
NYPTALKSHOW Podcast
NYPTALKSHOW: Where New York Speaks
Welcome to NYPTALKSHOW, the podcast that captures the heartbeat of New York City through candid conversations and diverse perspectives. Every week, we dive into the topics that matter most to New Yorkers—culture, politics, arts, community, and everything in between.
What to Expect:
• Engaging Interviews: Hear from local leaders, activists, artists, and everyday citizens who shape the city’s narrative.
• In-Depth Discussions: We unpack current events, urban trends, and community issues with honesty and insight.
• Unique Perspectives: Experience the vibrant tapestry of New York through voices that reflect its rich diversity.
Whether you’re a lifelong New Yorker or just curious about the city’s dynamic energy, join us as we explore what makes New York, New York—one conversation at a time.
Tune in and let your voice be part of the dialogue on NYPTALKSHOW.
NYPTALKSHOW Podcast
Mind Control : Reprogramming the brain with Dr. Paul Dyer
Dr. Paul Dyer unveils his revolutionary concept for treating mood disorders through neural filtering technology in this mind-expanding conversation about the future of brain science. Fresh from receiving recognition at the Health 2.0 Conference in Vegas, Dr. Dyer explains how AI could fundamentally transform our approach to emotional regulation without removing human agency.
The human brain processes information through seven different categories—our five senses plus vibration and frequency. These inputs create wave patterns that activate various neural networks including the visual system, limbic system, and default mode network. When one sensory input dominates, it triggers a cascade of biochemical reactions throughout the body before we're consciously aware of what's happening. Dr. Dyer's groundbreaking research suggests that AI could function as a filter for these neural signals, creating a more balanced emotional response.
What makes this approach unique is how it preserves human choice while providing tools for better regulation. "It's like autocorrect," Dr. Dyer explains, "but instead of changing the word for you, it highlights it so you can make the decision." With 60 million Americans currently taking mood disorder medications and countless others suffering without treatment, this technology could represent a significant breakthrough in mental health care.
The conversation takes a fascinating turn when Dr. Dyer introduces his concept of "Know Why Self"—understanding not just who you are but why you behave as you do. Most of our patterns establish themselves in the first seven years of life and repeat throughout adulthood. Without understanding our "why," we remain programmed by early experiences rather than living intentionally. Join us next week as Dr. Dyer explores the why, how, and what of reprogramming
Welcome to the Fit, Healthy and Happy Podcast hosted by Josh and Kyle from Colossus...
Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify
NYPTALKSHOW EP.1 HOSTED BY RON BROWNLMT & MIKEY FEVER
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What's going on. Everybody is Ron Brown, lmt, the people's fitness professional, alongside my co host, mikey Fever, and this is a New Yorker's perspective. Dr Paul Dyer was just on and something happened. His screen went off His connection, or maybe he has to charge his phone, not sure. Whatever's going on. Hold on who's in the chat. Peace Awareness Daily. Peace Awareness Daily. All right. The chat. Peace awareness daily. Peace awareness daily. All right, all right. Here we go. He's back, he's back. Let's turn this music off again. Thank you guys for coming out this evening.
Speaker 2:I really appreciate you, dr Paul Dyer.
Speaker 1:Mikey Fever and my In the audience. Okay, so he's back out again. All right, in the audience, in the audience. Thank y'all for showing up this evening. I really appreciate y'all, and for the onlookers now and for those who are to come.
Speaker 2:Peace to the listeners.
Speaker 1:Peace to the listeners on Spotify, apple, etc. All right, so we have Dr Paul Dyer today with us. How are you feeling, dr Paul Dyer?
Speaker 3:I'm doing really good. I'm doing super good. You know coming back for a little bit of a travel, but I'm doing super, super good.
Speaker 1:Yeah, I see you online moving and shaking man.
Speaker 3:You were in Vegas, I believe I was in Vegas at this huge health conference, along with people from marketing, AI, business, education. So it was just a fantastic conference of the Health 2.0 Conference, it was really good and I got an award. Of course, you're a great scientist here you're a black scientist, which is funny because that's why I was called the black scientist, you know, oh, wow the black scientist, nice.
Speaker 1:That's why I was called the Black Scientist, you know? Oh wow, the Black Scientist, nice. So now, so as far as what you guys were discussing, can you share that with the audience?
Speaker 3:Absolutely so many people. And well, I'll just stay with health care, because this is what this is all about, because other people were talking about the fuel economy. People were talking about new technology, how it's going to be moving forward, everything you're using, everything you probably never heard of. Yet things are coming down the pipe as far as technology sat, with those guys sat with those CEOs, sat with those technicians and things like that. And then on the health side, really on the health side, just everything to really take care of the human being.
Speaker 3:And it's mostly on the emotional level, mostly on the mental level, that this conference was really built around. And so I fit right in and I was talking about how AI is going to be introduced into the neuro stem cell and how it's possible, how I really believe it's possible, because I've written up my equations, my physics equations, my wave point transformation and things like that how AI is going to really be put in. Next week I'll actually Do a, a PowerPoint presentation. This way it'll be a lot easier. But, in short, just AI becoming a filter. But even AI is not where my thinking's at, so it's not there yet, but we can work towards that. It's going to be neat Congratulations on that.
Speaker 1:Now, Mike, you have any questions or anything you want to say before we go into the questions.
Speaker 2:I know the AI thing and the tech seminar with the healthcare. That's where I sat right now. It's been like that for years. They've been working on altering the human psyche.
Speaker 3:Well, here's the thing they're not trying to alter it. See, ai is going to have a tough time trying to figure out our brain. It just really is, because AI is built to learn. It is still a petulant child. It is always wanting to learn. So the more you input it, the more it learns. But the way the brain learns is in so many facets, so many ways of how it learns and how things get inputted into your brain that develops in your body.
Speaker 1:yeah, so it's gonna be tough for ai yeah, uh, one thing I learned about ai recently is the more you use it, the more you understand it and the more it understands you correct, yeah?
Speaker 3:yeah, that's what I mean. It's always learning and it's learning from all things inputted. Exactly that's all it is, and and the way I am going to, the way I can see it working, is is going to be more of a helper than a doer. So, um, I'll put you simply this way you know how sometimes, if you're writing or you're on your phone, and it does autocorrect.
Speaker 2:Yeah.
Speaker 3:Right, that's AI working for you in a way. Right, it's telling you use this word. That word is I don't know what you're talking about. This is the most popular word. Use this word you're talking about. This is the most popular word. Use. Use this word. What? What I believe ai can do is be a helper, meaning that even if it wanted to change the word as you're typing on your phone, it doesn't change it for you. It highlights it. I'll put you that way it'll highlight it so it gives you.
Speaker 3:It'll give you a, give you a presentation of looking at, saying is this the word I want to use, and maybe I do want to use a different word, or this is the word I want to use, and you can just keep on going. So this way, you still have to think about the word, you still have to implant or input the word you want to use, or the word that you type is the word you want to use. So that's how I'm going to use AI into the emotional science, into the brain, into the networks.
Speaker 2:But in a sense of altering right, Maybe wrong term being used at the moment. They are expecting it could change certain circuits in your brain.
Speaker 3:Like I said, if you were going the pharmaceutical route with the medicine. Well, so we talked about that. I talked about that with a person who's on the cutting edge of that and they live in Dubai and that's so far away. It really is right now, because for it to alter it really is right now because for it to alter that means it must have an idea of what your specific body has to be. So that means, even if it was to alter, that means it would have to be in your body to learn your natural state of who you are, not what it's going to derive it to be.
Speaker 2:Yeah, not what it's going to derive it to be yeah, in that sense that's what I'm saying, probably a different term, but yeah, through time, the input, as you mentioned, it can also help navigate, help a person navigate.
Speaker 3:Yeah, because if it learned you and then it said well, I want Mikey Fever to be something completely different, mikey Fever to be something completely different.
Speaker 3:I don't think that AI could change its rhythm into making you into something else. Okay, unless it was put in as a doer, like if it was implanted as it's meant to turn this on, that's it. It's meant to turn that off, that's it. That in itself, you know one circuit in the neural networks. Turning it on and off can affect you in certain ways, and I said this in my talk, in my fireside chat, that health does not have to be weaponized. It does not have to be weaponized. It's just educating the people, because people are like.
Speaker 3:You know, some of the concerns in health is are people going to be so afraid of AI? And I'm curious who would be really afraid? That's like you being afraid of the driving car. When it first came out, people were very skeptic. You know, getting in a car instead of getting on a horse, or horse and buggy, you know. So it's the idea of change. I get it. You know people are very skeptical of change, and that's fine, but I don't know if you. I get it. You know people are very skeptical of change and that's fine, but I don't know if you can avoid it.
Speaker 2:Gotcha.
Speaker 1:Okay, Now we're talking about reprogramming the brain. Now what's your idea or concept of how you would change the brain using AI? Can you go into detail about that?
Speaker 3:Absolutely so. You know we so the way the brain. In short, the brain picks up in seven different categories. It picks up in all of your five senses and it picks up in vibration and frequency. Now you have at least seven main networks that the brain sort of uses, right, it has the visual system, the limbic system, the central executed network system, the default mode network and it has a couple more. So it has all these networks that is prepared to share information.
Speaker 3:Ai gets implemented into without giving my proprietary part into the first part of the brain where the neural stem cell is activated, because as soon as it's born it already has its marching orders because of who you are sensory, who you are in vibration, who you are in frequency. So if you're living in low frequency, if you're living in low vibration, if you're hypersensitive by hearing, smell, whatever your senses are, and it causes you to be more alarmed than any other sense, what I believe AI can do is actually filter the alarming registration of your cell and bring it into a low common denominator low common denominator. So this way you have an equal chance of developing all those other things on an equal playing field. Because if you're visually excited by what was that? What did I see? And then it gets you all excited. It's already dumped a whole bunch of chemistry.
Speaker 3:We talked about chemistry. It dumps a whole bunch of activation that happens in the body that's reacting to now what your neural cell has picked up, saying this is what we are reacting to, this is what our neurostim cells marching orders are. We're hyper, we're sensitive, we want to be stressed out. So your blood changes, your blood pressure changes, your cell changes, your glucose changes. Everything is changing because of the information that got inputted into you. That's why, when you become a calmer person, you're like I can't believe. I used to really be excited by that, because you have changed your cell information about like I'm not getting, I'm not going to, that's not going to bother me anymore, right? So that information, it still comes in, but you've regulated it. What AI can do, what I believe AI could do, is help filter that so you can give yourself time to regulate that.
Speaker 1:OK, now given filter that to give yourself time to regulate that. However, you did say what happens in the brain are chemical reactions that flow through the body and it kind of sets your your brain and DNA, if you will right your genetic.
Speaker 3:Right, yeah, so there's a DNA component to it, but that has to be activated. Remember the DNA and RNA influencing the chemistry to activate it. Right, we all have a cancer gene. Okay, what you say. We all have cancer genes. You don't have to have cancer. It's not a death sentence. Have to have cancer, it's not a death sentence. But the only way you activate it is by doing something that isn't healthy for you. That activates the cancer genes. So now it grows.
Speaker 3:Well, it's just take that in in good mental health or a good emotional health, a good emotional intelligence, if you want to regulate that, so you develop a strong on that level. That still takes your what do you call putting in the work, putting in the training, putting in the action. This way, the cells get its information as soon as it's born. The neurostell gets its information as soon as it's born and saying, oh, I'm not too excited about this is born and saying, oh, I'm not too excited about this. So this way, when it goes to the places it has to go in the body, it doesn't have to be activated by such high overload of a sense vibrational frequency got you I? I feel scared, like that's a subconscious saying that. Let your conscious know.
Speaker 3:Now, once your conscious says I feel scared, your subconscious is remember, it's already happened, it's already running its course of what to do. If, because, because the subconscious is we're already scared, we're already working on our defense mechanisms, by the time the conscious level has it, I think I'm scared. Your, your chemistry is already in action, way like remember, like way like. Way before that right, way before that, your subconscious already triggered its markers, its chemistry, to prepare, to batten down the hatches for something to happen so that changes everything in your body, whether it be a physical overload, whether it be a mental overload where it decreases your spirituality. All those things are already has happened. Once you come out of your mouth and say I don't know if this is right, I don't think this is good, anything of those kind of anything, of those where you go negative, disturbing words, it's just you reacting to the subconscious way after the play has already been kicked off and now you're watching the replay in the conscious.
Speaker 2:So basically, I hope you're saying that it already happened in your subconscious mind it's like virtual computers the hypervisor is the sublayer and your brain is basically the operating system that allows it to run multiple.
Speaker 3:I like that. I like that Multiple yeah.
Speaker 2:I see that I got you. I understand, don't mind me, I'm just a little flustered today, a little tired, but I'm on it.
Speaker 3:No, you know, talking with other scientists and they were like Dr Paul man, this is amazing, how did you come up with this? I said because we are losing the battle with mood disorders here in the United States. We went over the math, we went over the numbers. We went over the 60 million people in the United States. 60 million people, and that's the ones that are registered taking mood disorder drugs. We're not even talking about self-medicated and not able to self-medicate or whatever. Have you or just you know, who are emotionally unhealthy. And you can talk about how slight it is. You know I still can go to work, I can still. I still love my cat, I don't know. But when it comes to that guy, I just want to, to, like, you know, push him down the stairs. That's not healthy. I don't care how healthy you are.
Speaker 3:You know, when you have those mood changes, those exuberant mood changes where you're just like gritting your teeth and you're just like mother, I'm just gonna oh ah, you know, whoa, whoa, get off the train, right, like someone needs to get this guy right and or for whatever reason it happens, things like that happen and then you're trying to reel back in all those horses. I don't know if you've ever been on a horse ranch or seen wild horses, but one cowboy cannot rag on all like, uh, like, 50 horses wild horses. It's just, it's not there. But you do gotta get ahead of it. That's the one thing I do wild horses.
Speaker 2:You gotta get ahead of it to lead it, and right now we're chasing them I'm glad you said that, dr dyer, earlier when you said about altering and genetic, on how to you know basically heal yourself, on how to not be reactive, just to be responded you know changing your cells and how you um restructuring yourself, basically because you know I have.
Speaker 2:I'm not ashamed to admit that I went through that process before because I used to be a reactionary person and I had to really learn how to you know, silence the mind and you really know what triggers. You know what I'm saying. Weigh things out and learn how to respond instead of reacting, because reacting on impulse, as you said, said you release certain chemicals in your body. That's how you get high cholesterol and all chemicals and you know, clogging arteries and I'm like now.
Speaker 3:Now I just disengage, capture the breath and, just like you know what you know it's a fascinating thing with the network and everything we can eat as well as we want to eat. Just, you eat beautifully and the body will still have a hard time transforming and breaking down the good nutrients, just because the chemistry of what we are producing and starting from our brain all the way down through our stem cell and our spinal cord just doesn't react to the food the way you think we should be reacting to food.
Speaker 1:Gotcha. Now I wanted to say this. You spoke about how you know AI would change the brain and the emotions. But I was thinking while you were talking about that. I was saying that while you were explaining.
Speaker 3:I didn't say AI would change the emotions. It would filter it. So it comes out to a balanced state with all the others.
Speaker 1:Right, so, pardon me. Filter with all the others. Right, so, pardon me, filter, would it? Wouldn't it be easier for us to uh figure out a way where ai can just erase old memories of things and I don't know, I I don't know if you really want that.
Speaker 3:You know, our memory, um, network, um, it's a catalog, it's it's an old book. I reach back for old books just because I remember seeing something whether it be a picture or a word in that old book, and I go back and pick it up and it's useful. An old book or an old memory can be not as useful if it's only gearing you up to be in a negative state. So it's all about how you interpret the information.
Speaker 1:Okay, so what about erasing the emotion that comes with that memory?
Speaker 3:Oh, no, I know I personally wouldn't want that, because that would take away from the development of who you are, because if you could erase something, that means it could add something, and if it added something I didn't want and it could erase something I didn't know it I would like to have kept. Well then, I admit that that I think that's the delicate part. I think a lot of people are going to probably get it wrong. That's why I was doing this research for the last three to five years, because I didn't want AI to be implanted willy-nilly Because you could plant it in the central nervous system and it'll just do everything. You could probably have it do those things that you want. Never let this in, always let that in.
Speaker 3:I don't know if that's not a human being anymore. It's a drone. Being a human being means practicing and studying and being actionable and intentionable. To be alive, right, you have a human response to live, and to live If you're doing other than living, ie surviving, struggling. Those are all just factors that we have to get over, and it does take time. I think we're running out of time because people are running into more problems, more emotional problems, than they have time to deal with them? How do we know? Because the pills are increasing. Yeah, the numbers that way are increasing. So either people just can't put in that work, they can put in some work, but they just can't put in that work, they can put in some work, but they just can't put in that work.
Speaker 1:Right, because the population is pretty much worked to death.
Speaker 3:Right, right, our populations work to death.
Speaker 2:And bombarded with information on a daily basis. Commercials, infomercials, symbolism everything is constantly bombarded with data. We always got to be in the new, Keeping up with the Joneses. Basically, we got to constantly get our information fed to us through our phone. The amount of words we speak daily, the amount of noises we hear subconsciously, we're recording without even knowing. So it's chaotic.
Speaker 3:But here's the thing you can be in and I've done this. You can be in a noisy, crowded, anywhere place and I can literally shut it off and hear one person. But I get it, I trained for it, I've done that. So if someone says is it possible, dr Dyer? Yeah, absolutely, it's possible. So can you teach me to do it? Absolutely, I can teach you to do it Absolutely. But my next question is, when I look at you, I could teach you to do it Absolutely. My next question is, when I look at you, I'm like are you ready?
Speaker 3:You're like well, I got things going on this week. How about if I hit you back next? Oh no, I can't do it. Then either I'll hit you back, well, I'll let you know, right, and then I'm like all right, that's the answer you get. Because I, I know, even when I was doing just the physical body right, training, a lot of the physical body training, people give me those excuses like you know, um, what time do you have open? What time can you come? Well, what's good for you when you show up? And they're like well, I don't know. I don't know if it's this, I don't know if I could do that, I don't know if I could do that, you're probably really expensive. How about this? You start showing up, we'll work it out. You're probably really expensive. How about this? You start showing up, we'll work it out. Well, I don't know if I could do it. So, even in that situation, they have a hard time, right, committing.
Speaker 2:That's the word.
Speaker 3:But what I did bring up at the conference and I was talking to some people they you know with my background, and all I said here's the thing I said me and my people talked about New York perspective is that not many people have ever taken an oath. And I really believe it comes down to taking an oath to say I will. And once you take that obligation of an oath to say I will, then yeah, you're going to have to change a lot of things in your life, but when you say I will, dot dot, dot, man, we're limitless. But people don't take oaths.
Speaker 2:I got to take an oath to go to bed. I can't sleep at night. That's chaotic. Is that a reprogramming of the mind that can be done for that?
Speaker 1:yeah, workout, workout a couple of hours before hardcore and I bet you go to sleep.
Speaker 2:I've been like that for years, since I was a teenager and a new thing I got. I was like what's going on with my mind? I'm eating like once a day. Now I've been doing that what two years.
Speaker 3:You're saying you're having a hard time falling asleep.
Speaker 2:Yeah.
Speaker 3:That's because your mind's running. I mean, that's the only thing that would keep you up, so something's got to be more tired than your mind.
Speaker 2:Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1:It's got to be your body.
Speaker 3:Your body won't make you go to sleep, but your mind will eventually wake you up.
Speaker 2:Got you.
Speaker 1:But you know, like, after doing martial arts, going through forms or you know, stick, knife and all of that, and trying to remember that and training and moving by the time you get home, I don't want to think about nothing, Nothing.
Speaker 2:You see how Ron said my mind is constantly going. I just reading. I think of being in front of a screen all day at work. You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 3:Because I do IT that can really be the problem.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I do IT. That could really be the problem. Yeah, I do IT for a living, so I'm staring at full monitors at once, so it's like Well, for me.
Speaker 3:You know I am a thinking person. I do think a lot, I think and read a lot.
Speaker 3:I mean, you know I'm yeah, I'm always in some form of book to study you know, yeah, book, absolutely I'm still into the books and going over books and the systems of things, because still working my highlighters and the different yellow and red highlighters and blue highlighters in my book, and then I'll use maybe the computer to be like okay, what, how? And then I ask the question and I'll go dig there and then read some more. And then I have to say I push it away and I'm like, okay, I'm shutting down, I, I have to shut this down because it's getting a little too much and I'll push it away. It'll take me a little bit to shut it, to calm it down.
Speaker 3:But I think my mind's, for me my mind is like a little look, a little boy like, but you promised that we can go to an amusement park type mind and I say, well, you know what. We did this. Let's move on, let's relax, let's listen to some music, let's draw, let's paint, let's just doodle Right, and just relax and let let my mind relax away from the amusement park of the stuff I was looking at or reading or studying.
Speaker 1:Right Now. Now to bring it back to reprogramming the brain and AI. I like this subject. So you say the ai would act as a filter, but how would it filter the chemical reactions from what happens in the brain?
Speaker 3:so it doesn't filter the chemical, it filters the wave just okay, the wave, that's the way.
Speaker 2:Yeah, it filters the wave right. So it's like it's like the cat skin that shows, like when somebody's brain areas of the brain that light up the waves, that's the wave patterns.
Speaker 3:Right. So each wave comes into the brain as a signal because we're electromagnetic, right, electrophysiology. So I've written it in the formula of how the waves come in. So because we have certain waves, as you know, we have the alpha, we have the delta and we have the theta and these types of waves and the up on these waves and frequencies and then the vision picks it up from, you know, color schemes, wave also sound. That puts it into sight. Waves, right. So basically I'm filtering the wave. Basically I'm filtering the wave. So no matter what is high, like I said. So it doesn't matter what sensory perception or what waveform is registering higher than the other or gets signaled more than the other, that AI filter holds it back for the rest to catch up instead of what the other wave triggered first and wants to run the show first.
Speaker 2:It's like a modem it modulates, demodulates, it breaks it down. We use the IRQ like on a system board, like a requestem it modulates, demodulates, it breaks it down. We use the IT term, the IRQ like on a system board, like a request line, interrupt request line. It will modulate, it, slow down the bits hold off for the processor. Let this one process first.
Speaker 3:Yes, absolutely.
Speaker 2:Absolutely, oh man.
Speaker 1:It sounds great. What would this be Like a?
Speaker 3:machine. No, it would have to be implanted. This can't be an outside. So right now we're dealing with a lot of outside Influence. We have red light therapy. We have, you know, we have red light therapy. We have cryotherapy to help heal that body. So we have these wearables now right, the ring wearable, the watch wearable. Wearables now right, the ring wearable, the watch wearable. It can help you detect where things are going, ie blood pressure, the different signaling to say, oh my goodness, I didn't know my blood pressure was rising Right, so let me do some of this so I can bring down my blood pressure, some of this so I can bring down my blood pressure. So we have detection externally. I want the detection to happen immediately so you can do the work immediately.
Speaker 2:Gotcha.
Speaker 3:Like I said, I really do want us to still do the work, because if we did it a different way, then the AI would be in a program that would say be happier, be calmer, okay so now where would this happier, be calmer.
Speaker 1:okay, so now, where would? Now, where would, where would this device be implanted and what would be the process? I mean, would you have to go do surgery and open your skull up and put something in there, or would you put it through the air, mouth, mouth?
Speaker 2:Nose.
Speaker 3:See, that's so.
Speaker 1:Nose, nose, nose. You're right, Nose, nose.
Speaker 3:Knowing my weaknesses, I don't want to speculate on how to input, because the other part of this is the AI part. I'm not an AI guy, I'm not. And the other part is what you call the surgical part, because the way they can introduce things into the body, that's non-evasive. Is that possible or is it not possible? So that is not my field of study and that's why, even at this conference, I reached out to talk with people, even who's into that neurosurgical field, and they were just blown away by my idea and they're like, they're on board and I showed them just a moderative diagram how I believe it's going to work, but the moderative equation, how I think it can work. And because I how about this?
Speaker 3:The problem with being a scientist is that working by yourself, I can tell you now things are flawed. You need a team to say what about, what, if and how about, because you know it's tough to do that by yourself, to question something so amazing, you think is amazing, you think it could really help, really help, and it and it kind of starts flowing over and you, you want to be such the scientist that you don't want to flow over to ego. Right, like this is gonna work. You know I don't want to be that guy. I never want to be that guy. So I know I need help. So I do need a lab, I do need people around me. But if I had to take a guess it would have to be surgery. And if I had to take where I had thought it would be to not answer your question it would be in the prefrontal cortex.
Speaker 1:Why do you choose the prefrontal cortex?
Speaker 3:Because that's where learning takes place.
Speaker 2:Okay, that makes sense.
Speaker 1:Okay, so these waves will affect the brain or filter. So okay, so you're filtering the waves of the brain Right Now. The device will it send waves to pretty much connect with the waves of the brain to filter?
Speaker 3:It would have to. It would have to filter to catch, and the way the signal gets put up it's like this is almost like a dust storm and every particle isn't the same particle you're trying to filter. It's only filtering a tenth, yeah okay, got you now.
Speaker 1:You said you said earlier. You know you would like for people to also put in the work plus, use this device that you know, device that you would like to create now. Last week you were saying that the amount of work that has to be put into reprogramming the brain would be hours and hours. Now, does this cut the hours in half or shorter?
Speaker 3:Oh yeah it will.
Speaker 3:It would be most definitely cut it into short, because now it's actually giving you a sense of pause because of the filter, whether you have been more reactionary before, it's going to, because that is not in the hypervigilant area of that reaction to that emotion. Let's go with, instead of like you have this emotion coming in at a 4, you have this emotion coming in at a 3, you have this emotion coming in at a 10, you have this emotion coming in at a 3 and this one at a five. Well, you mathematically put those emotion coming together because the filters out here that's filtering it. So now it breaks it down to the common, the lowest common, equal, common, equal, where instead of usually this 10 would take over and then everyone's following the 10 and either trying to support it or to go against it.
Speaker 2:Got you. I can also see some cons with it too. Yeah, on a health level, because the human, you know. On a health level, because you know the human brain. When people have strokes, paralysis or whatsoever, it's a neurological issue. So imagine implanting something that's going to artificially filter things out.
Speaker 3:There'll be some kind of congestion well, this will only be on a wave and frequency in on a neural stem cell. So your lesions that you have for stroke, your blood vessels collapsing and things like that, that will still and will happen. This doesn't stop none of that what it would. Maybe you're not overreacting to your diagnosis, so this way your body can be a little bit more common so you can help heal those things internally. Because once you start overreacting, then the body really starts ripping itself apart, right? So yes, the Western medicine still has to do its thing. It has to find that tear, it has to find that tear, it has to find that leak, it has to find those things and repair it.
Speaker 3:But you know, sometimes when you are in such a hypertensive area, your blood becomes toxicity. So you're not helping recovery're not helping recovery. You know what I mean. So, yeah, you, you'll get stitched up, they'll find the lesion, they'll pull out the um, the, the tumor or something like that, but that everything still has to heal and because of how you feeling about all this, you've also created a toxic climate that's dude.
Speaker 2:I feel like they've been prepping us for this man. You remember, ron, as a kid watching ninja turtles, that character, the brain crane, when the brain the guy's stomach yeah yeah, that's what it sounds like, like we've been prepping us for that I have, I have, I have something else.
Speaker 1:Uh, this is a bit controversial, which, which you're explaining, is a bit controversial because when I was growing up, you know, brothers in the conscious rap circle would talk a lot about microchips being put inside the brain, I mean inside the skull and things like that. So how would you deal with the pushback? They would say? Dr Paul Dyer created a chip of the microchip for the antichrist.
Speaker 2:Illuminati.
Speaker 3:So a microchip is something that cannot. It can create a filter and it could learn, but it's also doesn't have the fluidity that AI could have, Because if it's a microchip, that means you taught it what you wanted to do.
Speaker 1:Right, gotcha, gotcha. Now, as far as the work, the the work put in, what would you say? So I could imagine this chip has not only instructions for how to use it, but also it should, from what I'm thinking, maybe it should come with some kind of extra book for you to put in the work. Now, when we talk, about. Absolutely yeah, Now when we talk.
Speaker 2:Okay.
Speaker 1:Ron, Now when we're talking about putting in the work, if you could break down putting in the work into categories, what would be the categories?
Speaker 3:Of how to put in the work or what category would I put in. I think putting in the work is still always one. I know it's always.
Speaker 1:Well, let me explain. Let me explain. So I mean, like putting in the work, so one meditation, two running Three, this Four, that Like, if you could break it down, putting work.
Speaker 3:The first piece is to begin to know the development of self. That's the first thing I mean and I'm not talking about like I like blue hats over yellow hats, yellow hats. I'm talking about why do I stand on this side of the door, why do I step off with my right foot first? Well, because I'm a righty. You're not answering my question. Because if that's the case, then don't ever play basketball, right? What do you mean, dr Dyer? Because if you're only going to step, your first step is always right foot. Then, as a defender, I know where to put myself, because you never step off with your left foot. You just said you always step off with your right foot, right.
Speaker 3:So I see that, as a defender, I know where to put my hips at.
Speaker 2:Got you. You know I was reading this book. Cybernetics was talking about that.
Speaker 3:The brain, like, as you mentioned, using different, changing your routine to activate other parts of your brain that you never want to use. That was to add on to what you were saying do things so habitually? It is in it's. It's it's like they don't even know what they're doing and they don't even know why they do it that way and it and and I've said this before this is why so many um black americans or people around the community. They're so stuck in their ways because they'll say, well, this is just how we do things. What the hell does that mean? I don't even know what that means. This is how we do things and what's the outcome? So, if it's like, this is how we do it to find gold, and every time we do this we find gold, all right, I got it Right. There's some things that are just standard being in the military. There's some things that just, this is just how we do things. Why? Because the outcome is a higher rate of success than not. That's it.
Speaker 1:But you know what we're doing. This is how we do things and the outcome is terrible and we just stick with it. We should be the first people lining up for them chips.
Speaker 3:I mean, it is so true. You're right, though. So learning yourself know thyself, that's not just a phrase, it's so much Know thyself, know thy. Know why self Put it that way, know why self.
Speaker 1:You might be on to something with that. You should trademark that right there, you should. You might need to trademark that right there. Dr Paul Dyer, Know why? Self Ooh.
Speaker 2:Question is why? Yeah, that makes sense.
Speaker 3:If you cannot answer that outside of a phrase, because I want to. This is just how I am. This is just what we do. I don't know. This is how I learned it. This is what someone told me to do. Then you don't need a microchip someone's already chipped you because you have no idea wouldn't the why come from the first seven years of your existence?
Speaker 3:that is the first seven years of your existence. That is the first seven years of existence. Is the, what do you call the optimum years of training the brain? If I can have your kids for the first seven years of their life, I'll have them for the rest of their life.
Speaker 2:Exactly.
Speaker 3:And it's fascinating who came up with that phrase? And that was the Catholic Church, the Roman Catholic Church.
Speaker 2:I'm sorry, I'm sorry yeah.
Speaker 3:They may be evil, but they're not wrong.
Speaker 2:Yeah, because it's seven years of mission.
Speaker 3:It's seven years and I'll have them for the rest of their life. Yeah, and the only reason why things change people say, well, I'm not a this anymore, I don't do that anymore. It was dramatic that caused you to change. There was something so dramatic that it fell like a large rock in a river that you had to reroute a river. Whatever that dramatic was, whatever that big thing was in your life, it changed you. But again it changed you. You didn't change because you realized the river was running wrong. Again, you still don't know your why.
Speaker 1:Right, wow, I think that should be the next podcast. We talk about the why and the first seven years of existence. What about the next seven years going into adolescence?
Speaker 3:They're often repeated and become strengthened through the next 70 years. Hmm strengthen through the next 70 years. We repeat the same things we do at seven from zero to seven that we do at 35 and 70.
Speaker 1:brother. Brother, listen, I came to that conclusion over the weekend because you know all the stuff that I do and you know like I'm always around a lot of people and I just watch people, I say, wow, it looks like we're really grown children sometimes.
Speaker 3:Just a different sandbox.
Speaker 1:Right, that's all Got you, got you. Box right, that's all got you got you. So now um one more question about reprogramming in the work.
Speaker 3:So why the why it's you find yourself into the how? Exactly now the how is confusing to people. We thought the why is confusing. No, the how is confusing because the how needs information, all information, not segregated information. And you're only learning about black history and all the things that that that was successful, that was atrocities, that was everything and you don't know the other part of history. You still don't know how you got to know your how.
Speaker 1:Everything is like multilayered, the how is mult-layered, yeah. Now after the how, what would be the next step? The why, the how.
Speaker 3:So, after you go through your how, things start to fall out into the what. What to do?
Speaker 2:What to do.
Speaker 3:What to implement, what to work on. It starts doing the what and your what can be meditation on this thing or exercise on that thing. Right, it doesn't mean it's. It doesn't mean it's or right I, I created, I created myself.
Speaker 1:um. So sometimes you know, when you're doing like so much, you tend to relapse, right. So like like, if I I'm, if I'm working out, or if I'm working out, or if I'm going to martial arts class and I'm doing this with my children and I'm doing this and I'm doing that, to keep up with it all. It takes a great amount of will and organization to keep it going for 52 weeks, for, you know, a whole year, right? So sometimes I fall off on things. So I created a. What did I write? A relapse, relapse question plan, relapse questions, plan of action, love it. So when I relapse, I go okay, I plan of action, love it. So when I relapse, I go, okay, I just relapsed. Now, why Then I start going? How did I relapse? That's the question. And then after that, what's the plan of action? To move forward and keep going?
Speaker 3:There it is.
Speaker 2:Your own program, your own cycle.
Speaker 1:Yeah, exactly, I created a system. I just recently created this system to make sure that I don't relapse.
Speaker 3:And I tell you, most people who are intentional will do what you did in your lives. But the caveat is are your intentions of humanistic area?
Speaker 1:Are you?
Speaker 3:a human living. Are you a controller? Controller Because you could develop that, because you feel out of control, or you could develop it because you're human and you're developing because you want to serve. That's a fine line.
Speaker 1:Well, my whole life is centered around service.
Speaker 3:So well, you could say that. I've talked to CEOs and they say their life is about service, but they forget that they're human. They never thought of it that way. They're so far removed from the human side of their doing.
Speaker 2:Are you God, Generate, operate, destroy. I always say that. Oh yeah, man, as Ron said, I do that all the time. I have my little vision board. All these times I sit down and have to quiet my mind and be like, all right, I'm all over the place. Because within my life, the way my lifestyle lifestyle is, I got like a dependent family that needs my attention and other people like constantly my attention. They need you know. I'm like I get a little moment for myself, a little 10 minute breather, just to, you know, decompress, Because I realize, you know, because constantly being of service, people want to, you know, hear your voice, save somebody's life, give advice and everything. But there'll be a moment I'm like I need a moment for myself, right?
Speaker 1:And you got to take it.
Speaker 2:Exactly Because I'm like I'm gonna go crazy. So yeah, I understand.
Speaker 1:Well, I don't know if you got something to say no, okay. On that note, I would like to close today's podcast on Mind Control Reprogramming the Brain with Dr Paul Dyer. Appreciate you, dr Paul Dyer. Next week I want to go into the details of the what, the how and the why, or the why, how and what. I want to go into detail with those three things, because those three things it's all about putting in the work. So we don't have the AI chip now, so what can we do to reprogram the brain now with the work that Dr Paul Dyer suggests? Next week's podcast, 7 pm. Look for Dr Paul Dyer 7 pm every Monday and give them your social media handles. Tell them where they can find you.
Speaker 3:Oh, people can find me if they put in Dr Paul Dyer. I think that's the easiest thing LinkedIn Snap. Whatever It'll come, it's either Dr Paul Dyer, grandmaster, or it's. Once you see the picture, you'll be like oh that's the guy. That's the funny guy in the beard.
Speaker 2:Meditation, people Meditation.
Speaker 3:But wait a minute. He's holding a rifle and a gun. Yeah, don't get it twisted. Dr Paul Dyer is a very kind guy.
Speaker 2:He'll blam you, as they say.
Speaker 1:On that note, peace to everybody in the chat. Everybody viewing 7 o'clock is the schedule. Monday, Wednesday at 8.15 and, sorry, Tuesday at 8.15.
Speaker 2:Wednesday at 7pm. All sorry.
Speaker 1:Tuesday at 8.15. Wednesday at 7 pm All lives the rest of the week. They're prerecorded videos. We're giving you content seven days a week moving forward, so look forward to it. We have a podcast with Brother Kujo coming on right now. However, it's prerecorded, so look out for that on Saturday 3 pm. Peace to everybody.
Speaker 2:Thursday we got a podcast with Tiffany.
Speaker 1:Thursday Tiffany podcast coming out. See y'all, we're checking out. Peace to everybody, peace we're out.