the end of life I also
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worked in palliative care I was the director of a unit at the hospital which looked after people with a terminal
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disease and I did that was 22 years or so of my practice
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28 22 years and then then I switched gears all
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together and I went to work in the downtown east side of Vancouver British Columbia which is more North America's
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most constantivated area of drug use we have more people coming from anywhere in the world
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are shocked by what they see there are thousands of people in the streets injecting selling using inhaling
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ingesting drugs of all kinds and people have suffered the consequences of
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drug use in a society that doesn't understand drug use so it punishes it and excludes it also sizes it so people
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get HIV from Dirty needles and and hepatitis C so this is the population often they're
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homeless so that's the population I worked with for 12 years till the end of my medical work
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that experience working with patients that were in palliative care so that's for anybody that doesn't know that's
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patients that are approaching the end of their life that have terminal illnesses and that are aware that they're going to to die
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what did that experience teach you it took an acceptance of one's
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lack of lack of omnipotence as a physician because you go into the you want to cure
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people you want to you want people to heal and now it takes the tremendous exceptions to say you know we've reached
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the limit of our knowledge and that doesn't mean we can't help people but we certainly can't cure them
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you know and so it taught me how to be with the inevitable and and and when you're working with
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people who are in the process of dying about I mean by the way who isn't in the process of
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dying you know but but people whose time is more limited than the rest of us acceptance you learn a lot of acceptance
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it challenges you to do your best when you know your best isn't going to
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be saving anybody's lives but it's to help people live a life of
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as little suffering as possible and as much dignity as possible so it really challenges the best parts
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of you to show up patience acceptance um intuition personally taught me a lot
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to listen to people interesting enough people really want to be heard when they're dying
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they want to make sense of their lives they want to tell their stories then I want their stories to be heard
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and so I listened a lot I just sat by the bed so I don't know it isn't
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and all that when you listen did you did you hear any themes relating to
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regret or things that actually mattered because I always imagine in if I was
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given such news that my life was coming to an end and there was an approximate date it would be quite a powerful way of
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finally realizing what truly matters and what never did you know people who react to their impending death in different
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ways so there were some people who just fought it to the end you know they
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didn't really want to accept it but most people were more along the lines that you
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describe where they really get to see what's important and so I mentioned this a number of times it sounds strange and
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I don't recommend it but I've had patients say to me doctor I don't know how to tell you this and I can't even explain it perhaps but this illness
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that's going to take my life is the best thing that have happened to me and but by men they meant a couple of
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things by it they meant what you just said about finding out what's really important in life in this book The Myth
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of normal lying to you a young man called Bill pie wrote a book called blessed with a brain tumor
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in a Hot Hog what kind of blessing is that so I said I asked will what's the
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blessing and he said it made me appreciate every moment it meant every time I talked to somebody this I knew
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this might be the last conversation I'm gonna have with them so it better be a human genuine interaction
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so there was that aspect of it the other aspect of it was that
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again my view is as I pointed in this book and in previous Works who gets sick and who doesn't isn't isn't exactly
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accidental they were certainly personally patterns based on traumatic experiences in your childhood that make
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disease more likely and people very often realize that throughout their lives they had
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abandoned who they were they lived the life that didn't wasn't meaningful for them and
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are on that they reconnected with themselves in an authentic way and that seemed to be worth a lot to people
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again I don't recommend that way of going to reconnect with yourself but people have certainly I certainly saw it
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so those are the two big lessons after your 33 years in medical practice
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um you you described that you had a bit of a you kind of tuned into a creative calling which was writing well I began
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to write when I was a physician so my first book on ADHD after I was diagnosed
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with it was published in 1999 now so that was 23 years ago now so I began to
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write and even before then I wrote Because I wrote uh cons for newspapers
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but yes there was a time in my life where the writing impulse which had been with me all my life was stifled and and
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and and and um stymied and so was I because I had this frustration in fact they had the sense
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that there's something I needed to express but I didn't know what and they didn't
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know how and at some point I realized oh yeah I need to write so that began before I finished medical practice but
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it certainly um has been essential to my ongoing
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unfolding as a human being I was so compelled by that when I when I read about that because um
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I've started to really understand the value of creativity in all of our Lives regardless of whether we have the luxury
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of being called an artist or not and so what in your view is the importance of
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well you're you're singing my tune here if I may say it that way because um I called in this book uh there's a
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great Hungarian Canadian stress researcher called Janus celi a c-l-y-e
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and Celia is the one who actually coined the word stress in the sense that we use it today and he's the one that showed in
00:22:12
the laboratory how stress diminishes the immune system and this this organizes
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the hormones and and ulcerates the stomach and all this kind of stuff but
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so now you also said then I quote him here what is in US must out what is in
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us most out that we all have to follow our key of your urges in the way that nature
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prepared for us otherwise we can be hopeless hopelessly hemmed in by frustration I'm paraphrasing him very
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closely so we are created an image of God I mean as
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you know what do religious views are but that sense that we created an images of
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God means that we are creators because the essence of God is creation in fact we call God the Creator and we
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call the result of that creation if we're created then if we're if we're
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offshoots of that creative dynamic in the universe then it means that it's in us to create
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and whatever form that takes I mean you know you don't want to see me
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do art you know unless you I can do a pretty good stick figure you
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know but but I'm married to a nurse um so that Community doesn't have to take
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the form of formal art but it does it if it takes some flow of something that's
00:23:32
inside you that needs to come out otherwise as Celia says you get hopelessly hemmed in by frustration and
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so in that sense everybody's got that creative urge and that may take the form of social intercourse it might take the
00:23:45
form of gardening I don't care communion with nature athletic expression I don't care what
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but it but but there's somebody everybody's got it and if people don't realize they have it it's only because
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life is him demand and they're too busy and sometimes they are trying to make a living or trying to survive or too
00:24:04
disconnected from themselves but it's in all of us and to the extent that we don't give it expression we suffer
00:24:13
one of the things that really hems it in is um is the prospect that we might not be
00:24:19
good at it because we think to express ourselves creatively we kind of join a competition of sorts and that's that's a
00:24:25
trap we can fall into so if I'm gonna DJ I need to become a good DJ yeah but in Social comparison or else I don't want
00:24:31
to but what I've come to learn is in fact the act of DJing alone in my kitchen at midnight is is the reward
00:24:37
regardless of outcome or whether there's a crowd there it's just me and my dog listening that is the expression is the
00:24:43
reward not the achievement or the medal that I might get although yeah not the external well look look I went through
00:24:49
that in the writing in this book so here I am this is you know the writer who writes about you know
00:24:55
trauma and you know healing and all of a sudden I'm in a panic because I'm writing a book and I realize that the
00:25:01
problem was that you talked about identifying with your work so I had identified with this book so the problem
00:25:07
wasn't a book because let's say I write the book and it's not a success I mean okay big
00:25:13
headline in the Sunday Times book not a big success you know like how big of a deal is that in the history of the
00:25:19
universe but if I identify with the book and it's not going well then if the book
00:25:25
fails then I'm feeling as a person which then goes back to my very earliest uh concern about not being worth it you
00:25:32
know so once I disidentified I said no this is just a book it may be
00:25:38
a good book it may be an important book maybe a book that doesn't hit the mark but it's only a book and how it goes
00:25:45
says nothing about me or my worth once I could decouple that then I could
00:25:51
confidently and much more comfortably go back to the writing of it but I went to that crisis it seems like a bit of a
00:25:56
paradox that this the lack of self-worth would would motivate someone to to create great things because they want
00:26:02
the approval but at the same time make the process so agonizing because their self-esteem seems to be on the line yeah
00:26:07
all their sense of self-worth is on the line well that Dynamic was in me once I realized that I let go of it you know so
00:26:14
it didn't it didn't dominate me in the end and uh honest to God by the time I finished the book I'm not just saying this in retrospect
00:26:20
it's it's the best seller now in several countries but I actually said to myself and I meant it
00:26:28
now I've done the book that's what matters I've said what was in me to say
00:26:34
how the world reacts I can't control and it doesn't actually matter on a fundamental level it's not
00:26:41
that I don't want this book to be accessed I mean success of course I wanted to sell 10 zillion copies but
00:26:48
that doesn't Define my self-worth or a high function in the world how I feel about myself honestly it does not and I
00:26:55
I understood that by the time I finished working on it so once it's done it's out there doing
00:27:01
its work or not doing its work but I don't have to hang my own sense of
00:27:09
self on how the book does because at that point that's an outcome you can't control right so trying to
00:27:16
control that would be yeah anxiety and yeah oh yeah well you can't control it
00:27:21
no 10 years this book yeah took you to write took me to prepare it took about
00:27:28
three years to write yeah you describe it as a calling yeah the myth of normal
00:27:34
yeah what four words to to sort of pull people into in some way summarize uh 550
00:27:42
odd page book why why those four words why that phrase can I post from one to find a quote on
00:27:48
my cell phone 100 yeah yeah I just so this is um are you familiar with the
00:27:54
rokovic artoli uh Echo totally yes okay yeah so Tony lives in Vancouver like I do and um in one of his books he says
00:28:02
the normal State of Mind of most human beings contains a strong element of what we might call dysfunction or even
00:28:09
Madness you know so um in medical um parlance uh normal means healthy and
00:28:17
natural so there's a normal range of blood pressure normal temperature it's a range outside that
00:28:25
range there's no life there's no health either too high or too low you're gone
00:28:30
so normal means it's it's equivalent with synonymous with healthy and natural
00:28:39
however we make that same assumption that the audience Society what we used
00:28:45
to what we call normal is also healthy and natural which is a myth because I'm
00:28:50
saying that in this Society what we considered to be normal is neither healthy nor natural in fact it's hurtful
00:28:57
to us so that we're using the word normal in in a way that
00:29:02
doesn't apply in the narrow medical sense it's accurate but in a broader sense
00:29:09
that which we're used to in this Society be considered normal is just not good
00:29:14
for us you know and Norm is kind of a statistic or it's a kind of a um average so if everybody you have a
00:29:22
dog if everybody in London mistreated their dogs and if you didn't then you'd
00:29:28
be abnormal you know so it's a myth to say that what is normal is healthy and
00:29:34
natural that's what I mean by the method normal that's one one thing I mean the other thing I mean is
00:29:39
if we understand that the actual science of the unity of everything I'm not
00:29:44
talking about spiritual Insight here I'm talking about you know physiological science that are physiology and
00:29:51
psychology is very much affected by our life experiences being in utero childbirth early childhood and
00:29:59
throughout the lifetime it also follows that illness and health are not individual attributes they're
00:30:04
actually manifestations of our relationships and our situation in the world and and our history
00:30:12
that also means when the circumstances are abnormal you expect people to be sick
00:30:18
you know just as if you gave animals something that wasn't healthy for them they'd be sick that'd
00:30:24
be what you'd expect so this idea that the people who are ill
00:30:30
either physically or mentally abnormal I say no these are normal responses to an
00:30:35
abnormal set of circumstances and rather than being sort of those abnormal
00:30:41
ones and the rest of us it's really a spectrum they were all pretty much all
00:30:46
on it so in those three senses this idea of normal is is a myth and it's one that
00:30:54
keeps us from seeing reality and we're all an abnormal in some way
00:31:01
yeah so if you maybe my maybe my attention is different maybe my you know my my interpersonal relationships are
00:31:08
abnormal but in some way I'm going to be abnormal as it relates to treatments how do you think that the medical profession
00:31:14
and the psychological profession would respond differently if we removed this
00:31:19
idea that there is a normal how would our approaches change to treating people hmm
00:31:26
well that's it's a multi-layered answer
00:31:31
um first of all we would recognize that our diagnoses are not explanations for
00:31:37
anything so you know I've been diagnosed with ADD you know legitimately so as my first
00:31:43
book was on it um but but it doesn't explain anything
00:31:50
so so I do not easily very easily you know and sometimes when I don't often
00:31:56
and I don't want to but you know unless I'm highly motivated
00:32:01
so so you might say this person has ADD how do we know because he Tunes out a lot
00:32:07
why is it doing a lot this is because it turns out a lot so so first
00:32:14
of all we have to understand that our understanding of normal and what's outside the normal they don't doesn't
00:32:19
explain anything they can they can describe if you
00:32:24
describe my mental functioning as that of somebody who's got an automatic tendency to tune out you'd be accurate
00:32:31
so the description it's helpful as an explanation as to why this person isn't behaving quote unquote
00:32:38
normally it doesn't explain anything not if you understood that I spent my infancy
00:32:45
under very difficult circumstances where I was very stressed because of all the stuff I already talked about and that
00:32:52
tuning out was a normal response to to those circumstances as a way of
00:32:58
protecting myself from the stress of it all and this is happening when my brain was developing
00:33:03
then you understand there's nothing abnormal about by tuning out in fact it is the normal response to a set of
00:33:10
abnormal circumstances so that's the first point and I could go through the same kind of dialectic with
00:33:18
all manner of physical and mental diseases by the way so-called the
00:33:24
second point is why do you say so-called um
00:33:30
well look the disease model is as long as we understand it's a model
00:33:36
it's okay and we think it describes reality fully it doesn't so
00:33:43
um for example um because you talk about mental
00:33:50
illnesses and we're assuming that there's a kind of definite pathology there just as in
00:33:57
rheumatoid arthritis you can describe the inflammation of the joints and the blood levels of certain antibodies
00:34:03
being abnormal and hormonal levels being disturbed you know
00:34:13
we're making the same assumption in mental illness there's no such evidence in mental illness there's no
00:34:18
physiological parameters that you can say somebody's got mental illness there's just been a study a few months
00:34:24
ago of thousands of band scans of people with mental illness diagnosis
00:34:30
there's nothing diagnostic about them about the brain scans it's not like I can take an x-ray of a lung and say that
00:34:36
this is this lung is got what we call consolidation or or fluid indicating
00:34:42
inflammation there's nothing like that and mental diagnosis there's no blood test you can
00:34:48
do and so on so illness is a is is a is a model I mean it might
00:34:56
yeah somebody's really depressed even suicidal perhaps and they might
00:35:01
need pharmacological Intervention which will really save their lives that may be true
00:35:08
and in that sense you may say that they're ill as long as we realize that this is a construct that we're applying here but
00:35:15
there is no actual measurement of that that's at all similar to what we call
00:35:21
physical disease but even a physical disease we make certain assumptions
00:35:27
um for example somebody has rheumatoid arthritis no
00:35:32
that nothing wrong with that statement on the face of it but there's an assumption there
00:35:38
the assumption is that there's this thing called rheumatoid arthritis and there's this person called me and
00:35:45
this person has this thing no you know the example I often give here's my cell phone I'm holding it in my head I have a
00:35:51
cell phone it's not part of me it says nothing about me it just it's a discrete object its nature doesn't depend on my
00:35:58
nature nothing is that true about rheumatoid arthritis
00:36:04
or is it more true to say as I found out that this is a condition that shows up in people with certain life experiences
00:36:12
and certain ways of functioning in the world and that because of the science
00:36:17
document the unity of mind and body and the impossibility of separating the activity
00:36:23
or emotional apparatus from seeing our immune system because it's all one organismic unit
00:36:30
therefore the when the immune system turns against the body as it does in rheumatoid arthritis damage system
00:36:36
actually attacks the body is that a thing that's got a life of its
00:36:41
own or is it a process that's happening inside that person because of certain aspects of their lives
00:36:47
now if I say it's a thing that happens to you then that thing has got a life of its own and that's why most doctors see
00:36:54
it they see somebody with rheumatoid arthritis they say okay this is the kind you've got this is what's going to happen this is this is the only thing we
00:37:00
can do is this is to mitigate the symptoms I find that's not true I find that the
00:37:06
rumor that by them not just I find it the science finds it that rheumatoid arthritis is very much related to stress
00:37:13
and Trauma and the more stress there is the more likely it is to flare up and if people deal with that stress if they
00:37:20
know how to prevent it their illness abates which means that it's not a thing that's
00:37:25
separate it's a process that happens inside them this is a subtle concept though I'm wondering if I'm explaining it clearly
00:37:32
no you are and it's really making me question how much we misunderstand the relationship between the mind and the
00:37:38
immune system yeah because that's the real that's the important connection to understand if you if you
00:37:44
are to accept all the things you've just said yeah which we don't we don't understand I don't think typically we understand that my mind and my immune
00:37:51
system have such a close relationship well the the there's a whole new science
00:37:56
that studies those relationships it's called psychoneuraminology which studies the interlinked unity of the emotional
00:38:03
apparatus of our brain and body with the immune system with the nervous system and with the hormonal apparatus I mean
00:38:10
it's just so obvious I could change your hormonal state in this fifth second right now without
00:38:16
touching you just by screaming at you and threatening you that would necessarily create a change I mean it's
00:38:22
just clear their emotions are inseparable you know and and the other funny thing is well several funny things
00:38:29
how do we treat most conditions in Medicine by the way inflammations if you go to a dermatologist with the infinite
00:38:35
skin if you go to a rheumatologist with inflamed joints you should go to a gastroenterologist with inflamed
00:38:41
intestines if you go to a respirologist with inflamed lungs if you go to a
00:38:48
neurologist with the inflamed nervous system is in multiple sclerosis they're going to give you steroids
00:38:55
the steadily inflammation the water steroids they are stress hormones
00:39:00
and you would think that as Physicians we would ask ourselves gosh we're treating everything with stress hormones
00:39:06
the stress maybe have something to do with this condition then when you look at the scientific literature yes yes and yes so the
00:39:16
um there's a Great Canadian physician actually United by Queen Victoria one of the great medical teachers of all kinds
00:39:22
Sir William Osler and he said in 1890 that rheumatoid aristritis is a stressed during disease
00:39:28
the the French uh neurologist Jean Matan charcoal who first described multiple sclerosis he said this is a stress
00:39:36
driven condition and since then there's been so much research so
00:39:42
what I'm saying is that this this way of looking at what we call disease is a process
00:39:49
is so much more accurate scientifically actually and understanding the Mind Body unity and then you know naturally when
00:39:55
people are traumatized that has a huge impact on their physiology their psychological trauma is a huge impact on
00:40:01
their physiology it's just science but its science that's not taught to Medical teach medical uh doctors it's
00:40:08
just for some strange reason well the average physician never hears a single
00:40:13
lecture about say trauma and his relationship to illness and yet the studies internationally thousands of
00:40:19
them showing those relationships so there's this strange gap between
00:40:25
science and and medical practice but it would it would change medical practice for the better
00:40:31
because what would happen if you went to a physician and and you presented with your symptom and they'd say okay look
00:40:38
we'll give you such as medication to deal with your symptoms and then let's look at your life
00:40:43
in the context that you live it and see how that the stresses that you may be taking on the traumas you may be
00:40:49
carrying might be affecting the physiology of your body no they don't have to be all trauma
00:40:56
therapists to do that they just have to raise the question and they start and then to begin the
00:41:01
inquiry that'll make a huge change to that person's life and to their disease process
00:41:07
and clearly to their kids lives as well because I remember reading in your book about the uh the study with the rats
00:41:13
yeah um and how they could you tell me about that study how the stress study with the rats and how the parents
00:41:19
um treatment of a child impacted their stress response and then also they passed that on which I thought
00:41:25
was yeah that was a very interesting study it was done in Canada um at McGill University
00:41:31
um I think maybe something in the last 20 years early 2000s I think and they looked at her mother rats
00:41:39
interacted with their infants their newborns and some and this is a process
00:41:44
called grooming in which the mother rad licks the infant earned apparent very uh perennial a
00:41:52
perineal area you know in the genitalia this is shortly after birth this mother rats you start licking their infants
00:41:59
some other rest did it in a more efficient and caring kind of way than other mother rats
00:42:05
those that had the better kind of caring the better kind of grooming go to be
00:42:11
calmer and responded to stress in more functional ways than those little rats
00:42:18
who as neonates had not been given that same kind of
00:42:23
efficient and quite as caring grooming
00:42:29
foreign the brains of those adult rats who had
00:42:35
been groomed one way or the other as infants the stressed apparatus was different certain receptors for the
00:42:41
stress hormones so one of them could call themselves more easily than the other what was interesting is you might say
00:42:47
well that she's genetic the calmer mothers passed on their genes to the infants no they didn't because if you
00:42:54
took the infants of mothers who groomed beautifully and put them with mothers who didn't and conversely it took the
00:43:00
infant Rats of mothers who didn't groom so well but you put them with mothers who did
00:43:08
they change it changed the brain for the adult it changed the brain it changed
00:43:13
the genetic functioning not the genes okay but the genetic functioning this is called epigenetics how genes are turned
00:43:19
on and off by the environment and then those mother and those rats who are going well as infants doesn't matter
00:43:27
what the original mother was but those are actually going well they went on to groom their infants
00:43:33
in exactly the way they had been groomed so this is how we passed on our parenting stuff from one generation to the next both
00:43:41
behaviorally but also through the turning on or off of certain genes
00:43:46
so in essence the how nurturing our parents were has a big impact on our own ability to handle stress positively or
00:43:53
negatively oh absolutely and then we passed that down I stressed up answer how they reacted to her own stress as
00:44:00
infants you know that has everything to do with her brains handle stress later on
00:44:05
and so some people just don't handle stress very well they don't handle a frustration very well you should have seen me this morning at
00:44:12
the hotel when the swimming pool didn't open in time you know but I I was a lot better than it might
00:44:18
have been years ago you know uh but yeah our stress responses are very much programmed by our early uh developmental
00:44:25
experiences speaking about our early experience is the first word in the sort of subtitle
00:44:30
of your book is the word trauma um it's a word that I've I've talked about a lot on this podcast and I've you
00:44:36
know I've had a lot of people here that have opened up about their traumas how do you define trauma I know Society has defined it in its own way but how do you
00:44:42
define it the word I I Define it very specifically
00:44:47
um it's not something bad that happens to you it's not some no it's not that you know I went to this movie last night
00:44:54
and I was traumatized no you weren't you were just sad or you were had some emotional pain but you weren't
00:44:59
traumatized trauma means a wound that's the literal meaning of the word it's a Greek word for wounding so trauma is a
00:45:06
psychological wound that you sustain and um it behaves like a wound so on the
00:45:12
one hand everyone if it's very raw if you touch it it just really hurts so if I have a
00:45:18
wound around not being wanted then or the belief that I'm not
00:45:25
then decades later if anything reminds me of that it hurts as much as it did
00:45:30
when I originally incured the wound so in in one sense trauma is an unhealed wound that touched we get triggered
00:45:37
that's what triggering means by the way some old wound gets activated or touched and the other thing that happens to
00:45:43
wounds is that they scar over and Scar Tissue has certain characteristics it's
00:45:49
thick it has no nerve ending so there's no feeling in it so people traumatize disconnected from their feelings
00:45:56
um Sky tissue is rigid it's not flexible so we lose kind of response flexibility so when something happens we tend to
00:46:04
react in typical stereotypical predictable dysfunctional ways because of the
00:46:09
rigidity and Scar Tissue doesn't grow like healthy flesh so people are
00:46:15
traumatized tend to be stuck in emotional states that characterized
00:46:20
their development when they were traumatized so when somebody says to you don't miss such a baby uh
00:46:27
doesn't sound very pleasant but there's some truth to it it means that you're probably reacting according to the lines
00:46:34
of someone that you sustained as an infant and now you're you're reacting as if that wound was happening all over
00:46:39
again this is what one of my friends in the trauma World Peter Levine calls the attorney of the past
00:46:46
so something happens in the present and we react
00:46:51
as if we're back there in the past when this first happened and we're not in the present moment at
00:46:56
all and I was I was trying to figure out how many people um as a percentage of the population
00:47:01
have a have trauma but then I I you know I read this stat with 60 of adults um say that
00:47:08
they've had sort of a traumatic early upbringing or whatever or traumatic events from their childhood but then I thought maybe everybody has trauma
00:47:15
it depends on um how we understand trauma so if we understand trauma is
00:47:20
only the really terrible things that happen to people which do happen to people you know in the book I talked
00:47:26
about a British friend of mine but not living in Canada um they are a yoga teacher and a
00:47:33
meditation teacher and a psychologist and an artist actually and they grew up
00:47:39
in some orphanage here in Britain where they were racially taunted every every morning you know words that are in the
00:47:46
book by her permission which I'm not going to cite here publicly and that gave her a sense of deficient a
00:47:52
sense of self that I'm just not good enough that I don't belong and so on there's those obvious traumas or the
00:47:57
obvious trauma of being sexually abused so men who are sexually abused according to Canadian study have tripled the rate
00:48:04
of heart attacks as adults you know and all kinds of physiological reasons well that should be the case so there's those
00:48:12
self-evident Lord big tea traumas that we call Big tea terminal Cat TV the
00:48:18
capital T trauma with the capital T there's a certain percentage of the population much larger than we think
00:48:24
subject to that if you include um All the known factors such as
00:48:29
physical sexual or emotional abuse spanking by the way has not been shown
00:48:34
to be as traumatic as harsher forms of physical abuse spanking which is still
00:48:40
recommended by so-called experts who should be named remain unnamed for the
00:48:45
moment uh the death of a parent the violence in a Family Violence parental
00:48:51
violence against each other a parent being jailed depending mentally ill
00:48:57
did I say apparent being addicted a rancor's divorce these are the identified Big traumas Big T traumas no
00:49:03
not to mention poverty not to mention extreme inequality war and so on
00:49:10
but then if you remember that trauma is not what happens to you but what happens inside
00:49:16
you this is the wound people can be wounded not just by bad things happening to them
00:49:22
but small children can be wounded in loving families
00:49:27
where they don't get their knees met I mean that's obvious in the physical sense if a child doesn't get proper
00:49:34
nutrition their body will suffer their mind will suffer
00:49:40
we're also creatures with the emotional needs as important as our physical needs so when the child's emotional needs are
00:49:46
not met that child is wounded and that's what we call small tea trauma which is not the big ticket events such as I
00:49:53
described but just the child's need to be loved unconditionally to be held when
00:49:58
distressed to be responded to to be seen to be heard to be allowed their full
00:50:05
range of emotion without them being stamped on in the name of so-called discipline
00:50:11
[Music] um the right to play creatively spontaneously out there in nature not
00:50:19
with these damn digital the gadgets that subvert and hijacked the child's
00:50:24
imagination but spontaneous Play That's essential for band development
00:50:30
so what I'm saying is that when these needs are not for the unconditional loving attachment
00:50:35
relationship when those needs are frustrated children are also hurt and I call that trauma as well because it
00:50:41
shows up later in life as the impact of painful wounds so drama in this Society for all kinds
00:50:49
of reasons is far more common than we imagined from sitting here and speaking to I don't know somewhere over 100
00:50:55
different people that come from all walks of life but specifically people that are successful in their Industries and you talked about you know
00:51:02
how um an anomalous early upbringing can create sort of abnormality in an adult a
00:51:08
lot of the people I sit here are successful because of some kind of abnormality or at least their interpretation of some kind of early
00:51:15
event that caused them to have some sort of abnormal belief about themselves that they're not enough so they become a
00:51:20
billionaire or a gold medalist or whatever it might be yeah one of the things that I thought I could predict is
00:51:26
I thought I could if they told me I thought after doing 100 episodes if they told me the traumatic event they'd been
00:51:31
through I could predict the the outcome in them but there's a disconnect there
00:51:37
because you know I'd sit here with a guest who went through one of your tall um capital T traumas like domestic
00:51:43
violence and one of them might become incredibly angry yeah and one of them
00:51:49
might become the most peaceful loving person I've ever met yeah and that taught me that there's this thing in
00:51:55
between the event which is what you call interpretation yeah and I found that really I found that as that kind of
00:52:01
makes it really difficult to diagnose well no look so the two examples you gave um
00:52:07
that really peaceful person may be really peaceful for genuinely good
00:52:12
reasons such as they've found the milk of human love flowing through their veins and they've had some spiritual
00:52:18
reconciliation with the world where they may have lit genuinely learned compassion for themselves and others but
00:52:24
they could also be very nice and peaceful because they're suppressing their healthy anger because they're actually sitting on
00:52:31
their rage unconsciously which is going to show up in a form of some kind of Health manifestation I guarantee you
00:52:37
later on so you can't tell from the outside without asking some questions uh or I
00:52:44
can give you the example of a Donald Trump who had a really traumatic childhood I mean
00:52:50
his father was a this as described by his psychologist niece Mary Trump his
00:52:56
father Trump's father who is Mary's grandfather
00:53:01
was a psychopath and who really demeaned and harshly
00:53:07
treated their children so Trump decides unconsciously
00:53:12
that by the way I'm not talking about his policies here I'm not this is not a political debate and in the book I point
00:53:18
out that his opponent was also traumatized uh Hillary Clinton said this is this is a uh ecumenical uh view of
00:53:25
trauma and politics and not choosing sides I'm just saying that you can see his trauma in every moment he opens his
00:53:31
mouth his grandiosities need to make himself bigger more powerful aggressive and eat
00:53:36
as much as said in his autobiography that the world is a horrible place a doggy dog place where everybody was
00:53:42
after you everybody wants your wife and your house and your wealth and this is your friends
00:53:48
never mind your enemies but that's the world he lives in though that world that he lives in reflects his childhood home
00:53:54
he developed that world you he came to it honestly you might say because that's the world that he lived
00:53:59
in and he gets to be really successful in this crazy world
00:54:05
you know financially although people question you know was he really as big a
00:54:10
success as he says he was but he certainly was successful politically if by success you mean the attainment of
00:54:16
power his brother on the other hand Mary Trump's father Trump's niece's father
00:54:24
drag himself to death and they were both responses to the same
00:54:29
you can never say it's exactly the same for two kids but there was that there was a toxic home environment one ends up
00:54:36
dead as an alcoholic the other ends up at the Pinnacle of power
00:54:42
um and when I look at them both I see dysfunction there significant
00:54:48
dysfunction here so one of the one of those the consequences of that early upbringing
00:54:53
was it materialized itself as sort of addiction and the other got the same psychological
00:54:59
reinforcement or the thing missing from power and work and money
00:55:05
Donald Trump learned that the way to survive is to be aggressive and harsh and competitive and to get the other
00:55:10
before they get to you which is a faithful reproduction of his early childhood experiences so for him
00:55:17
these were not choices so much as survival techniques and
00:55:25
uh when they talk about his lying well
00:55:31
I don't know when he's lying or when he's not but my sense is that often he actually believes what he's saying and
00:55:38
actually he's a biographer or the person who co-wrote his
00:55:44
cause the autobiographical the art of the deal this this writer says that he's
00:55:49
never met anybody who is so capable of believing something that's not true to be true if he wants it to be true
00:55:56
now that's the mark of a traumatized child you know a denial of reality
00:56:02
it is an inauguration there was a certain number of people that came today
00:56:07
he couldn't stand it that there weren't as many people there as came to Barack
00:56:12
Obama's inauguration they were much smaller number of people there he created this reality where many more
00:56:19
people came to his inauguration now what age behavior is that
00:56:24
that's a four-year-old but more kids came to his party than my party that can't be true
00:56:30
but that's Donald's way of dealing with reality it's not a moral failing as such that's
00:56:37
how he survived and these survival mechanisms for them get to form our
00:56:42
personalities and again in this world sometimes they pay off
00:56:49
in certain ways is that is that often the case with pathological lies they've learned to lie
00:56:56
as a way to survive oh absolutely the the German philosopher writer Nichi Friedrich Nietzsche said people lie
00:57:02
their way out of reality who have been hurt by reality and so I've lied you know like when I
00:57:10
had my shopping addiction I relied Every Day to my wife you know and even afterwards when she
00:57:18
tried when she stopped trying to change my behavior I said just tell me
00:57:24
if you're going to show up you're going to spend another thousand dollars on music just tell me
00:57:30
I still couldn't because I was so ashamed of it and so the lying
00:57:37
became like a a way of survival for me defense against reality it's a defense against reality
00:57:43
and is the defense against um being judged you know well that says something about
00:57:49
my childhood you know nobody's born a liar as we say in this book there are congenial Liars but there are no
00:57:56
congenital Liars no one day old baby tells any lies no wonder your baby
00:58:01
pretends anything if we end up pretending in any way at all to the extent that we do it's because we have
00:58:07
to learn that's what we must do to survive you said something at the start when I
00:58:13
gave the example that I have this I sat with a guest here who went through domestic abuse yeah and they are the
00:58:19
calmest person and then you said well maybe they're suppressing it and in fact the minute you said that it reminded me
00:58:25
of something they said which is they they said to me on this podcast that they had um angry outbursts all the time
00:58:32
so sometimes their child will come up to them yeah um and want to play when they're working
00:58:38
and they'll snap yeah and they're trying to they're trying to deal with that yeah that's what I meant that they're sitting
00:58:43
on this um creator of volcanic crater of anger
00:58:49
which sometimes bursts out of them so their their demeanor is like a really
00:58:55
developed suppressed um way of handling rage
00:59:01
which rage when they were children had they expressed would have got them into
00:59:07
more trouble so suppressing it repressing it became their survival it's all about
00:59:13
survival you see so it became their survival mechanism no that person as long as they keep it that
00:59:20
way they're at risk their risk for mental health diagnosis
00:59:27
like depression because what what is depression it means you're pushing something down that's
00:59:32
what it means what to be pushed down our natural emotions why do we push them
00:59:37
down because we have to to survive so that that person I don't know I can't prognosticate what's going to happen to
00:59:44
them but if they don't work it out in general they're at risk for some kind of mental
00:59:50
or physical manifestation that's my experience quick one some of you may know we've got a brand new sponsor on this podcast
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let me know how you get on talked about expressing one's emotions and something you've talked about in this book but
01:01:49
also previously is this idea that there is such a thing as healthy anger yeah um it's one of the seven A's of your of
01:01:54
healing as you say the first being the topic a topic we've talked about already which is acceptance yeah
01:02:01
um the next being awareness well awareness I wish we had put into this book but we didn't not into this book uh
01:02:08
in this book I booked Four A's and uh I left that awareness and that was an Omission on my part really yeah it was
01:02:15
I'm sorry but it was so in the book you have authenticity anger acceptance
01:02:22
an agency yeah and yeah acceptance yeah so awareness you've said before before
01:02:28
this book that awareness is the starting point yeah I found that to be so true in my life
01:02:33
but it's not very easy I feel like awareness is a is a luxury or a privilege that is very hard fought yeah
01:02:39
because you're guessing yeah you're guessing based on pattern recognition so I was guessing 25 years old I can't get
01:02:45
into relationship any time a girl comes near me yeah even if I've pursued her I run off and to figure out why I was
01:02:52
doing that to even identify the behavior pattern and go that's not helpful that's not going to lead me to feeling whole
01:02:57
yeah um where does that come from took 25 years and a lot of like introspection
01:03:03
but but most people they're living unaware of the puppet master of trauma
01:03:09
that is driving their life that's a really good analogy the trauma really is like um a puppet master behind the
01:03:15
scenes in the unconscious pulling your strings and you're not aware of it you know do you remember Pinocchio yeah so
01:03:22
remember what Pinocchio says at the end the way when he finally becomes a real boy yeah yeah he says how foolish I was
01:03:29
when I was a puppet and to the extent that we're being activated by these
01:03:37
unconscious strings that are traumas pulling behind the scenes and reacting in our lives and we think
01:03:44
we're autonomous free beings but we're actually being controlled by something in the past that we haven't worked out
01:03:49
we're puppets reality puppets there's not there's not much freedom in
01:03:54
that there's no there's no freedom in it at all so I mean I suppose the opposite of
01:04:01
trauma if you want to revisit that question is is liberation interesting
01:04:08
Liberation and by reconnection by reconnection of Liberation from the from
01:04:14
the inexorable power of the unconscious which is like cutting the strings in a way kind of brings me to there's kind of
01:04:20
two ways to I want to go with that but the first question I have about about trauma and the puppet master analogy is
01:04:25
do we ever do we ever really cut the strings or do we just kind of learn to pull against them when they try and tell
01:04:32
us to do something with more Force then they're exerting in the opposite direction um
01:04:37
that doesn't work very well pushing against it because they're still reactive you're still not in charge
01:04:43
you're just in automatic resistance mode to something there's no freedom in that either you know so yeah
01:04:51
um but awareness that you mentioned is huge because weren't you aware that there's
01:04:58
this see the thing about these strings may not Fray right away but once you wear that ah
01:05:06
this reaction of mine it's not about what's going on right now there's something old being activated
01:05:12
here that awareness alone weakens the it slackens the strings a bit no you know
01:05:17
they no longer is taught they're no longer is automatically um capable of pulling on you
01:05:25
so it does have to be begin with awareness of them ultimately
01:05:31
if we realize that this Puppet Master is just a desperate little person trying to get you to survive the only way he she
01:05:39
they knew how when you were small when they were small if you make friends with it but we believe it of its duties
01:05:46
saying thanks very much but I can handle it now it eventually Becomes Her friend rather
01:05:53
than sort of our Master you know you know on that first step of just acknowledging just understanding that
01:05:59
there is a puppet master they're controlling us and exactly which strings that Puppet Master is is pulling in our
01:06:06
lives how does one go about awareness the process of awareness is that I mean is it introspection keeping
01:06:13
a diary therapy what is it well all that I mean it all or any but even when you ask how you go about it
01:06:20
what is the it well for you to say how to go about it you already must have some degree of awareness if you didn't
01:06:26
you wouldn't even be asking the question so that's the very first step of realizing that there's something here
01:06:32
to work on there's something here to work through it does not need to be the
01:06:37
way it is that already is the biggest step the Buddha said that that to recognize the source of your suffering
01:06:44
is the first step towards relieving the suffering and so as soon as you ask how you go about it you've already taken a
01:06:50
huge step because a lot of people don't even know that there's an it they just think this is a reality that
01:06:56
this is life so we're realizing that this it doesn't have to be the way it is
01:07:01
that's already a huge step now beyond that yoga meditation
01:07:08
um nature um therapy of all kinds Bodywork
01:07:14
of all kinds like like somatic experiencing or um or um
01:07:22
cranial sacral treatments or even massage therapy it's incredible what can
01:07:28
be revealed just through body work like that then all kinds of forms of therapy the ones I teach the ones other people
01:07:34
teach journaling um certain exercises in this book that
01:07:41
we recommend like just ask yourself will you have trouble saying no in life to things you don't really want to do and
01:07:47
working that through on a regular basis so there's lots of ways once you open the door you know
01:07:53
I have a chapter on psychedelics here which is a again it's not like a Panacea or for
01:07:59
everyone but surely it's a helpful modality for a lot of people so um some people may actually benefit
01:08:06
from taking pharmaceutical medications if their situation is dire enough
01:08:12
but not as the final answer but as a way of getting respite that allowed them to go to work on the real issues that cause
01:08:18
them to be depressed or anxious or tuning out you know so any
01:08:25
and all of these things other people don't even want to open those doors though because they there's so much pain
01:08:30
associated with maybe going back or revisiting an early experience that they just think it's better keep the doors
01:08:36
shut yeah um and get get to tomorrow that's true
01:08:41
um to which I have two answers one is it's true it's painful
01:08:47
um because all the pain you didn't want to feel and you've been running away from through your compensatory behaviors
01:08:53
like like your addictions are nothing but an attempt to escape from Pain that's all they are that's not you know they're not a disease they're not a
01:09:00
genetic whatever it is addictions are very simply an attempt to escape pain
01:09:05
which could create more pain but that's what they are and so we get addicted to work to sex to
01:09:13
pornography the gambling to the internet to shopping to eating to power on that point I find it so fast that you that
01:09:19
when you mentioned in your previous book that you know you classify things like
01:09:24
food yeah social media yeah shopping yeah porn and work as types of addiction
01:09:31
that was uh that in and of itself was a bit of a revelation for me because I never saw work as an addiction the
01:09:37
minute you said it was and I kind of link it to you know heroin addiction which is
01:09:43
providing a you know a certain psychological physiological um benefit to me yeah temporarily
01:09:49
temporarily yeah of course it's a [ __ ] addiction of course work is an addiction because they have that addiction well it can be an addiction
01:09:56
yeah or it can also be sacred it can also be fulfilling in the manifestation of your creative urges but it's so it's
01:10:02
not the but it's strange to say not that I
01:10:08
recommend it but it's possible even to use heroin in a non-addictive way I don't personally get it and I would
01:10:14
never want to but the addiction is never in the Behavior itself it's in your
01:10:19
relationship to the behavior so if the particular activity gives you temporary
01:10:25
relief or pleasure and therefore you crave it but it causes harm in the long term and
01:10:30
you can't give it up you've got an addiction and I don't care what the activity is could be drugs and all the
01:10:36
other things that we mentioned and and and it employs the same brain Circus by the way the workaholic is after the same
01:10:42
brain chemical that the cocaine addict is after dopamine you know and people can be even addicted
01:10:50
to their own stress hormones like adrenaline the so-called Adrenaline Junkies there's such a thing you know so
01:10:55
almost anything can be addictive if it serves the purpose of temporarily easing some distress but causing harm in the
01:11:02
long term is is escapism the right word to use then for it if we're because it it doesn't sound as much like
01:11:08
we're escaping rather than we are seeking something I'm seeking relief
01:11:14
from a certain mental state like like I just gave you a definition of
01:11:20
addiction so I think I don't know what addictions you've had what happened or haven't besides you know but what did
01:11:27
that do for you temporarily um and give you something made me feel
01:11:35
like I was valid and I was pursuing a sense of accomplishment and validation
01:11:41
and a good sense of worth worth yeah it was worthy yeah no is that something that people need or not
01:11:46
yes yeah that's a good thing but the real question is why did you ever get the idea that you
01:11:53
didn't have the words why did I get the I didn't have the word that's what trauma comes because I was called the n-word when I was yeah eight by a kid in
01:11:59
school exactly and then I know myself because your mother screamed at your father yeah yeah you know and and so all
01:12:06
that together and so and that's emotionally painful like what's it feel like to be not to have a
01:12:13
sense of word that's painful and so that's why my Mantra is don't ask why the addiction that's why the pain
01:12:19
and if you understand why the pain you have to look at that person's life and what the benefit of the addiction is
01:12:26
that's something that you say in the previous book that I found is it's a flipping of narrative where you say we
01:12:32
should be asking what the benefit of the addiction is well and like in your case yeah it gives me a sense of worth well okay
01:12:38
I'll say to you if you come to me because you say like I'm broke or like it's causing some harm in my life it's
01:12:44
keeping keeping me from Intimate Relationships that makes me stressed and tired whatever it is
01:12:50
that's the first thing I would ask you for you of you is what is it doing for you and you say a sense of word and I'd
01:12:55
say you know what you deserve to have a sense of birth I
01:13:02
totally understand why you'd want to engage in an activity that gives it to you
01:13:08
but given that it's causing you harm let's look at why you don't have a sense of worth and how else you might develop
01:13:14
it that isn't harmful to you you know so but you you start with what's right
01:13:20
about it what are you looking for and what you're looking for is always valid
01:13:27
and how one would go about how would one go about getting that sense of worth and asking for a friend
01:13:34
well um that would be a matter of um some form of work people who meditate
01:13:41
often deal with that issue through the meditation not always certainly therapy
01:13:48
you know um by recognizing also that what you're
01:13:54
doing to get a sense of where it doesn't really do it for you just by getting honest about it you know
01:14:00
so there's all kinds of ways but the first step is the recognition that's the first step that you say is uh
01:14:06
missing missing from the book which is that sort of awareness the next thing which I've been it's been really front of mind in my life recently because I've
01:14:12
been asked this a few times on stage and I've been trying to find the words to really um articulate the importance of it is
01:14:18
and this is one of your forays in this book about how to heal is authenticity yeah really interesting concept because
01:14:24
I've been trying to articulate why the fact that I've just shared all this stuff with you yeah and the fact that I
01:14:29
do this every week yeah I'm getting closer and closer to that sort of authentic self where there's really the mask is kind of dropping on me why
01:14:36
that's been so healing for me why is authenticity such a good way an important way for us to heal
01:14:42
it's much more than the way for us to heal it's actually who we are like what you're actually asking is why is it
01:14:47
important for a creature to be true to its own nature because that's what we're meant to do we're
01:14:53
meant to be here as ourselves you know and and and when we nod ourselves because we had to abandon
01:15:00
ourselves or betray ourselves disconnect from ourselves in order to survive
01:15:06
um we lost connections with our essence and uh
01:15:12
I mean how does it feel to be a successful CEO and you know more
01:15:20
than realizing your Financial dreams but to be a workaholic and and and and
01:15:26
not to be available to yourself in areas of your life that really matter to you
01:15:32
as opposed to being honest about your stuff sharing with other people uh dropping
01:15:39
the veil dropping the I mean to answer your question what does it
01:15:45
feel like I mean can you sense the difference in your body feels lighter well yeah expansive exactly well that's
01:15:53
the answer yeah that's why it's so important so many of us so many of us um
01:15:59
live in authentic lives because as you said it's it's because either
01:16:04
because from an early age we were escaping um some kind of you know reality in
01:16:09
order to help us to survive or then the other thing that happens a bit later on in life is we develop an identity which
01:16:14
becomes a career which becomes a Social Circle which becomes a prison of um our inauthentic selves we get
01:16:22
trapped in there you know because I was good at something or because I you know I felt accepted in this job as a lawyer
01:16:29
so I am now living inauthentically as this robot in this prison
01:16:34
um and it's a it's a there's often a real perception of risk
01:16:41
and loss in danger of trying to get out of that prison and trying to get close to our authentic
01:16:47
selves we feel like we'll lose our friendship Circle we'll feel like we'll we'll let our parents down he wanted us
01:16:53
to become a lawyer you know all of these things I guess you see that a lot in your in
01:16:58
your work well there is that risk and but here's the issue as a child you had
01:17:04
no choice but to go for acceptance and being approved of and
01:17:10
being received um under any under any conditions no matter what you had to give up of your
01:17:16
authenticity you had to give up your authenticity you had no choice in the matter at a certain point as adults we get we
01:17:23
learn that this lack of authenticity this this connection from ourselves this separation from our gut feelings
01:17:30
um is costing us it's costing us in terms of our physical health our our Peace of Mind our relationship our
01:17:37
mental health and so on you'll never be as vulnerable again as
01:17:44
you were as when you were a child you never be as helpless as dependent as
01:17:49
um resourceless no it's true that if you develop the
01:17:54
whole set of relationships based on your authentic inauthentic Persona some people
01:18:01
in your life may not like it if you gradually move towards authenticity they
01:18:07
may not like it it's not what they wanted from you you're going to find out who your friends are you're really gonna fight because your
01:18:13
real friends will say oh I'm so happy for you we were waiting for this other fans will
01:18:18
say uh that's not what I signed up for you know the question is you still have to decide
01:18:25
as an infant as a young child I had no agency in the choice of you know authenticity
01:18:31
and attachment no I do which one do you want to go with what is the cost of being an authentic I can't
01:18:38
make that decision for anybody else nobody can make that decision for anybody else but most people will find
01:18:44
that choosing authenticity as benefits Way Beyond whatever they might lose that's what I find
01:18:51
and you said the word their agency which is the second of the Four A's yeah on how to heal now agency when when I read
01:18:57
that word I I hear like personal responsibility taking personal responsibility yeah over my life exactly
01:19:02
which also means not letting you know you don't use try you don't wear trauma
01:19:07
as a badge you know or you don't use it as a get out of jail pass in a game of Monopoly oh I was traumatized so I can't
01:19:14
I can't be any other way you know I mean giving all the power to the Puppet Master yeah yeah exactly
01:19:21
so agency means actually I take the responsibility not for what happened to me
01:19:29
not even how I interpreted the world as a result going backwards but how I interpret the world from now on do I
01:19:35
still want to interpret the world and my role in it based on some decision I made when I was a one-year-old that's where
01:19:41
agency comes in agency also means that if I have any kind of dysfunction or illness it's
01:19:48
not just that I put my hands in the hands of a put my my faith in the hands of a physician or a Healer but I I have
01:19:56
I make the decisions I listen to your advice I accept some I don't accept some but I'm the one who's making the
01:20:02
decisions along with what seems right to me to agency
01:20:09
first thing in your in your work throughout your work you use alliteration as a lot as a way to kind of summarize and make ideas really
01:20:17
memorable it really helps it's an old trick it's a trick it's a writing trick right well it
01:20:22
also works you know before ways or uh before almost but I don't I don't know
01:20:28
what to say you know what I'm I'm denigrating my work if I say it's a trick no it's just something just the way things occur to me that's all it is
01:20:36
one of the one of the um alliteration devices you use is also relates to limiting beliefs and how we can undo
01:20:42
self-limiting beliefs with the five R's yeah relabel reattribute refocus re re
01:20:49
value and recreate yeah now from what I understood of those relabeling is
01:20:58
the story and the belief that is limiting to us um well it taste something like um
01:21:05
eurocologist yeah I need to go to work I need to do this work really building as
01:21:11
I don't need to do this work I just have a belief that I need to do this work okay so that real building just takes a
01:21:18
degree of separation from the behavior and and actually it's true it's
01:21:23
not that you need to do all the circuits you have this belief so the relay building just says it for what it is by
01:21:29
the way I have to acknowledge that I these these five R's only one in his
01:21:35
mind I stole the other four from a psychiatrist just I I mentioned that in
01:21:40
the book but I find it very helpful technique but the it was developed for
01:21:45
people with obsessively compulsive Tendencies so the relabel is not that I have to wash my hands 100 times I just
01:21:51
have a belief that I have to wash my hand a lot of times that's the context in which it was developed I think it works for all kinds of all kinds of
01:21:58
Dynamics and then if I and then so I've re-labeled it I don't have to work to feel a sense of
01:22:04
validation but I have a belief that I do that's right and then I reattribute it which is the second R which means I get
01:22:11
clear on where it's come from yeah so let's say you have to believe that you're not worth it it's not too then
01:22:18
I'm not worth it I just never believed that I'm not worth it okay or it may not be too then I'm not
01:22:24
worth it but I do have a belief that I'm not worth it re-um attribute means this
01:22:29
is an old brain circuit sending me an old message it's got nothing to do with reality it has to do with some
01:22:35
experience that I had a long time ago that's to be attribute you just say where is it actually coming from there's
01:22:41
a circuit in your brain that's wired with the message you're not worth it and it's going to
01:22:46
keep repeating that message well you say okay that's where it's coming from until I refocus which is the photo yeah so
01:22:53
refocus is just to give yourself some space so if you ever say uh I need to go
01:22:59
to work uh okay refocus means well for five minutes maybe in five minutes I'll go to work
01:23:05
but five minutes I won't I'm gonna put on some piece of music or go for a walk
01:23:11
or meditate or whatever so you refocus you put the attention somewhere else
01:23:17
right just just so that to prove to yourself but you actually have some agency over your brain
01:23:23
if only for five minutes if you have this belief that I'm not worth it
01:23:28
well you can go back to it in five minutes if you want just for five minutes though consider all the ways
01:23:34
they've made a contribution consider all the ways that people have acknowledged your
01:23:39
benign the presence in their lives the times that people uh have told you that they've loved you or that you told
01:23:46
somebody else just for five minutes hang up with that five minutes later you want to go back to this belief that or if you
01:23:52
can't help going back to this belief that you know I said well that's okay but at least create some space it's all
01:23:57
about creating space between yourself and these beliefs or these behaviors
01:24:02
and in that five minutes you're basically accepting new evidence to be true or you're proving that other evidence is true I didn't need to go and
01:24:08
work well you're also proving that you don't have to spend all your time subjected to those beliefs you can take
01:24:14
a Hiatus from it at least for a while and they are not you they're not you yeah and then
01:24:20
revalue um reevalue it really what it should mean
01:24:26
or maybe more accurately devalue because you say what has been the actual value
01:24:31
this belief that I'm not worth it what has been the actual value of it in my life or this tendency of mine to be a
01:24:38
workaholic what has been actual value it made me tired it made me alienated or
01:24:45
it keeps me depressed so it keeps me hopelessly trying to prove something which I can never prove to myself anyway
01:24:50
to external activity so that you actually look at what does it mean it's actually impact on your life
01:24:55
what has been his real value um sometimes the value is positive though right like I think about my own
01:25:01
workaholic workaholism if that's the term I think uh there's some there's some positives here yeah a lot of
01:25:07
negatives yeah well it is the positive do the workaholism or is it due to your
01:25:13
capacity to work hard and and on behalf of a goal they're not the same
01:25:18
new capacity to work hard to achieve a certain goal is simply a gift that you have
01:25:24
and something that maybe takes some discipline an application on your part that's not working that's just
01:25:31
a strong positive work ethic the recallism and you're driven to work
01:25:37
you actually don't need to it's funny because it reminds me of an analogy I've been talking about in the
01:25:42
last couple of episodes of this podcast of the the distinction between being driven and being dragged yeah it's like
01:25:48
am I which side of the Lorry am I flying down the motorway am I tied to the front and am I running and pulling the Lorry
01:25:54
or am I just like my ankles attached to the back of the Lorry as it flies down the motorway because I'm being dragged
01:25:59
but if I may I would say that neither of those are particularly desirable
01:26:05
but but but but it's the distinction that I made before between being driven and being called yeah because if you
01:26:12
called it's if I call you say Stephen would you come and have dinner with me you can say yes you can
01:26:19
say no I just gave you a call and you could say literally I'm talking about calling you know telephone call you know
01:26:24
you can say yes you can say no it's a decision now but you're the one who's making the decision yeah when you're
01:26:29
dragged or pushed or pulled you're not making the decision I'm a slave to the decision to that that's right to the
01:26:35
activity one of the um one of the really interesting things I wanted to talk to you about is is ADHD yeah
01:26:42
um I've had a few of my friends and my close Friendship Circle diagnosed with ADHD recently
01:26:48
um and then I looked into some of the statistics around ADHD and I found this statistic that said in the 1980s one in
01:26:54
20 U.S children were diagnosed with ADHD today the number is roughly one in nine
01:27:00
yeah um and just generally you know around me there's it feels like and this could
01:27:06
just be because of my own little narrow Circle or it could be because of a wider thing happening in society it feels like
01:27:12
there's been an increase in diagnosis of mental illness and things like ADHD and
01:27:17
the causes when I spoke to my friend about what he believed the cause of um his ADHD was and he's posted this on
01:27:24
LinkedIn and talks about it very publicly now um it seemed to point to he seemed to
01:27:30
believe it was relating to some kind of genetic or heritable
01:27:37
um Factor now the issue the issue that I've sort of been contending with myself and why I spoke to Johann Hari about
01:27:43
this and others about this is if I if I am to accept that then I am I feel like I'm accepting that we're being
01:27:51
born somewhat broken and this is almost what Johann Hari talked about in in the early stages of his teenage years where
01:27:57
he he was made to believe that there was this chemical imbalance in his brain and therefore he was born broken and here's the medication to solve it yeah
01:28:04
so but I don't want I don't believe that I don't I don't personally believe that we're we're born broken well um and
01:28:11
anybody interested in the subject my daughter I think Joanne and actually this is to read my book and it is called
01:28:16
scattered minds and um I was diagnosed within my 50s and so were a couple of my kids but but I never bought into the
01:28:24
idea this is a genetic disease or that it's a disease at all genetic or otherwise um now as for the rising number of
01:28:31
um people being diagnosed with it there could be two reasons at least one is we're better diagnosis so before we
01:28:38
wouldn't have noticed it but now we are or genuinely there's more people who are having trouble in certain ways such as
01:28:44
with attention and impulse control and so on but either way the fact is that many
01:28:51
more children are being diagnosed and medicated for this condition particularly in the U.S but also increasingly uh here in the
01:28:57
UK as well and in China and elsewhere now um as I said earlier if we the fact is
01:29:06
here's the actual reality nobody's ever found the gene for ADHD nobody's ever found the gene that says if you have
01:29:12
this Gene you're gonna have ADHD no such thing has ever been found no group of genes ever been found that says if you
01:29:19
can have this Gene you're gonna have this condition nor ever will be and no such gene or group of genes have ever
01:29:25
been found that if you don't have these genes you will not have the condition now there are some diseases there are
01:29:31
genetic one runs in my family muscular dystrophy if you have the gene you're going to have the disease my mother had
01:29:37
it my aunt had it that's a genetic condition and if you have the gene you'll have the disease
01:29:45
very rare those kind of diseases no there are some genes that the more
01:29:53
them you have the more likely you are to have any number of mental health diagnoses ADHD
01:29:59
depression anxiety even psychosis bipolar Illness but there's no group of
01:30:04
genes or set of genes or Gene that themselves determine any one condition as a matter of fact you can have those
01:30:11
same genes and not have any condition whatsoever so something is being passed on but it's
01:30:17
not any kind of condition that's being passed on what's being passed on is sensitivity and the more sensitive you
01:30:24
are the more you're gonna feel whatever is going on in the environment so you take the same sensitive kid with these
01:30:30
genes that confer greater sensitivity of them and sensitive means to feel from
01:30:36
the Latin word to feel sincere the more sensitive you are the more you're going to feel the more you feel the more bad
01:30:43
stuff happens the more pain you're going to be in and the more compensating you're gonna have to do the same time with those same genes if
01:30:50
you tweeted well and you grow up in a healthy environment you just be creative and happy and joyful and a leader and an
01:30:56
artist or a shaman or or a very creative CEO or whatever you're going to be so
01:31:02
the genes don't determine they make you more sensitive to their environment no
01:31:07
if you go back to what I said about the tuning out it's simply a defense so the more sensitive you are
01:31:15
and the stress in the environment the more you're going to feel the stress the more you're gonna need to escape from it
01:31:20
by tuning out so he didn't inherit ADHD you inherited a sensitivity that makes it more likely
01:31:27
under stressful circumstances that you revert to tuning out when your brain is developing which by the way is an organ
01:31:35
that develops physiologically under the impact of the emotional environment so if there's a lot of stress in a
01:31:41
child's life and what I'm saying is in this Society is that more and more parents are stressed not because they
01:31:46
don't love their kids not because they're not doing their way utmost to provide for them but because they're
01:31:52
more stressed to all kinds of social political economic reasons I mean if you look at inflation in Britain is a high
01:31:58
risk right now more people are going to be stressed financially Financial stress on the parents
01:32:04
translates into physiological stress in the children those children may want to tune out
01:32:09
because it's too much to be in their present some of them will be diagnosed with ADHD they didn't inherit anything in terms of
01:32:16
a disease they're just reacting to the environment so if we're diagnosing more and more
01:32:21
kids these days I think it's because the parenting environment has been much more stressed and that's backed up in this
01:32:27
book where you mentioned that study of 65 000 parents yeah um and their children with ADHD right
01:32:34
you say well there's more trauma in their lives yeah so the children they do a study with 65 000. I forget
01:32:41
I read it yeah yeah but many thousands of kids yeah so
01:32:47
because I found that to be really really sort of um supportive of what you just said where I I'm again I'm I'm saying
01:32:52
this from memory but a study of 65 000 um children and their parents and they found that those parents who had more
01:32:59
adverse um traumatic events in their lives ended up having having a higher chance of
01:33:05
having a child that had ADHD well look if you look at um the United States at
01:33:10
least poor kids and kids of so-called color are much more like to be diagnosed with
01:33:16
ADHD interesting no why would that be the case because they're living with so much more stress
01:33:22
men as well right men as well adults you mean men yeah so I read that more men
01:33:28
more boys more men are diagnosed partly because in men the the symptom of
01:33:35
hyperactivity seems to be there more often so when a kid is sitting in school and the cancer still that's obvious the
01:33:42
teacher will notice it the girl who's kind of dreamy and tunes out kind of Fades away at the back of the
01:33:48
class she doesn't create any problems so they don't then that's one of the reasons but also
01:33:55
um funny to say but young boys infant boys
01:34:00
are more sensitive to a mental environmental pressure than girls are for some strange reason so they're more
01:34:07
likely to be affected by these factors Singapore like that in the class that's
01:34:12
a fidgety that has a poor attention span bad response to stress we medicate what
01:34:18
is the impact of that approach to treatment medicating super early I used to
01:34:23
when I worked as a physician I would certainly prescribe medication sometimes it's a question of who's prescribing it
01:34:29
and what intention if I understand that the real problem in this child is not that there's anything
01:34:35
intrinsically wrong with the child but that they were developed in a stressed environment and those stresses
01:34:41
are still acting on them and one of the stresses is that parents don't understand the kids behaviors and
01:34:47
they tend to react rather harshly then if I change if I can help the parent understand the sensitive nature
01:34:53
of their child which also means that when positive changes occur in the environment the kid
01:34:58
will be very responsive to that as well if the parents can create a positive accepting understanding atmosphere in
01:35:04
the home and work on their own stresses so they don't unconsciously pass them on to the kids that kid will change very
01:35:10
quickly and I say well if in the short term the child wants the medication to function
01:35:16
better and no child should be forced to take medication and medication are never
01:35:22
the final answer at the very most their stop cap there's no proof whatsoever that medications help anybody heal from
01:35:28
ADHD they simply suppress symptoms which may be helpful in the short term but for
01:35:34
God's sakes go to work on the long-term development of that child and what does that mean create the conditions image
01:35:40
healthy development takes place that child will do very very well if you think the problem is a disease they're
01:35:46
just going to medicate away the symptoms of what about fat adults they might I'm thinking of my friend that he's he's in
01:35:52
his 30s and he got the diagnosis of ADHD in his 30s yeah he's been given this medication which he presumably has to
01:35:58
take for Life he's told me the medication has helped helped him Focus this helps him Focus has helped him
01:36:03
Focus yeah it's been a game changer Steve you know yeah yeah I I've taken medication myself for ADHD and it helped
01:36:09
me focus it helped me write my first book um I didn't dig it for this one as a matter of fact more recently when I was
01:36:16
beginning to write the medication I thought maybe I would take a bit of stimulant like I used to and just to see if it helps me write the book better all
01:36:22
it did all it did is give me side effects my brain has changed I don't need it anymore you know so I I would
01:36:29
say to your friend if the medication is helping right now and it's not causing you side effects
01:36:35
I got nothing against it and you might want to give it a break every
01:36:40
you know every weekend if you don't you know you might want to use it for when you're having to work or having to you
01:36:45
know they concentrate but it's up to you if it helps you function take it but go to work on the traumas and stresses that
01:36:52
are driving the ADHD going back to your childhood and you know I may say my book in ADHD
01:36:58
scattered Minds does outline some ways to do that um you might find that you don't need
01:37:04
the medication uh so much anymore or not at all perhaps number one number two
01:37:09
even if you do your life will be so much Fuller and so much more um less stressed
01:37:16
if you deal with the underlying factors then if you simply medicate the symptom
01:37:21
is there I always think in life there's a cost for all these things we use to medicate and stimulate ourselves and
01:37:26
yeah so I always always ask myself like there's got to be it's gonna say there's got to be a catch here and even for
01:37:32
coffee I'm like what's the catch it can't just be all up and positive and with with my friend when he said when he had the conversation with me about being
01:37:38
on this this medication for life my first thought is like okay what's the cost it's going to make you really focused and better at work but what is
01:37:44
the what is the long-term cost of I had to talk to your friend friend
01:37:50
those are good questions to ask when I took medication it made me a much more efficient workaholic you know it
01:37:57
did nothing for my recallism just made me much better at it because I could stay up later now and I was more focused
01:38:02
I get even more things done you know so um you got to deal with these other
01:38:08
issues did you I did did I deal with them yes I have and there's so much more
01:38:17
like like dealing with the trauma like I'm telling you if your friends got ADHD
01:38:22
I can tell you heated stressed early for years and his parent was her parents were strapped his pants were stressed so
01:38:29
deal with that deal with what conditions are you creating now in your life that create more stress for you
01:38:36
are you taking care of your body are you exercising are you eating well do you get out there in nature nature is a
01:38:42
certain kind of Harmony to it which actually calms the mind you know so are you doing all these things if you're not
01:38:48
all you're doing is medicating a symptom if you are taking the medication
01:38:53
specifically to help you focus but you're working on his other issues you have a much full life and you may
01:39:00
find you don't need the medication after all you you came off the medication for your add yeah
01:39:06
um because I'm a because I'm just not that medically well versed what's the difference between AD
01:39:12
ADD and ADHD it's you know it's a kind of a confusion it is just simply means
01:39:17
that the hyperactivity is present okay so you can have ADD with or without hyperactivity okay so the actual you
01:39:24
know proper way to divide it is a d and in Brackets HD so that in indicating
01:39:32
that the hyperactivity may or may not be there got you so you you you were on medication you did the work you know not
01:39:39
on medication yeah um do you still have the symptoms of ADD to a certain degree but not in the way
01:39:46
that anyway Bloods my life like one thing I completely be sure that when I go on a speaker I'm going to lose something I'm going to lose my
01:39:54
my portable electrical tooth cleaner where I'm gonna in this
01:40:00
case I left my rain jacket in Budapest when I came here and I I you can take it for granted that my attention will just
01:40:07
not notice something that I haven't packed yet that's okay I'm going back to Budapest next week so I get to get my rain jacket back but sometimes it's the
01:40:14
cost of being me so what you know so no not in every way but that's not the point nobody's life
01:40:21
has to be perfect it just has to be a life that I I want to live and I can enjoy living
01:40:26
that I have you know so who cares if sometimes I forget something or I lose
01:40:32
something or even if I'm listening to a symphony and I can't keep my attention on it okay so I can't
01:40:39
this you talk about there's some toxic Society yeah
01:40:46
do you think society's getting more toxic and if so why what measure shall
01:40:51
we use you know if you use the measure of a number of kids being medicated
01:40:57
a number of adults having chronic illness autoimmune disease a number of
01:41:02
students University students being depressed contemplating suicide
01:41:09
number of children in the United States killing themselves um
01:41:15
the number of people on medications of all kinds the degree of safety that people have in
01:41:22
society the the rancor or peace that characterizes political discourse in this world the
01:41:31
intolerable fact that eight people in the world I think own as much as the bottom half
01:41:36
as the bottom 3.5 billion you know if I look at all those things
01:41:41
by those measures if you look at what's happening to the environment if I look at the fact that the people
01:41:47
who are the worst polluters in the environment also happen to be the most successful people you know by a certain
01:41:52
measure of success um by any number of parameters if I look at
01:41:59
um oh racism still affects the lives of so
01:42:04
many people um and and not just affected in an emotional sense but actually
01:42:10
physiologically you know it's a this is a toxic society and those
01:42:16
measures are getting worse they're not getting better and inequality is getting worse here in the UK and elsewhere
01:42:23
so yeah I think it's getting more toxic what's the antidote well
01:42:29
um how about we go back to this word awareness like like people just have to get that this is how it is and in the
01:42:34
last chapter I don't lay out a political program you know I don't see that as my role to do that I have my own political
01:42:40
ideas and preferences but I don't want to impose them on the reader but I do say
01:42:46
first of all we have to lose our illusions that this is that this normality is
01:42:51
actually healthy or natural we have to just get cognizant that what we consider to be
01:42:56
normal is actually bad for us um number one number two
01:43:02
um just if we introduced the concept of trauma into Health Care
01:43:10
like the average doctor again strange to say doesn't hear a single lecture in their medical training about the impact
01:43:16
of trauma on physical or mental health which is astonishing given that it was a
01:43:22
British psychologist Dr Richard benthal who pointed out not that many years ago that the evidence linking what we call
01:43:29
mental illness and childhood adversity is about as strong as the evidence linking smoking and lung cancer
01:43:35
and the average physician doesn't hear a word about that it's astonishing
01:43:40
education teachers if they understood Child Development brain development the
01:43:46
developmental factors that I that children need that I cite in this book and if they understood
01:43:52
how trauma affects his capacity to learn to pay attention and to behave in functional ways The
01:43:59
Daily Telegraph here in London not that long ago was
01:44:05
bemoaning the fact that kids aren't caned anymore in schools I mean they were but they were but they
01:44:11
were moaning about is that we no longer traumatized kids quite as harshly as we used to that's what it that's all it does caning
01:44:19
so if teachers understood that the behaviors on the part of children are actually manifestations of emotional
01:44:25
dynamics of frustration and needs not being met and and very often of trauma
01:44:31
that would change the educational system if the legal system understood it
01:44:37
that that most people facing the criminal justice system are actually traumatized people they could actually
01:44:43
be rehabilitated uh and and and healed if we understood that instead of just
01:44:49
exposing them to harsh punishments we actually treated them like human beings who may have done things that are
01:44:55
unacceptable but that came from traumas they couldn't have helped and that they
01:45:00
can be helped back to um healthy functioning as we know from lots of experience just that little
01:45:07
trauma information would change society so that's what I can offer as a
01:45:13
physician what about parents what do they need to know yeah well if parents actually understood first of all
01:45:21
that the first three years are everything that if if they get the template right in the first three years
01:45:26
they can hardly set a foot wrong afterwards but in the other hand if we're not
01:45:33
present for our kids emotionally if we don't understand them if we don't see them if we don't
01:45:39
attune to their emotional states we're going to hurt them and if they understood what the needs of
01:45:45
children are when I mentioned some of them for play for experience of all emotions for
01:45:53
unconditional loving attachment for the child being able to rest from having to
01:45:59
work to make the relationship work so the child doesn't have to be good or nice or beautiful or or or or successful
01:46:07
or they just have to be approval and acceptance on them if
01:46:13
parents just understood that and if they understood how important it is that they take care of their own
01:46:19
emotional needs so that a child doesn't have to take responsibility like perhaps you did for the parent
01:46:26
stresses your parents understood all that and if Society actually understood her
01:46:31
importance parenting was and it supported parents who needed the support to be there for their kids
01:46:38
it wouldn't be financially costly it would save us a lot of money not to mention we live a lot more
01:46:44
happier kids who don't need to be on medications so yeah and lastly schools schools well
01:46:51
again like I said about Educators if Educators well here's the thing if you look at how does the human brain develop I quite an article I quote an article
01:46:59
from the Harvard Center on the developing child that appeared in a journal of Pediatrics official Journal
01:47:05
of the American Pediatric Academy in 2012 February
01:47:11
the article said that the human being developed it to do a complex process that begins before birth and continues
01:47:19
into adulthood okay now that means a we take care of the emotional needs of pregnant women
01:47:25
number one number two if it conditions into adulthood continues into adulthood then the job of the schools if they
01:47:32
understand it right is not to teach kids what year the ball of the battle of Australis took
01:47:39
place or the ball of Battle of Waterloo um or or you know algebra any of any of
01:47:46
that stuff the most important job of the schools is to promote healthy brain development
01:47:51
with a child who's with healthy brain development will actually be naturally curious they'll want to know about
01:47:57
history that we came to uh to absorb the skills of algebra they'll want to know
01:48:03
how to use a computer and they'll want to know um how to write properly a kid will want
01:48:10
to do that spontaneously because Mastery and and learning these are human hungers
01:48:15
the human needs so in other words the most important job of
01:48:22
the schools is not to cram the kids full of information but to help them develop healthy brains
01:48:27
what does that require safety above all lack of pressure healthy relationship with nurturing
01:48:35
adults and if the kids are not going to spend their time with the adult but they with the parents which they can't in this
01:48:41
Society like they used to through a human evolution let them spend their time with adults who are emotionally
01:48:47
nurturing and emotionally penetrating the attentive to the child's needs now
01:48:52
you're going to have schools that are going to really kids teach kids something and where kids will want to learn and it's very simple
01:48:59
it doesn't take more training and it doesn't take more well they take some training perhaps but not more than what
01:49:05
teachers are getting now so that's sort of a take in education
01:49:10
I was thinking there about the importance of doing certain psychological tests on certain teachers because if they are also
01:49:17
passing on a generational cycle yeah of their own at a time when my brain is still being developed they can have a
01:49:22
huge impact positively or negatively on my absolutely on my life in the same way that my parents could absolutely uh it's
01:49:29
quite remarkable teachers don't know how much power they have because of the vulnerability of the young brain
01:49:34
and well-meaning teachers it will sometimes behave in ways that are really hurtful to kids just because
01:49:41
they don't get it not because they don't mean well so I've had many adults sit in my office
01:49:46
say with tears in their eyes about something a teacher said to them three decades before
01:49:51
like the classroom the class will continue and Johnny comes
01:49:57
back to Earth this kind of sarcastic little dig can under my child's dignity and sense
01:50:03
of self so easily so if teachers just understood how powerful they are and how important they are in helping to promote
01:50:10
healthy brain development I think the profession would take in a whole new meaning that would be much more satisfying than it is right now
01:50:18
it's not the fault of individual teachers we're talking about a system that isn't that is toxic
01:50:26
okay but we have closing tradition on this podcast oh okay where the previous guest asks a question
01:50:33
for the next guest I didn't get to see it until I opened the book so there's a question written here for you before I
01:50:39
ask you this question I did have a question of my own which was you know you're in your 70s now um
01:50:45
what are you still working on in terms of your own traumas is there anything even though you're you're in a later
01:50:51
stage of your own life that you you're still sort of struggling with as it relates to that Puppet Master pulling on
01:50:56
the strings and that kind of analogy that we gave earlier yeah
01:51:02
um it's a sense of peace when I'm not doing anything
01:51:10
just being the capacity just to be
01:51:16
um that's something I'm still looking for not well not looking for like I was looking for a lost puppy
01:51:23
but I'm still searching myself for and where exactly does that come from in
01:51:29
your own diagnosis oh what if I tell you when I find out
01:51:35
I mean I can give you a textbook answer but it wouldn't be authentic okay
01:51:41
so you don't know entirely I have some senses I have some ideas and then
01:51:46
um it foreign
01:51:54
it really means being okay with my mind the way it is
01:52:00
and not needing it to be any different that's what it would mean which means if I'm sitting there
01:52:07
for five minutes I don't know how to reach for the cell phone to occupy my mind
01:52:12
and now in the midst of this busy book tour and all the speaking I do I don't I don't do enough to to take care of that
01:52:19
quiet little voice inside myself I don't I think it would take some attention
01:52:27
I can't either though I can't sit for two I can five minutes I couldn't sit for five seconds without grabbing my
01:52:32
phone that's weird I noticed the other day that I was like going to the toilet and I had no intention of using my phone
01:52:37
in the toilet yeah but I went to get my phone because you can't be alone with yourself yeah I can't be alone with
01:52:43
myself yeah I can't sitting for 30 seconds you know my brain is that is that because they've built
01:52:49
these algorithms to to stimulate my dopamine or is it because there's something in me I guess it goes back to a point about addiction well it's both I
01:52:56
mean they're they're certainly creative algorithms to stimulate your brain and get you hooked on that dopamine head you're sure if we should they call that
01:53:03
neural marketing neural marketing can you get that yeah they work on your brain to get you know to get you
01:53:09
addicted but it also comes from an earlier discomfort with the self that predates
01:53:14
any cell phone use it goes back to earliest childhood where it couldn't have been comfortable to be
01:53:20
just with yourself because of circumstances
01:53:26
interesting interesting yeah my because I've Got Friends that don't have the
01:53:31
same the same addiction with their cell phones that I do they they can take it or leave it they put it outside their
01:53:37
bedroom when they go to bed charging in the kitchen I'm like how I have to hold mine like my pillow yeah exactly well
01:53:43
like your little safety pillow and what's the first thing you do when you wake up in the morning I grab it with one eye open and all that gunk in my eye
01:53:49
I'm like trying to just you know yeah yeah we'll have if both you and I work are not doing that so much okay I'll
01:53:55
give you my number you'll let man we should we shouldn't discuss by phone how we're getting on with this that's just another reason to use my phone but next
01:54:01
time I speak to you okay in person you can update me on how you're getting on with that I am I am I am working on it
01:54:07
I'm working on it I think I've got to become more cognizant of the cost of that addiction
01:54:13
well exactly to really I know one of the costs is meaningful connections and presence with
01:54:19
them with and in the cost to interpersonal relationships but maybe I haven't had the the cost
01:54:27
um impact me enough yet maybe the question left for you
01:54:33
but I don't know the signature so I'll have to figure that out later but is what's your selfish dream
01:54:44
um you know what I'm not sure how to sit with that question because I'm not trying to get out of it but I just don't
01:54:50
look at my own reaction to it um you know at this point
01:54:58
I don't have too many what does it mean selfish by the way let me ask you that what does that mean
01:55:04
something that is for me at the expense of others I don't think I have any dreams like
01:55:09
that left I might have not might have I did have at some point but if I have a dream
01:55:16
for myself in that sense of self-enhancing dream something that enhances my ego or something well if
01:55:24
this book sold a billion copies well that that'd be a nice selfish dream you know but
01:55:30
I don't know how else to answer that um I do have dreams but they're more about
01:55:36
the state of the world that I like to see the the world I'd like to see future
01:55:41
Generations in Arabic selfless Dreams yeah well I don't know what this self-loves because it certainly involves
01:55:47
my own history and certainly would make me feel better you know so in that sense
01:55:52
it's selfish you might say but they're not they don't have to do with personal
01:55:58
I have enough you know I've done enough and I have enough so I don't have any
01:56:03
anything any anything lacking that I need to dream about all of our selfless streams are also
01:56:09
very much selfless selfish in that regard as well they're going to help themselves in a different sense I mean
01:56:14
any dreams I have or for a better world certainly or certainly have the function
01:56:19
of making me feel better of of maybe even
01:56:24
the stuff that happened to me or the stuff that happened to you it would mean
01:56:30
a lot to me if they didn't happen to any more children you know so in the sense that it would
01:56:35
mean a lot to me you might say it's selfish but it's not purely about me it's about something larger I'm not
01:56:41
trying to paint myself as some kind of a altruistic Saint I'm just saying that would make me feel better if I really
01:56:47
knew that kids in Gaza didn't have to face any more bombings if kids in Israel
01:56:53
didn't have to face anymore uh danger of terrorist attacks if um not that I see
01:56:58
inequality there but I like that for both of them if kids in Ukraine they need to live under the the threat of
01:57:06
missiles falling if people in Russia didn't have to feel to live with the fear of
01:57:13
perhaps a nuclear conflict or the young men being conscripted into a war if uh if kids in Britain
01:57:21
you know didn't have to live in poverty wouldn't that make you feel better you know so to the extent that it makes us
01:57:27
feel better you might say it's selfish but is it
01:57:33
gabble thank you my pleasure thank you so much thank you so much for for writing such an
01:57:39
important book I I think my only wish is that I discovered this book sooner
01:57:44
because I think so many of my I think it would have liberated that's a good word liberated me from a series of things
01:57:51
that would have helped me to live a much better life and to understand myself that's that's the point of awareness that we talked about I know that your
01:57:57
Advanced stage is over isn't it yeah I think we all want the answers even sooner because we we reflect on some of
01:58:03
the consequences or the mistakes or the that we made not that those are I'm imprisoned by any of those but it's you
01:58:09
know and so it's so wonderful that this book now exists you're you're a name that I I started to be peppered with by
01:58:15
my audience over and over again specifically in the last 12 months people it's really really young people
01:58:20
were messaging me and asking me to have a conversation with you about the topics we've talked about today things like ADHD and their trauma and so much and
01:58:28
you know I sit here every day talking to um a lot a lot of people on this podcast
01:58:33
and um I think my understanding of trauma has forever been
01:58:40
redefined by both this conversation today but also by your book and I really I I'm so thankful to you because I think
01:58:46
that'll help me speak on the topic with more accuracy um and therefore um hopefully help other
01:58:51
people understand their their own trauma in a more um meaningful way it's just
01:58:56
such an important book well thank you so much thank you so much for giving me the platform to to talk about my work and
01:59:03
and just the opportunity to meet you thanks a lot and it's written in such an accessible way yeah which is so
01:59:08
important because that means it can reach even more people thank you so much okay thank you [Music]
01:59:25
thank you
01:59:33
[Music]

Badges

This episode stands out for the following:

  • 85
    Most heartbreaking
  • 80
    Most emotional
  • 80
    Best overall
  • 80
    Best concept / idea

Episode Highlights

  • The Impact of Childhood Trauma
    Gabor Maté discusses the profound effects of childhood adversity on mental health, comparing it to smoking and lung cancer.
    “The evidence linking mental illness and childhood adversity is about as strong as smoking and lung cancer.”
    @ 00m 18s
    November 07, 2022
  • Lessons from Palliative Care
    Gabor Maté reflects on his experiences with terminally ill patients and the insights gained about life and acceptance.
    “Acceptance teaches you to help people live a life of as little suffering as possible.”
    @ 17m 49s
    November 07, 2022
  • The Role of Creativity in Healing
    Maté emphasizes the importance of creativity in our lives, suggesting it is essential for emotional well-being.
    “We are created in the image of God, which means we are creators.”
    @ 22m 53s
    November 07, 2022
  • The Myth of Normal
    Exploring how society's definition of normal is often unhealthy and unnatural.
    “What we consider normal is neither healthy nor natural.”
    @ 28m 50s
    November 07, 2022
  • Understanding Trauma
    Defining trauma as a psychological wound that behaves like an unhealed injury.
    “Trauma is a psychological wound that you sustain.”
    @ 45m 06s
    November 07, 2022
  • Understanding Trauma
    Trauma is not just about the big events; it's also about unmet emotional needs.
    “Trauma is not what happens to you but what happens inside you.”
    @ 49m 10s
    November 07, 2022
  • The Puppet Master of Trauma
    Trauma acts like a puppet master, controlling our reactions without our awareness.
    “Trauma really is like a puppet master behind the scenes in the unconscious.”
    @ 01h 03m 09s
    November 07, 2022
  • The Importance of Authenticity
    Authenticity is crucial for healing and reconnecting with our true selves. 'We're meant to be here as ourselves.'
    @ 01h 14m 42s
    November 07, 2022
  • Understanding ADHD
    The rise in ADHD diagnoses may reflect better awareness rather than an increase in the condition itself. 'Nobody's ever found the gene for ADHD.'
    @ 01h 29m 06s
    November 07, 2022
  • The Impact of Medication
    Medication for ADHD may suppress symptoms but doesn't address underlying issues.
    “Medication is never the final answer.”
    @ 01h 35m 22s
    November 07, 2022
  • Teachers' Influence on Children
    Teachers have a profound impact on children's emotional and cognitive development.
    “If teachers understood their power, it would change everything.”
    @ 01h 50m 10s
    November 07, 2022
  • The Impact of War on Children
    The speaker reflects on the hope that no more children face violence or danger due to conflicts.
    “It would mean a lot to me if they didn't happen to any more children.”
    @ 01h 56m 30s
    November 07, 2022

Episode Quotes

Key Moments

  • Disidentifying from Work25:32
  • Small t Trauma49:53
  • Puppet Master1:03:09
  • Awareness1:04:58
  • Seeking Worth1:11:35
  • ADHD Diagnosis1:33:10
  • Environmental Stress1:33:16
  • Teacher Impact1:50:10

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown

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