Recovery Catalyst
Recovery Catalyst Podcast hosted by Cat York, is dedicated to creating a supportive, honest space for candid discussions on mental health, addiction, recovery, healing, and breaking generational cycles. Each week, we dive into the messy, complex, and profound truth of finding a new, healthier legacy, sharing raw, authentic stories of resilience and reinvention. This is where a community connects, heals, and learns what it means to truly redefine their story, one authentic conversation at a time.
To Follow, Support or be a guest click https://linktr.ee/RecoveryCatalystPodcast
Recovery Catalyst
How Words Shape Reality — Metaphysical Psychology with Dr. Herman SJR
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
In this episode Dr. Herman SJR — a metaphysical psychologist and systems architect — explains his concept of holistic vision, the bridge between mind and metaphysical realities, and why "divorce" (stepping outside yourself) is the core exercise for seeing interconnectivity across any situation.
He discusses the power of language and linguistic framing, offers practical exercises to reframe identity and break procrastination, and shows how redirecting energy and changing self-talk leads to clearer problem solving.
The conversation closes on humanitarian action and daily civility as remedies for social disconnection, plus a note on accessing his free program to learn universal thinking tools.
To Connect with Dr. HermanSJR visit link below:
To purchase the published works of HermanSJR please visit:
Love the conversation? Want to be a guest? Support the Call Her Cat Podcast mission to redefine the story of addiction and recovery. The easiest way to help is to subscribe on your favorite platform and share this episode with a friend. We always love hearing from our listeners!
Good morning, everybody, and welcome to Call
Introduction to Dr. Herman SJR
SPEAKER_00Her Cat. Today I have a very special guest on, someone you're probably not gonna meet more than once in your lifetime. This is Dr. Herman SJR. Dr. Herman SJR is known for teaching universal laws, universal problem solving, internationally sought after, highly nomadic, non-politically correct, no nonsense, blunt, eccentric, lightning fast moving, and in your face universal systems architect, doctor of metaphysical psychology, and scholar who consults, trains plus 100k entities, Fortune 100, universities, AI experts, artists, creatives, compliance officers, doctors, engineers, lawyers, federal, local police, wellness experts, and many others across all industries, across countries and languages, and the ability behind history's greatest thinkers. This ability he loosely calls holistic visions and defines as the ability to see the foundations and interconnectivity of all atmospheres. His work continues to generate plus twenty-six million in clientele revenue. Dr. Herman is a Harvard University published writer, twelve times author, ten solo, two contributor, whose work is accepted in the U.S. Library of Congress and used in educational entities worldwide, writer of fifty plus academic, business, and research papers, expert featured plus seventy times in media worldwide in various languages, including MSN Yahoo, awardee of six degrees, one doctorate, two masters, two bachelors, and associates, an advisor, consultant, instructor, judge, mentor at universities, academies, career centers, entrepreneurship incubators, and accelerators, and employment agencies worldwide, universal holistic psychological systems consultants for a NASA contractor, an Interpool, International AI, Cyber Investigation contractors through CIA, SARPA, DEA, FBI, Europool, Interpool, Secret Service, other agencies, and high net worth individuals.
Reflections on Biography
SPEAKER_00Did I miss anything after her ministry?
SPEAKER_02I should have said you you can truncate it. Sorry, I should have told you.
SPEAKER_00No, no, I I don't I don't want to shorten it anymore. I mean you those are that's a pretty you know extensive biography, even just the truncated version. You know how does it feel when you I'm always curious how people feel when they hear their their biography like run back to them.
SPEAKER_02I I always I always greatly appreciate it because it reminds me of where I'm at. As a matter of fact, there's a beautiful psychological drill that I highly endorse. And uh just so we say this, I'm not a clinician, I'm not a psychologist, nothing I say is ever medical advice, all that legal stuff. So there this one drill is basically writing your own eulogy, and it is really good to get you in a place of understanding what you've really done or what you have yet to do, according to your own mindset. And to answer you further answer your question, when I hear that, I'm like, okay, yeah, I'm doing pretty good because as a ridiculously inculcated, you know, overachiever who after everything you said, I I think that I haven't even begun to fulfill what I need to do in this world with potential. It's always good to say, oh wait, maybe I did maybe I did do some good stuff after hearing the bio. So it gives you hope.
SPEAKER_00No, I think it must I feel like it might even inspire you a little bit to be like, oh. Yeah, like like that's me. You know?
SPEAKER_01Yeah. Yeah. Uh yeah, yeah. It's like, oh, who is that guy? Can we meet him?
SPEAKER_00Are there are there any other disclaimers you need to to mention?
SPEAKER_02No, I I think that's it. Just the uh not medical advice and educational entertainment purposes, all that stuff. No, I I think
Understanding Metaphysical Psychology
SPEAKER_02we're good. And uh yeah. Okay.
SPEAKER_00Now, just so we can get like a good like a good foundation, I guess. What does your uh your doctorate is in metaphysical psychology? Could you uh what what what does metaphysical mean to you and how would you introduce it to somebody?
SPEAKER_02Well, you said metaphysical psychology, but your question was what is metaphysics? So metaphysics is merely composed of two Greek words, meta meaning above or beyond, physic, physique meaning pertaining to the physical. So anything that's above or beyond the physical realm or world, whatever you want to call it, that's metaphysics. Uh, but metaphysical psychology is basically, very simply put, everything that I just said as interpreted by the mind. So I never like, and I say this on a few of the interviews that I've done, I never like when someone says, hey, Dr. Herman, what's metaphysical psychology? I really don't like that question because it's extremely difficult because of the scientists. So the reason I say that is because metaphysics is an ever-diminishing field, just like Neil deGrasse Tyson, who I do not respect, just as he said that God is an ever-diminishing entity, because people used to say, oh, this is all God, this is miracles. But now science is saying, okay, that's not God, that's meditation, that's not God, that's affirmation, or that's not God, that's physics, or that's not God, this is quantum physics. So God is getting smaller and smaller and smaller. And he was quite proud of saying that. The same is with metaphysics. Before they were like, oh, this is metaphysical nonsense, but now it's like, well, excuse me, spontaneous healing, spontaneous regression, according to science and medical documents, is real. But before they used to say, oh, that's metaphysical crap, metaphysical nonsense. But now it's like, no, no, they they entertain the field of resonance and quantum healing and stuff. So that's not metaphysics anymore. So we're gonna take that away from metaphysics, and then we take this way and this way and this way and
The Nature of Metaphysics
SPEAKER_02this way. So metaphysics is a little tricky because these days it's quite hard to define it. That's why I don't like that question.
SPEAKER_00Well, no, I can understand that because you would think those two words, you know, don't typically you know. I think sometimes psychology gets a bad name too. Oh yeah. You know, they don't they don't it's it's sometimes called like a fake you know, fake or oh yeah, you know.
SPEAKER_02If you don't know what you want to do in life, you can major in history or psychology is a famous thing in academia.
SPEAKER_00Ouch.
SPEAKER_02Yeah.
SPEAKER_00Ouch. So what sparked you to get into into this field?
SPEAKER_02Well, lifelong nerdism. So I'm I'm the I'm the epitome of a nerd, just psychotic for knowledge, and I really mean psychotic. And I've said this quite a few times in different articles and such. When I was eight years old, I was watching the Prices Right game show on TV. I stayed home one day for some reason, I don't know why, and I was laying down on my dad's bed alone, and I was watching it, and the Bob Barker, the original host, right the best host, in my opinion, he he told the contestants to spin this big wheel. And for those of you that don't know, Bob Barker, you spun this wheel, it had between 10 cents and a dollar, different denominations. And if you got to a dollar or at a dollar, you would win closest to a dollar, and you would get two spins. And Bob Barker, this one person won. And for some reason, Bob called him back and said, Hey, spin it again, see what you would have gotten. And I was eight years old, and immediately I said to myself, I think I said this out loud, that's so stupid. It wouldn't prove anything because I knew that when you do something at this time versus doing the same thing at another time, even one second later or one year later, whatever, the atmosphere completely changes. You're going to take different steps, maybe three steps or four steps or three point five steps. You're going to grab the wheel differently. You're going to have different muscle contractions than you would one second earlier if you did it one second earlier. You're going to have different intention. You're going to expel different grade of energy to that, to that wheel, to that pull or push or spin. So it's going to be completely different. The atmosphere has completely changed. So I knew that eight years old. And then from that moment, I was like, okay, the world is really thinking really dumb. They don't connect things very well. So I want to be the bridge
Lifelong Nerdism and Curiosity
SPEAKER_02of the connection. And metaphysical psychology, if you define it properly, not as I defined it earlier, that's the simple definition. It's really not a field. This is where I don't want to get too confusing. It's really not a field. It's really a bridge. It's the bridge between what happens in the mind and what happens metaphysically and how to bridge those things into real world application. I'm just gonna stop there because it's gonna be too nerdy.
SPEAKER_00No, that's okay. I think it's I like the way you said it's not a field, it's a bridge.
SPEAKER_02Yeah.
SPEAKER_00I like that because it uh you kinda I get the when you say that I hear that word interconnectivity, how you loosely define a holistic vision there. Yes. I I like that. It's you know, you can envision that in your mind. And it's like a field, I feel like can sound often dull sometimes. Like I'm in the field of this. What you're doing is you're connecting and you're you know, I almost feel like a connected ass when you say it, like Oh yes. You know, and and you you you loosely refer to holistic vision as the ability to see foundations and interconnectivity of all atmospheres. Can you expand on that a little bit?
SPEAKER_02Sure. And it's actually in reverse, that's a finite definition that I came up with, but I loosely refer to that that definition to the term holistic vision. But uh but otherwise you you still got the concept. So the ability to see the interconnectivity and foundations of all atmospheres. Atmosphere is just a situation, a scenario, a an environment, a person, an entity, whatever. It doesn't matter what it is. So it's not an instance, or excuse me, it's not a meeting of only weather. I gave that definition to someone and they said, What do you mean? You mean weather? I'm like, no, I'm using the general term atmosphere. And one huge problem with society these days is that people are really locked into inculcation of connotation of various words. What that means is when they hear atmosphere, they immediately think only weather. When they hear me constantly use the word divorce, they immediately only think two entities getting out of marriage. And no, divorce just means separation. That's it. So if you use words properly based on their real etymology, not Webster's dictionary, that's superficial nonsense. That's why I always tell people don't ever use a dictionary ever again. It's superficial knowledge. Use etymology of any word you ever learned. So the atmosphere pertains to everything that I said. So what does that mean? That means that you can be whatever the hell you are. If you're an FBI agent, if you're a podcast host, if you're Tony Robbins, if you're Oprah, if you're a babysitter, single mother, single father, if you're a student in high school, whatever. It doesn't matter. These are universal concepts. You can look at any atmosphere, any situation, and see how it relates to this atmosphere or culinary theory or molecular gastronomy or art theory, music theory, or paleontology, archaeology, no exception whatsoever. And that's not hyperbole. And you can make relations. You can see, oh, cooking, cooking pasta relates to bartending, cooking pasta bartending relate to counterterrorism, cooking pasta, bartending, counterterrorism relate to child rearing, which is bringing up children. And I'm not exaggerating, I'm being very real here. So when you look at these things, everything that exists, you'll see that there's no separation whatsoever. It's not a joke, that's not exaggeration. If you think such as so that there isn't separation, you're the problem. You're not thinking deep enough. Because when you go to the universal level, the ground level, the root level, the concept, the algorithm, the rule, whatever you want to call it, the lowest level possible, you see that there are very few rules in existence, and they are in everything. So if you master the ability to find that lowest level in whatever atmosphere, I'm using that word atmosphere in my definition of holistic vision, then you can use that atmospheric algorithm or that rule or that concept or that vision or that universal, whatever you want to call it, in any other field whatsoever, and you'll be extraordinarily more successful than even experts in that field who do not use universals. This is the same thing as how history's greatest thinkers ever thought and performed and saw. If you ask people, who are three of history's greatest thinkers, which is one of the first questions I ever ask in all my programs, they all say the same thing amongst a small group of people. Aristotle, Einstein, Socrates, Plato, Mohammed, Gandhi, Jesus, all these people. It's a lot of people, but compared to everyone that's ever lived, it's a tiny pool of people. And in my research and experience, the only commonality with all those people, history's greatest thinkers, is that they were experts in one or more fields, like Leonardo da Vinci was, I think, 15 or 20 fields, but they were experts at the lowest level possible. So they mastered their field or fields so much so that they could apply that universal, that algorithm, that concept, that rule in other seemingly unrelated fields. So then they were able to excel. So Einstein's um theories of relativity and physics, we actually use that in psychology today. We also use that today in stock trading. So the ones that impact the world most are the ones that can see, like holistic vision, whatever you want to call it, the foundation and intercut interconnectivity of all atmospheres.
SPEAKER_00What are some what are some what are some ways people can apply this to our lives? Like it's I know you mentioned seeing the connectivity, but how can what are some exercises that it can do to to do that? Because it's you know, I feel like we get we have with everything, we're very disconnected from everything. Like what's a way that people can get reconnected and see the interconnectivity of everything?
The Concept of Divorce in Life
SPEAKER_02Okay, so forgive me, you're asking you said originally different ways to apply it, but then at the end you said different ways to see it. So do you want to know different ways to see it first or to apply it? Let's go and see it. Let's go and see it. Sure, sure. So the easiest way to see it, as I said for over ten years of doing work, is to fall in love with divorce. If you forget everything I ever say, just remember one word divorce. You have to make sure that you are constantly divorcing yourself from everything you could possibly ever imagine. Habituate divorce. So and I shouldn't have to say this, but obviously I don't mean husband and wife divorce, every other divorce, though. So when you're in an atmosphere, when you're raising your kid, when a kid's having a tantrum, or when your kid's not excelling in school or whatever, stop, step outside of yourself and say, what the hell's going on here? Basically become your own consultant, become your own new way of seeing, your own third person, and see things differently outside of how you would normally see it. So if you're, let's say, a cop and looking at a crime, stop being a cop. Step outside of yourself and see that same atmosphere as another entity, as your best friend who thinks differently, who's an accountant. See it as one of history's greatest thinkers would be wonderful. See it as Leonardo da Vinci. How the hell would he look at this? Not solve it. We're not there yet. We're just looking at looking at the atmosphere, looking at this situation. So, how the hell would Leonardo da Vinci see this thing? Or how the hell would Chef Gordon Ramsey see this murder or whatever? So it may sound weird at first, but that's good and that's good. You want to start to do things in a weird way. So, divorce, always step outside of yourself, always start seeing things differently and say, wait a minute, if I walk from here to the park and it takes me 10 minutes and I walk this way, how can I do it where it takes nine minutes and 45 seconds? Well, I can take longer steps, or I can take this route instead of going from here to here, I can take this route from here to here. It shaves off just 15 seconds. So you want to learn to habituate divorce, to stop and see things differently. Now, to most uneducated people, they'll say something like, or at least think something like, oh, Dr. Herman, this is just stupid. Who gives a damn about you know taking 15 minutes off a bark walk or something like that or seeing things this way if you're raising a child? It's like, no, you idiot. You're right now you have just exposed how limited your thinking is. What you're doing doesn't matter. It doesn't matter if you're trying to go from here to there, point A to point B, faster or in a better way, or in a car or in a plane or whatever. That's irrelevant. What matters is the habituation, teaching yourself to divorce, divorce. So when you are in a situation that you really need the help, such as being that cop trying to solve a crime, or being in that parent who has a kid who constantly has a temper tantrum, you're able to stop and say, wait a minute, let me divorce. Let me see how else I could handle this in ways that I could never even imagine if I never divorced, because I'm habituated as doing things this way. I need to stop and think differently. So that is key to always habituate divorce.
SPEAKER_00I can see how how something, a holistic vision could be beneficial to someone, say who's like struggling with addiction.
The Power of Language
SPEAKER_00You know, divorcing yourself and really like having a conversation with yourself like in the third person almost. Oh, yeah. Would that be would that be something that you would agree on?
SPEAKER_02Uh yes, but uh just carefully, because I don't do mental mental health or anything. But yes, yes, you're right. Divorcing from yourself and having a third party cut third-party conversation with yourself is always an excellent tool. And it's actually one of the psychological tools that clinicians give, not me, I'm not a clinician, to people to rehash things, to look at things differently. So yeah, I agree with you. And it's well, it's the initial step to start seeing things differently. And how do you do that before you even have that conversation? You have to first divorce. Just like everything in existence follows the phrase, if he oh, what the hell did they say? If you in order for you to fix a problem, you have to first see that there is a problem. In order for you to first see that there is a problem, what do you have to do? You have to divorce. You have to have an element that pushes you and smacks you in the face and says, Hey, idiot, wake up, stop, stop right here. Whether whether they do it or not is different, but that first element of divorce is key to changing anything in existence. And your conversation for an addict is a beautiful example of that.
SPEAKER_00And one thing like something that I hear a lot as you speak is how important our language is. Not even just relation to like the dictionary, but it seems how we speak out into the universe and speak out into ourselves. Can you expand on why what minding our language means?
Connecting with Humanity
SPEAKER_02Of course. So there's an entire section that I deal with. One of my masters is in linguistics, and it's called linguistic framing. So language is ridiculously more powerful than most humans who ever live realize. So you have to be very mindful of your language because yes, your subconscious does not deal in words. It does not deal in I'm going to say human language, whether it's English or something else. However, you do. So when you're acting in the everyday world, you are affected by language when you constantly say to yourself, I don't want to say this to myself because I watch my language. But if if someone says to themselves, they're an idiot, I'm not going to say I'm because I don't do that. I mean, you can joke once in a while. I joke heavily because I'm an extraordinarily playful person. But if someone's constantly saying they're an idiot or they're too stupid to learn Chinese or they're too old, it upsets me so goddamn much. I'm like, you know, I I swear a lot. I guess I'll uh watch my language on the show. But okay. I'm like, I'm like, you fucking idiot. It's like, you know, you just you just killed your whole fucking strategy to learn Chinese or any language or whatever, or even worse, even worse, I really hate when people say dipshittery for their health because not because I'm an idiot or I want to be aggressive or anything, because I passionately love helping people and it it hurts me immediately when I see people suffering. So when people are perpetuating their own bad health or their own lack of ability, inability to do anything only because their mindset, it's like, you idiot, you're perpetuating what the rulers of this planet want to perpetuate. So to further answer your question, language is extremely important. So just change those that language around, whether it's self-language, self-speak, as some people call it, or others speaking it to you, reword it. So don't say I can never uh I can never learn Chinese. Say I can learn Chinese. It may be difficult, but I can do this. I don't know, I don't even like the word difficult. It may take longer, or it can take longer, something like that. That is better. Don't try not to use the word difficult. I almost never say it pertaining to myself. So when it comes to your health, stop this dumb shit of, oh, I'm, you know, they're too old, or I'm too old, or you know, I have this, so I can't do that. I have this ailment, so I can't do that. You're you're perpetuating, you're taking your mind, and your mind is listening to those words because yes, your subconscious listens to symbols, like I like I said, but your conscious mind is on top of that subconscious mind, and it takes in information that you give it, including language. So while you're saying, I can't do that because of diabetes, or I can't do that because of the back, it's like stop saying that shit. You have to look at every ailment, everything. I don't care what it is, I don't care if it's the most terminal thing ever imaginable. I don't care. You have to redefine it and you have to look at it as just yourself imagining this. This is an example I I say many times. Imagine you're walking down the street on a sidewalk and it's fall, it's autumn, and there are there's a pile of leaves, let's say one meter tall, three three feet roughly, and you're gonna go through those leaves. It's dry leaves, you know, it's a fall day, 70 degrees outside. I don't know what that is in sunlight, sorry, Celsius, 30 degrees or something like that. I don't know, 20. Anyway, uh, it's a nice day. All you're doing is walking through those leaves. That's it. You're gonna go through those leaves, they're gonna spat uh go about, you know, as you walk through them, the wind's gonna pick them up, you're gonna kick them away. You're going through the leaves. You're not petrified saying, Oh my god, I'm gonna go through these leaves and it's gonna hurt me, or maybe I'll break a leg or something. It's like, shut the fuck up. Just go, you're just going through the leaves. It's just a tiny moment in your life. You have to really, and I'm more serious than anyone who ever listens to this show can imagine. You have to see ailments, I don't care what it is, it's just something you're passing through. That is it. If you can do that, you can then start the path of wellness. Again, this isn't medical advice, right? I'm not saying this will happen. Go get checked out by a doctor. This is all educational and informational and entertainment purposes only. So, so yes, you have to really see those things if you're afraid of whatever as just walking through those leaves. That's it. And if it takes a walk through those leaves of one week or one year, that's fine. You're still just walking through the leaves. So that's the long answer of why your language matters. You have to really redefine yourself and stop saying I have this or my ailment, my headache, or whatever. It's not yours. Say the headache, say the diabetes, don't ever claim it. And that goes back to my lesson on divorce, constantly divorce, definitely from negativity. And if someone's talking with you and say, say, hey, how is your diabetes? Always, always stop them, and say, No, no, not my diabetes, the diabetes. Always stop them.
SPEAKER_00I I like that because I feel like even when you're talking to a doctor, you're gonna go to a doctor's office, it's there's a whole barrage of information thrown at you just listing what could be wrong, supposedly, with you. And it just it sets that internally with you. You know, and like you said, you start to claim it as like your own identity. Like that's all you are is whatever they label you as. And how do you like and is is divorce a good way to counteract what other people say? Like so you say you catch an email about you that was like unkind or something. Is is is is divorce a good way to to counteract the language?
SPEAKER_02It's it's the only way, definitely. You want to you want to restate it. So what I do is, I mean, this hasn't happened to me in a huge amount of time. I I'm not even sure. I'd really have to sit down and think because my circle knows to not say stuff to me like that because they know how I am and how I have helped them with language as well. So to answer your question, you always
The Impact of Social Media
SPEAKER_02want to reword it. So I don't care if you're at a doctor's office, and I have done this. I rarely go to a doctor because I do meditation healing and and and natur healing and stuff like that for myself. But when I have gone to a doctor, very rare, if they ever say something like that, I stop them and I say politely, I say, no, no, it's not, it's not my just please say this, because mentality is very important to me, being a psychological type of doctor. And they so far, no one has ever said anything stupid. And if they say something stupid like, oh no, shut up, or you know, no, you need to own this, and then I'm walking out or I would walk out. So, but no one's done that. And as we progress, I notice that doctors these days, at least in my experience, are very open to that. They say, Yes, you're right. Okay, I understand. I won't say that anymore. It because they and then we have a mini conversation on whatever you want to call it, new ageism or healing or quantum healing or Dr. Joe Dispenza healing or whatever like that. So to answer your question, you have to let me stop for a moment. You you I want to say you have to, but you really want to reword language coming into you from other entities, and that includes text message and emails. But if there are times that you can't, such as in your question, your example of an email, say to a boss or something like that, you can't really write back and say, hey, say it this way or something like that, then just divorce from from it internally yourself, or even better, speak it aloud and say, okay, they didn't mean this, they meant this. And then when you write back, write it in a way that you are rephrasing it for them in a positive way, of course, so you don't lose a job. But you're you're you're rewriting it. So let me give you a very specific example because I don't want anyone walking away without specificity here so they can have no nonsense tools right now. So let's say someone writes to another person. I'm gonna be careful with my target. If someone were to write to me and say they didn't know who I am, and I I wasn't uh I wasn't who I was, I was just a regular person. They say, Hey, what what's your problem? Why did you do this? I would write back to them something like, Hey, I don't know what you mean, but I did this, this, and this because of this, this, and this, and that is how I saw the situation. So I didn't attack them for how they said how they came at me by saying the word problem. I just redirected their query or their argument or whatever you want to call it, and then I answered it. So it's the same thing as in a keto. So in martial arts, I was in martial arts for 25 years. In a keto, that's the one that Stephen Segal, for those of you who are older, or the actor, the American actor Steven Segal, he did. A keto is an art from Japan, and it's the number one art that I've ever recommended to females, and a lot of other artists do this too. Because in a keto, you almost never hit anybody. You just redirect their own energy against themselves. So when someone punches at your face, you're not blocking it, you're not punching back, you're grabbing their arm and you're always using circular moment movements. You're grabbing their arm or pushing their arm into the force in the direction they're already going. So if I have my back against the wall and someone's in front of me and I cannot go backwards and they're punching straight at my face, I'm gonna either dodge it and allow their own momentum and power to hit the wall behind me and break their hand, or I'm gonna grab their arm or gently pull their arm. I don't have to do much motion because they're already in motion, powerful motion from their own punch, and I'm going to throw them into the arm. So I'm not using much effort. I'm taking the direct the power that's aimed at me and redirecting it away from me into the wall so they get hurt. I'm doing the same goddamn thing with the email. I'm taking their stupidity of their words, hey, what's your problem? Uh whatever nonsense that they're saying, and I'm redirecting it in a different, more beneficial way for me. It's the same thing when someone says, hey, how are your how's your diabetes? You're redirecting it. You're saying, no, it's not, it's not my, it's the diabetes. So you're immediately divorcing from it, you're redirecting it, and you're talking about the strategy that you're doing. Hopefully you're doing a strategy to overcome that thing. So you're really attacking it threefold at least.
SPEAKER_00I like that. I like that because so many times, even when you have like maybe like a mild cold, you're like, How's your cold? Yeah. You know. Like how you know, oh, what are you like, you know, like you know what I mean? Like people will always you know, because I had like some health issues and I realized the more doctors I went to, A the less they had answers, and B the worse I felt. And I would leave doctor's office feeling defeated. I'm like, this is just isn't working. And you know, finding like your own path, especially with language, kind of like what you put out into the universe will come back. You know, and the messages that we tell ourselves are very important. Like if you're constantly hearing and believing that you're sick, you're sick, you're sick, you know, I think it just continues that cycle. And I wonder how that applies to certain words that you hear a lot of, like procrastination. You know? Like if you feel like you hear that a lot, like oh you're you're you're procrastinating. What what is procrast what what what do you define procrastination as?
SPEAKER_02How do you how do you sure procrastination is merely putting s continuously putting something off, whatever that something is.
SPEAKER_00And how could you apply like a holistic version to that?
SPEAKER_02Well, that that wouldn't be quite easy. First you have to divorce, and I realize that you're a procrastinator and not you, but you in general. Right. And and then merely say whatever it is that you need to say to yourself, excuse me, to move yourself forward. Okay, how do you do that? The only way to do that is to find the meaning or passion or emotion or drive or feeling, whatever word you want to call it, it means the same thing in this case, uh, behind what you want to do in life where that procrastination element is coming into play. So what the hell does that mean? That means if you're procrastinating about uh I'm like stay general and then get specific, if you're cra procrastinating about something that you have to do to get paid because it's part of your job, or to get recognition, or to get a relationship because the person that you are in a relationship with or want to get into a relationship with wants that thing done or doesn't know about it, but you would like to do that thing, so you can then have that paycheck or relationship or whatever. You cannot look at that procrastination element. So you have to look at the long term, you have to look at your emotion, your feeling, your devotion, your passion, your reason behind the milestone, the further strategy, the bigger long-term strategy. So let's get more specific here. If I'm a data entry person and I have a stack that's one foot tall of paper that I have to do to put into the computer to for my job, of course, well, not me, but if I was a procrastinator, I'd be like, God damn it, this stupid ass papers. It takes five minutes to do one paper, and I got a one-foot stack. It's gonna take me the whole week. Yeah, tough shit. You gotta do it. So, how do you do that? You have to not focus on the pre procrastination element, which in this case is the stack of papers. You have to recall the passion that you have for whatever it is is the reason behind that job. I want a paycheck. If you got a job that you really don't like, but you are there for the paycheck, that's okay. Then just constantly remember, okay, it's not for, it's not for the boss who's an idiot. I can't stand him. It's not for the customer. They're whining bitches. I can't stand them also. It's for me. It's for my paycheck. It's so I can get this paycheck and I could save money and I could go to Bermuda, or I could go to Calgary, Canada, or or whatever. I could start my business, or I could get a better job, whatever. Forget the procrastination element. If you focus on that, you're gonna forever, most likely, forever procrastinate and you're not gonna change. So you're gonna say, How do I change? I can't, yeah, I divorced from myself, but no, you need to divorce from yourself, but then you need to find the passion that is behind your goal, which put you in that atmosphere of that procrastination element. In this case, in my example, my goal is to, I'll say, travel the world, which made me get this job that I hate, which made me do this data entry task, which is one foot tall that I hate, but I'm not focusing on the one foot tall element. I'm not focusing on the shitty job that I hate. I'm focusing on me being happy traveling the world. So you have to recall that. Now, if you can't find that passion, that element, that emotion, that drive, then you are in the wrong place and you really need to rethink your strategy and where you are in life at that moment and change something.
SPEAKER_00Now, was I'm trying to make sure I asked this correctly. When or where do you think we became like disconnected from like our language and ourselves in a way where it became okay to you know talk to ourselves this way, talk to other people like this way? You know, when did we start to where did it kind of go wrong for us, do you think?
SPEAKER_02That's an excellent question. That actually makes me think. I do have an initial answer, but I'm trying to think, see, I'm trying to divorce from myself. I'm divorcing from myself right now, and trying to think of a perhaps grander answer if there is one. So I would at the outset, I would say either all of it, or at least a great deal of it, stems from the pieces of garbage that rule this planet and constantly keep humanity divided. So we're not connected, we don't love each other, we don't come together and start waking up and seeing how they're really hurting humanity. So I think for medical reasons, I would say back in the 19 if we have to remember 1920s or maybe nineteen forties when the Drex Drexler report came out, when the Rockefellers and other pieces of shit took over the medical establishment and they started to realize that words are part of medicine. How you talk with yourself is a part of worsening yourself or bettering yourself. I ha I speak slowly now because I know that there's a an earlier answer, but I guess I'll focus on more of a modern answer with your question. So what I said is correct and my belief and it really helps to excuse me, it it perpetuates by these entities allowing people to be depressed and let things go viral that are condescending, that help humanity to further play itself down. You'll notice in I've noticed this a long time ago. You'll notice in TV shows when I used to watch TV a long time ago and in movies, it's very accept in even YouTube, it's very accepted to watch videos or TV or movies of people getting hurt and dumb shits laughing in the background when someone gets hurt. Yeah, sometimes it's comical if it's like three stooges or something like that. But habitually when someone really gets hurt, and now you see people getting hurt on in real life on YouTube or excuse me, in real life or on YouTube or whatever platform, and people are just walking away or not doing anything or even laughing or just taking out their damn phone and not even helping. And this all stems from that. They realize that if you get people to say, hey, they're a bunch of idiots, or we don't have to help the homeless, or the homeless are all pieces of garbage that made the decision to be homeless. So they're not really real people. You can smack them, you can break the bottle over break a bottle over their head. And you don't need to be positive with yourself. Being positive with your language is all hippie nonsense. You just need medicine. You can say, This is my fracture, this is my condition, you can own it. And as a matter of fact, you have to own it. This is what they say. You have to own it because then only then can you really. It and then start to make it better. No, that's the complete opposite. So I would say around that time where they started to realize that they could really control humanity more so and keep humanity more in sickness, ailments, and thus debilitated, so they can't wake up, humanity can't wake up, and help increase their revenue via pharmaceuticals and all that stuff that just helps to suppress health and of course life and vitality and positivity.
Reconnecting Through Humanitarianism
SPEAKER_00Oh, it is. And I think I think something too that has affected us greatly is you know, social media platforms. Yeah. Not only like what you said, I know what you you mean, like seeing like homeless people as as less than or getting a laugh out of them. Laugh out of their their pain and suffering. But you begin to see people's you know, kind of so-called like highlight reels in life. You know? And it becomes that dangerous game of comparison you know. This one has this, this one has that, but meanwhile you're we're s we're not getting any more connected to ourselves or each other. You know, we're just in constant competition of who has more. And no one's gonna you're not gonna be happy constantly trying to get more and more and more. You know, and I I I know that you like social media is not something that you you partake in and I completely understand why. Because I I think it is something that was meant to keep us disconnected from each other and to almost keep us fighting with each other. Would that be accurate?
SPEAKER_02I I I wish it wasn't. I I wish I could argue with you. Uh I've said I've said for years, and I just said this in a conversation either yesterday or two days ago with someone. There you have to realize that remember that the clientele that I have, I work with entities that are in intelligence agencies and these high-level entities that are do they do they do a lot of disgusting things to society, three-letter agencies and stuff like that. I I work with these entities, so I know how they really are. And you have to realize these ruling entities across this world, they hate you more than you can possibly imagine. And I am not kidding, they hate humanity more than you can possibly imagine. So, with that said, with that foundation, you have to realize when a new technology comes out, it will never until you know Jesus comes back or there's a miracle on this planet, or everyone wakes up, whatever you want to call it, whatever you want to say, until something that grand happens and the world really turns positive. Every tech that ever comes out, I don't care if it's Google or Elon Musk's stupid shit, or open AI, or this new one called Up Scroll that all the TikTok and not all, but a lot of TikTokers are leaving and going to UpScrolled or whatever platform, Twitter. Any piece of shit billionaire is not for you or millionaire. They don't care about you. So any tech that comes out is not for the people. I don't care if you got some piece of shit CEO saying, hey, I'm from Palestine or I'm from whatever, we're for free speech. They are not. Every dickhead who believed Musk's lies originally that he was for the people 10 years ago or whatever it was, they're all fucking idiots. It's like, no, wake up. They are not for you. So all this social media is not for you. It is only to help stifle and further hurt humanity. It is not to get people to to unify. Now, perhaps, just like in elections, low, low-level elections, like what's it called? Alderman or you know, city council member, something like that, they may be real. But when you get to the president and and even close to that, it's not real elections. It's already decided. So maybe someone today can wake up and be for humanity and say, hey, I'm gonna create a big tech platform. It's gonna be like TikTok or Twitter or whatever. Maybe they're real, but if they get big enough 100% forever, no exception, it will always be taken over by the pieces of shit who hate humanity and will turn it around to be a tool against humanity. So unfortunately, you're right, social media is not to unify people. The internet is not to unify people, was created by DARPA, the goddamn military branch, uh, which is also one of the entities that my clients work with. So I know what the hell I'm talking about. Also, the one of the reasons why I said I was hesitant, I was speaking slowly in my answers because you said language. We were talking about language, but I was hesitant because also language is also showing people, it's not always words. So going back to the example of you know beating homeless people or beating people who are lesser than you, or comparing yourself, like you said in social media, always comparing yourself. That is language also. It's not with words, but it's with symbolism. So all this general term language, I'm gonna say, is all hurting society. It's not good elements. That's why I don't have social media. And I tell everyone, get off the damn social media. You don't need it. We survived greatly without social media before, so we'll do fine if you divorce from it also. And yeah, you'll look at you'll look at like I was saying earlier with Hollywood and TV shows and everything. So many times I would see like King of Queens with Kevin James and whatever Leah Ramini or whatever it is that the actor. I that was so damn funny. I loved that show. Yeah, but so many times they would, and I would catch this too when they said it a long time ago. They say, Oh, I love something Doug would say to Carrie, something like, Where's the Carrie that I love, the one that gives the world the middle finger, the one that hates everybody? And the people would laugh. And I understand that, but you have to understand, yeah, you can laugh at that, but you have to understand it's like, yeah, laugh, but at the same time, in the back of your mind be, wait a minute, that's another programming element that these shitheads are putting into TV and Hollywood and all that stuff, media, the general term media, to help program people into it's okay to hate people, it's okay to be like, oh, wait, you're you're saying hello to me, you're a stranger, you're shaking your hand to me. What is wrong with you? And that's how this shit world is today. Every dickhead is like, is like, okay, whoa, why are you saying hello to me? Whoa, why are you giving your seat to me? It's disgusting how it is, and it's that that way because people don't realize this, they don't divorce, and they've allowed an entity or an a strategic energy, whatever you want to call it, to push humanity that way, and that's why the world's this way.
SPEAKER_00And I I completely agree with you, especially having having a a child has really helped me to see a lot of these things clearer. Um even you know, outside of social media, just the language used is you know in schools and things is is very, very powerful. It's very powerful. And I wonder if a way to or I should ask, like what do you think about because humanitarianism is something that's that's very important to you as well as paying it forward.
SPEAKER_01Yes.
SPEAKER_00Do you think that's a way to get back to I guess more our natural state of being connected?
SPEAKER_02Absolutely. Absolutely. You have to it it's without a doubt, you have to get back to and I don't I don't mean to sound like hippie ish or whatever, but it is what it is. You have to get back to love and unification, and one of the grandest ways to do such is to go back to paying it forward, go back to humanity, uh excuse me, humanitarianism. And as you said, I care about that a lot. I d I do a lot of humanitarian work for people in Africa, India, and underprivileged entities. But yes, that is a great way because it helps you to stop being selfish and thinking of only yourself and to help others, obviously. But also it helps you to reconnect with others and it helps you to like we were talking about making a a eulogy for yourself, it helps you to recall how good you feel when you're helping others. And this is a very key thing in existence because with myself and others who work with high net worth individuals, and I imagine most of your audience, whoear this show, will understand this already. We know for a fact that a lot of rich people are not happy. They go to counselors, they go to consultants, they go to Dr. Joe Dispenza, Tony Robbins, Dr. John Martini, and probably Bob Proctor when he was around, and Napoleon Hill, all these people, and they complain. They say they have all this shit. They have everything, according to the everyday person. They have everything, but they still complain, they still feel that something is missing. And this is gonna bleed into spirituality a little bit, but whatever you want to call it, humans have a an abyss, a missing element inside of them. And that thing, in my experience, and the experience of a trove of people across space and time that I have researched and colleagues that I know, we see that the only thing that feels that is helping others, or as some really religious people say, serving others, whatever you want to call it, connecting with others. And humanity, excuse me, humanitarianism paying it forward, the two phrases that you said, are of course naturally beautiful ways, the of the grandest ways, actually, to get back to unifying and bringing this world how it is. Like we just saw this this beautiful effort, the walk for peace with the monks. Right. Who started in October from Fort Worth, Texas, and they just finished yesterday. Going to Maryland, they went to Washington, D.C. was their original goal, but they extended to Maryland because the Annapolis city asked them to come over there as well after they finished with DC. And now they're they're either home right now or they're en route to Fort Worth, Texas in their van now. And you see giving back and unifying with each other and giving each other flowers, giving each other the peace bracelet that they did and other people did when they took extra and gave it to their loved ones.
Restoring Civility and Kindness
SPEAKER_02That is what helps fill that void. It's unifying and giving back and helping others, connecting with others, uniting with others, serving others, whatever phrase you want to say. That is the only thing. There is no other thing. So how do you do that? One great way is giving back, helping others when they don't have money or they can't give you anything back.
SPEAKER_00No, and I think that's beautiful. I feel like to some degree people have gotten almost afraid of being close to each other. And even you know, to ourselves we've become very disconnected through social media is a big thing. But just in a society, which is I guess almost a topic of just you know having more and more and more bigger this, more that more money, like you said. You know how many celebrities or you know, people very well off end up in counseling or end up you know, struggling with addiction or end up, you know, just losing it all and you know, you gotta wonder were they ever really happy. You know, was it ever really their goal to to get to that point? You know. And I wonder sometimes if people are just not afraid of connecting with people. You know. I we I feel like there's sometimes there's like a we may keep each other at bay, you know, because it might be like a like a fear of like self-reflection too and to start asking more questions. You know, sometimes you may not like the answers so much. I think that goes back to like what you were talking about, like divorcing e divorcing ourselves. Like what what do those answers look like and what do I have to do with them? You know? And you know, you mentioned that Buddhist walk, which I thought was that's just just such a simple way to give back. You know, I mean it's it's not easy, but you're not talking about I mean you could be as well, talking about giving back on a grander scale, but I think correct me if I'm wrong, like you're referencing even just being kind to each other. You know, just simple gestures of kindness. You know, not laughing at a joke that was maybe hurtful to someone or correcting our language. Because giving back and humanitarianism doesn't have to be on a large scale, it can also be on a smaller scale, like in your community. Would you say that's correct?
SPEAKER_02Absolutely. It it's restoring civility. Like you said, you use the word kindness, but whatever word you want to say. The this society is very sick right now, and it needs to go back to civility and caring with each other for each other and seeing each other as an entity that deserves whatever word you want to say love, kindness, respect, civility, or all of it, whatever. And as we touched upon in this conversation, a huge reason for this scenario, this atmosphere, is the idiots just perpetuating, you know, it's okay to hate people. Oh, we uh I I also don't like people. I actually saw this one dickhead walking around with a shirt in here in I'm in Tbilisi, Georgia, the the country, Georgia, not the US state. And I saw some dipshit walking around with a black t-shirt a few months ago and white letters, and it said something like, God damn it, what the hell did it say? It said, it said, I hate people, or something like that, or it's okay, I hate people. Some something like that. Going back to the the the comment on the Doug and Carey King of Queens theme. And I've I've seen it in other media outside of King of Queens. That was just one example. But here, it they think it's totally fine to to wear a shirt that says, and it was something more powerful than what I'm just saying. I hate people, was something like, Are you kidding me? You're actually wearing that, and it was something like like it's okay to hate people. And the fact that that is on a commercial t-shirt, I imagine that they didn't make that themselves, though you never know. Uh that means there's more than one that's made and being sold in this world. So, and people are actually buying it, otherwise it wouldn't have been made, unless it's a pilot, of course. You never know. So, yeah, all this stuff, it just allows people to be afraid of, like you said, oh, I don't want to do different, meaning I don't want to care for people or ask people how are you doing, because they may say something back to me and embarrass me and say, like, oh, what are you why are you talking with me? Or just ignore me. And it's gotten to that level because of, like I said, the language, whether it's worded, spoken language with a uh with a language, a human language, or language with symbolism, like we were talking about. It's just seen as okay, and people need to wake up and start with yourself. Take off your dumbass headsets as you're walking down the fucking street. You can have headsets, yeah. Of course, I'm not telling you what to do, but in general, to have headsets every goddamn place you go and disconnect from everyone, that is one of the big tools that these ruling shitheads have welcomed. Always have your headsets in, always disconnect, don't be close with anyone, don't have conversations on the bus, don't have conversations in the cafe, keep to your own music, keep your own world to yourself. And then don't have any real friends, just have dipshit friends on your Facebook who aren't really friends. You have a thousand of them, but you only have like one real friend, or I think the I think the statistic now is 2.5 real friends. I think it's less than that now. Wow. So yeah, it's no more than 2.5. I remember that. But that was a while ago, so maybe less. So yeah, you have to start with yourself. Just like the monk said uh in the walk for peace, peace starts
Mentorship and Community
SPEAKER_02from within. Returning to civility starts from within. Doing good shit, paying it forward, humanitarian, start with your own goddamn self. You know, hold a fucking door open for someone behind you. Give your seat to the elderly or to a pregnant person or something like that. You start basic, start small. You know, say hello to a goddamn stranger as you're walking into the restaurant, you sit next to them or whatever. Start with small shit, and you'll see that goes from there. It's like everything in existence, change begins with you.
SPEAKER_00And I and I think sometimes something that always that has that has bothered me is that I don't know, let me think of my words correct here. There's like a culture of you know, you it's like this kind of lone wolf culture, like you do everything by yourself, you don't need anybody. Yeah. And I think that's a dangerous kind of slippery slope because that no one does everything any everything by themselves. You know, like we all have help along the way or mentors or guides, whatever you want to call it. And I think that's a kind of obviously another tool used to keep us separated. But it's a very dangerous I think mentality to have that. You do everything by yourself, there's there's no help around you. You know, and I have to wonder what the world goes from there. You know. Because just seeing how the world is now, which is a very, very sad, scary place at times. It's just like everybody for themselves. And you only get success by yourself. And it's I don't I don't think that's accurate. You know, I mean you may put in the work, but somebody helped you along the way, even if you may not realize it. And I think it goes back to like kind of what you were saying was the interconnectivity that we're more connected than we like to believe or led to believe. I have to wonder who were some of the the guides or mentors that you had along your journey.
SPEAKER_02Oh, uh so many. Most of them were, as I say, mentors from afar. They didn't even know that they were my mentor. I just followed them and admired them. There was as we in in academia, I teach at different universities across the world. So I'm a scholar, though I'm not completely in academia anymore, but still still a scholar. And us academic scholars, whatever you want to call me, we say that we stand, we stood on the shoulders of giants is the phrase that we use a lot. So yeah, we may have the grand pedigree and innovation that we've done, but it's only like you said, even if you put in the work by yourself, you still had people that helped you before. And the people that helped us before, you know, Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, the work that they've done, we just bounce off of it. So it's also called concilience and academia. So the people to answer your question, I mean, I've had two father figures. Uh, one of them was a white guy that was like 60 at the this was a long time ago, like 60 at the time, he was my boss, and he really took upon me because we're both redheads. And uh and he he like fell in love with me. Everybody sorry, not everybody, everybody who hated him hated me because he he like took me in the since day one when I started working there, and I got all kinds of privileges and stuff like that. Go traveling with him. So they didn't like me. But the good people liked me because they knew that he was a good guy. So he really helped me with learning how to how business works and how operations work, and then another guy, a black guy, who Who was shorter than me, and he was the most powerful martial artist I could ever imagine, aside from Bruce Lee and Brandon Lee, and perhaps some others. But he he could he was able to kick everyone's ass. He was so short. This black guy at that time, and that was even longer. At that time, he was probably 40 years old, maybe. And he was he would be doing flips in the air and kicking. I'm like, holy shit, this little fucking short guy kicking everyone's ass. And and and he was the best. We we we I really loved him, both of these guys. And and he, the black guy, he uh actually told me, taught me about psychology and connecting with others and just I'm gonna say life in general. So those two really helped personally, and professionally too, but mostly personally, and then academically would be Dr. Rupert Sheldrake with his work on Morphic Resonance, Dr. Joe Dispenza, who I imagine most of your audience will know. I I love that guy, been following him for decades, and quite a few others, and then Buck Minster Fuller, who actually has my favorite quote ever, and I I use that when I talk with others a lot because my work on holistic vision is the very element that he's speaking of. So he said, if you want to teach others a new way of thinking, don't bother trying to teach them. Instead, give them a tool, the use of which will further new ways of thinking. And that's exactly my holistic vision. I don't give anybody answers, I give them the tool to go and find the answers themselves. So that's what that work is. But I would say those are the people that have helped me mostly. Hopefully I'm not omitting anyone.
SPEAKER_00Would you say that's a quote that you apply to your daily life?
SPEAKER_02Oh God, yeah. I'm I'm just, like I said, psychotic for knowledge and with with that with that with that character of myself. I'm constantly looking for new ways, even simple stuff that most people would think is just like dumb shit. When I walk to Dunkin' Donuts or to Starbucks, in my mind I'll say, okay, I do this very quick. I'll calculate from here to there. If I go this way, it's six steps. If I go this way, it's 5.5 steps. And not in a psychotic way where I can never relax, but in a way where constantly divorcing, saying, okay, this way of writing my seventh book, uh, I can use this cover, but I can attract these other people if I use this cover. And if I step outside myself and think of myself as, or excuse me, think of this book as a GPT or LLM prompt engineer or a systems architect, um, a computer systems architect, then I want to use this kind of message or this kind of cover. So yeah, I'm constantly doing that. I've been doing this work for over 10 years professionally, but I've been researching it for over 40 as a as a person. So yeah.
SPEAKER_00You you've accomplished so much. What is what is next for you? Like what's in store for you, or what do you you hope to accomplish in the future? Do you have goals like that, or do you not?
SPEAKER_02Oh yeah, I I constantly, I mean, I've I I've I've been asked this question by just in-person conversation on other media, and I constantly say that I'm just I'm so far ahead of where I should be, because again, being a ridiculous overachiever, never at the level of where I should be, which is a good thing as long as you don't let it you know turn you into a psychotic mess. So to answer your question. To answer your question, I'm actually looking for actually I just thought about this. Uh, this is a beautiful question from you. I just thought about this either one or two days ago. So I'm always looking to write more books and articles. I've written over 50 articles and and it would be my 13th book, uh, 11th solo with the two contributor. So I'm looking to possibly do some kind of, and I'm not sure yet, this is a new idea, like I said, over the last 24, 48 hours, but possibly do a small video or audio, or even better, a movie on a lower level of I'm not really sure, like how to get people thinking holistically collectively. So coming together, getting an artist, getting an accountant, getting a medical person, nurse, practitioner, dietitian, a doctor, whatever, and getting a lawyer together, different people. It doesn't have to be these specific entities I'm saying here. Getting a single mother, single father, getting a student, a high school teacher, all these different elements, all these different mindsets, different people, and get us talking together on camera or on audio or whatever. It doesn't have to be in person, could be remotely, whatever. Right. And getting us to talk about massively ridiculous issues, worldwide issues, and getting the perspective from this person, then the other person, then the other person, then the other person, and then me coming in the end, giving my answer, and then taking the collective of everything so we can, like holistic vision, like I said, going down to the lowest level possible, the universal, the algorithm, the concept, the foundation, whatever you want to call it, of those answers that are given. So you can then say, Holy shit, this is the solution to having, I want to say, perfect wellness, or this is the solution to world poverty, or this is the solution to this social media, or taking back humanity, or whatever.
Future Aspirations and Projects
SPEAKER_02So giving all these things. And that would be basically a media element, a media materialization of my think it was either my eighth or my ninth book, which is my only book that's completely free. And it was what the hell is it called? I think it's called Hull Hols Holism for Advancement, and it's a book with 19 different authors, including me, so 18 others, that are just exactly what I said. We all talk about, it's like 13 different articles in there, and we all talk about one issue from different angles. And then I came in at the end and said, okay, so this person said this, this person said this. So if you strip it all down to the bare elements, it means we only have to do this. It's very simple. Not easy. Simple and easy don't mean the same thing as you said just a few moments ago when you use the word simple and easy. Simple and easy just mean that sorry, and the line went off here. Let me just turn that off. So it's simple but not easy, but we at least then have a blueprint to be able to go forward with that. So I think that would be pretty cool and welcomed by a lot of people. And until I do that, just putting out more articles, media shows, and doing a lot more humanitarian work for people that contact me and they have no money.
SPEAKER_00Where can people learn more about you and what you do?
SPEAKER_02So the easiest way is to search online because of my work. I am heavily shadow banned, heavily banned on many platforms. I can stand right, and this is a literal sample that has happened many times in many countries. I can stand right next to you. I can take the phone out of your hands, I can search on this platform or that platform for me, Dr. Herman, and it will not show up. But on my phone, it shows up perfectly. So my work is heavily banned by the big tech pieces of shit. So with that said, the easiest way is to always search for me online. So search for my brand name, which is D R for Doctor, and then space, and then Herman H E R M A N, like her man, and then S like Sam and J R for Junior, no spaces. So Dr. Space Herman Sgr, no spaces in Herman S Jr, and then hit enter. That's the best way. Otherwise, because I'm all over the internet, just certain platforms heavily guard me away from humanity. So because my work is very empowering to wake people up. Otherwise, you can just go to drherman sgr.com or drherman sgr.card, c A R R D dot Co, or you can go to my entity, platinumsciences.com. I'm very easy to find if you just do a an online search.
SPEAKER_00And I just want to reference the the book that we kind of touched on a little bit today, which was influence yourself and others with psychological strategy, a concise and easy analysis and guide to develop holistic vision. I myself am slowly working through it, and it is definitely get you thinking. And I wanna I want to thank you for that. For for taking the time today. You are a very busy individual, and I appreciate you taking the time to to be here and to talk to everybody, talk to me today. Um to empower us a little bit and to give her give us glimpses into you and what you do and and who you are. I greatly appreciate it. And is there anything else you wanna you wanna leave us with that you wanna cap it off with?
SPEAKER_02Yes, and and by the way, thank you for having me and and for purchasing the book too. I appreciate that. Yes, the last thing I guess I would say is remember to always divorce. And then for a short time, because of me being inspired by those beautiful Buddhist monks, the Walk for Peace, I made my entire program completely free for a short time. I don't know when I'm gonna take it off. I may take it off from being free tomorrow. I may leave it up for a year. I have no idea. But because of them, I've been following them and and for for a little over a month now. I made my entire program completely free, and that's typically several thousands of dollars. So I would highly suggest that everyone who wants to improve the planet to themselves or whatever get on the program right away because everything is there completely free. So just search me online and you'll see on the website. I think it's called something like learn to think like history's greatest thinkers in five days or something like that. Okay. Start learning to think like them. So it's completely free. It's it's extremely long, extremely intense, very in-depth, but that's what you need when you're breaking your entire thinking foundation. So definitely try
Closing Remarks and Gratitude
SPEAKER_02that.
SPEAKER_00Well, thank you, Dr. Herman S. J. R. It has been it's been a privilege to talk to you, and I appreciate your time.
SPEAKER_02Same here. Thank you so much.
SPEAKER_00Thank you so much for taking the time with me today. I appreciate you. And I'm sure everybody listening to you will appreciate you. And have a beautiful rest of your day, your week, your month, your year. In the lovely love, really lovely country of Georgia. Yeah, thank you so much.
SPEAKER_02Thank you as well. You you have a great time as well. Thank you.
SPEAKER_00Thank you.