Drugs & the creative process
Smart drugs/creativity
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Speaker 0 (0s): Okay. So being Friday, what, what are people a lot of people do on Fridays, they celebrate get ready for the weekend. Maybe they have a few beers. Maybe you start your day out with a cup of coffee in the spirit of caffeine and in the spirit of booze and in the spirit of changing your consciousness. I thought today we would talk a little bit. What about drugs?
Right? We all do them. We all do them. Pick your poison. They say, what's your favorite poison? It's a good question. It's a good question. But I don't want to talk about just any kind of drug today. I thought we'd talk about a new type of drug that's been on the market for a while. And that type of drug, I guess, would be classified as no tropics in Oh, O tropics.
No. Oh, tropics. And what this family of drugs claims to do is to make you smarter. Think about that kind of abstractive first you think of what there's a drug that makes me smarter. I know how that works. Well, let's start with some of the drugs we know that people use that may make them a little bit smarter.
Yeah. And try and think about the mechanism of action that would make them smarter. First off you want to think about writers like Stephen King and Christopher Hitchens and all these, all these writers. At least when I was growing up, they were pretty big smokers. And what is the, what is the drug? And in of choice of smokers, usually nicotine, right.
And nicotine is almost like a neurotransmitter. And if you listen to some, I think there was a, I think that there was a interview with Stephen King Ray talked about how much he smoked and how, when he was writing and he would smoke a lot. And if you've never been the smoker or you never had a seat, you're right. You're probably like, dude, that's just, that's just disgusting. And you're right.
Cigarette smoking is pretty gross. However, it, it definitely does something to you. You know, at first it can give you like a bus. Like when you first start smoking cigarettes, you you'd get like a nicotine buzz. But then after a while it's more of like a common sensation. So it's definitely flooding part of your brain. The nicotine goes in action, like some sort of a neurotransmitter and stuff, simulates parts of the brain, which seems to lead to a more creative process.
So you could say that nicotine while ultimately bad for your health. Well, I don't know if nicotine's bad for, you know, smoke is definitely bad for your health active ingredient that leads to creativity and cigarettes is nicotine. And while smoking is bad, nicotine may be an agent of creativity. So there's one caffeine, right? Again, people that tend to, well, how many people wake up and have a cup of coffee in the morning?
I don't know if that makes you more creative, but it might make you more productive. And I think you could argue that that is a level of intelligence that that's kind of an abstract argument. However, you could say that being productive leads you to a better life, which would be a smarter way of, I know that's kind of reaching. So those are a couple of mainstream drugs people use to maybe make their life a little bit better.
Not sure smarter. I'm not sure it's smarter. I would say the nicotine may lead to creativity. And then you start getting into today's writers. Like if you look at today's journalists, there's probably a pretty good chance. They're like on Adderall. Adderall is like legal meth. You take Mike, if you take Adderall, I think the, one of the best ways to describe it would be like kind of a clear headed, extremely focused high intensity coffee buzz.
But it's almost not fair to describe it that way because the level of focus and the level of energy is, is makes coffee look like having a bite of chocolate. Does that make sense? I hope so. On top of that, Adderall lasts, I don't know, eight hours. You gotta remind yourself.
You could say that a lot, the different drugs, they put you into a different state of consciousness, thus, allowing you to see things different than you normally do, right? Nat is what in fact creates the creative process big. Now what seems to do big now is kind of psychedelics. And if you look at say mushrooms, it's magic mushrooms, or siliciden for example, there's a lot of work being done at a John Hopkins right now that they thought a lot of success treating people with PTSD.
They have had a lot of success helping people, helping stroke victims. And on top of that, what's awesome about that. Research is a lot of it is public. It can, you can see, you can read the reports and you can look at the brain mapping technology. They've used to see kind of what's happening in the brain. And according to some research that I read, it's a lot of, it's a lot big words.
And it's a lot of so stuff that you really have to kind of like you start reading something, right? I didn't even know what that word is. They gotta stop. Look it up and you gotta go back to reading it. And then you find another one you got dang, man, I'm not a doctor. Anyways. I'll try to spare you the technical jargon and break it down into digestible chunks that everybody can understand. So in your brain, you have this thing called the default default mode network.
Think of it like a, like a black box at the base of your back of your head. Like that's all like the circuitry goes through there and then kind of gets dispersed. And then it goes to these different channels, these big grooves that have been cut since birth, like you've been creating these channels, which is a good way to think about that. Is have you ever gone skiing or do you gone like to the top of the mountain? And there's like, Hey, here's the here is the devil's run. And here is the Pike's peak run.
And here is the double diamond Harvey Limon run. And here is the tomato run. There's all these grooves, what'd you to the top of the mountain. There's this sign. And there's all of these cut grooves where people have already been going down the trail. That's that's like the white matter in your brain, right there already been these links, these, these pathways carved into the white matter. And those pathways are carved by continually thinking and remembering and restructuring your memories.
So you have these established patterns. Now imagine if you, you go to the ski slopes and you're the very first one at the top of the mountain. Now there's just fresh powder up there, right? There's no, even though the signs are there, there's fresh powder and it was a big storm. And now there's no grooves cut, right? There's no, there's, it's a clean slate. Okay. So most of us listening to this are, you know, way above 20, 30, 40, and we already have the grooves cut.
So the default mode network is like the chairlift. And then it takes the, the, you get on the information, gets onto the chair, nothing. It goes to the top. So, so the chair lift is the default mode network. And then it disperses you out to all the ski runs. When you take mushrooms, it shuts down that default mode network.
So you can no longer take that particular chair lift to the top of the mountain. So instead of no, now the chair knows close. So now you've got to find an alternative route to the top of the mountain. You can either walk up the back way or, you know, maybe there's an old chair lift working on the other side of the slope that you didn't know about. So you got, got to go over there and take that one, or maybe there's a helicopter. You know, there's other ways to get to the top of the mountain that you didn't know about because you've been relying on this particular chair lift.
So as you're using the new method to get to the top of the mountain, be it the helicopter, be it hiking up the backside of the mountain, be taken a snowmobile or be it taking a new chairlift. You begin to see new scenery. Hey, I never noticed that tree over there before. Hey, I never noticed was a cabin over here. Wow. From this helicopter things look a lot different from this point of view. So when you take the psychosis, when you take mushrooms, you can, you can begin the more you take them, the more familiar you get with the new pathways to get to the top of the mountain.
So let's say whether you're a microdosing a little bit, or whether you're, you've decided to say, Hey, you know, at once a week, I'm going to take seven grams or whatever method people are choosing to do. You know, let's say you decide to do the seven grams a week and you decide to focus on, Hey, I'm going to take, I'm going to take the, the new chairlift route up every time now.
So now you begin thinking friend than you normally did, right? You begin seeing the different scenery consistently because once a week you're taking in this substance that allows you to take a different route to the top. Thus, you see the news scenery. So you're beginning to think differently once a week. And now when you're, when you don't take the mushrooms, boom, your brain goes back to working on the default mode network.
You're also aware of this other way, right? You've create, you've created this new run to get to the top of the mountain. You've created this new alternative. So now you can kind of switch between the default mode network and your plan B. You can switch to this other way of thinking. So you do that for a little bit and you become comfortable and you become familiar with the scenery or the thought produced by taking the mushrooms.
And now you can apply. You're able to apply a different thought process to different situations. Now you have an alternative pathway. Let's see you've taken the psychedelics. You keep taking the mushrooms. And now, instead of you've gotten kind of bored with the, you know, the second chair lift, and now you've decided to take the helicopter. So you do that for a little while. And you know, just like the, just like the first time you took him.
Now you knew, I notice things from a higher point of view because you're looking down on them via the helicopter. And then a couple of months later, you decided to walk up. What I'm explaining is a form of hyper-connectivity that's happening in the brain. So you've stopped using the one you're familiar with and started exploring new routes. And thus you've created new neural pathways. You've created new ways of thinking.
You've created different ways of looking at the world than you would normally do. And that is what creates the creator of process. That is what allows you to, to see things differently that allows you to learn from things that may have been monotonous in your life. See things, you know, it's like the old saying that says, some people, people see things the way they are. I see things the way they've never been in. Say, why not?
You know? And especially a spouse,
Speaker 1 (14m 54s): Especially in today's world where we're so hyper focused on, on abstraction.
Speaker 0 (15m 5s): You know what I mean by that? Like, it's like we get so
Speaker 1 (15m 9s): Caught up in our own world of tunnel vision that we almost
Speaker 0 (15m 12s): Can't see the bigger picture. If you take like a chicken yeah.
Speaker 1 (15m 18s): Or a hand or whatever you,
Speaker 0 (15m 21s): If you have to put, do you just put them down to the
Speaker 1 (15m 23s): Chocolate? Like you grabbed their head and you push into the chocolate,
Speaker 0 (15m 27s): That chicken will be, it's a weird thing. I don't know what they call it. But once he's focused in, on that chalk line, he can't move. He's stuck
Speaker 1 (15m 37s): For whatever sort of bird brain in ability to move. We know whatever kind of wizardry or, or lack of ability to comprehend, whatever, whatever it is, they're stuck on that chocolate and they can't move. And it's the same thing for us. You know, you start doing something, get up, go to work, come home, get up, go to work, come home, get up, go to work, come home, get up, go to work, come home.
Speaker 0 (16m 8s): Like you, you get caught. You get stuck
Speaker 1 (16m 10s): On this never ending wheel and you can't get off.
Speaker 0 (16m 15s): And so what some of these smart, what, you know,
Speaker 1 (16m 19s): If we argue that siliciden or mushrooms,
Speaker 0 (16m 23s): In fact, a agent of change
Speaker 1 (16m 25s): Or a smart drug, you know,
Speaker 0 (16m 29s): Then you could say that the reason this
Speaker 1 (16m 34s): Is a smart drug is because it allows us to revisit different ways of thinking. It allows us to reinvision ourselves. It allows us to reinvision our environment. It allows us to,
Speaker 0 (16m 48s): To maybe see ourselves the way other people could see us and that having the ability to see yourself the way other people see you, that's like a super power, because then you can get some real work done. You can
Speaker 1 (17m 9s): Get some work done on yourself that, and you could do it.
Speaker 0 (17m 14s): If you can get to that point
Speaker 1 (17m 15s): Where you're honest with yourself and you can
Speaker 0 (17m 17s): Go, wow, man. You know what I figured?
Speaker 1 (17m 21s): I figured out the things that I don't like and these other
Speaker 0 (17m 23s): Or people or things I don't like in myself. And once you figure that out, man, it's a game changer,
Speaker 1 (17m 30s): Game changer. And I think that that comes from changing
Speaker 0 (17m 34s): Your state of consciousness.
Speaker 1 (17m 36s): And I would argue that that's what silicide
Speaker 0 (17m 38s): Five and does. So that's, that's one of the smart drugs.
Speaker 1 (17m 47s): Another other classes, smart drugs are called race Tams. And it's your, like your Parasso Tam, your Neffer race town, your fiddle, harassed the town and harass the town. There's all these, it's like a family of, of no tropics. And what these do these activate, man, I haven't read the literature on it for awhile. So bear with me here.
I believe that this particular set of drugs are more like a, allow you to focus better as a whole. Now, each one of these drugs has, has a little bit different mechanism, you know? So crass, the Tam being the foundation on which the other raised hands are built to me, it seems to have kind of a bit of a focus slash calming effect.
And it's subtle. It's not like you take it and you're ready. It's not like a Adderall where you take it. And you're just like all of a sudden you're chewing the inside of your mouth or you're like fence, your fists are clenched and you're just, you know, your focus. And if somebody bothers you, you get upset. Like those are some of the side effects of Adderall, but the prasadam is more of a, like a really subtle focus and a Rasta Tam for me, I got, I felt that my verbal fluency, my ability to recall words, I guess maybe the ability just to recall is heightened, but it doesn't last long.
It's like a couple hours, maybe two hours, at least for me, that's where I can really feel the effects that that may be the initial half-life. I'm not sure. I'm never asked, never asked him that to me seems to be, that was one of, one of the ones I found most effective when I, when I tried the different race towns and that one seemed to work on like the nicotine nicotinic nicotine receptors, or, you know, it seemed to do a little bit, it seemed to be a little bit like nicotine to me, which that could be awesome for smokers, federal paroxetine.
That's a different animal fennel Prasad, Tam to me is a it's Parasso tan with a fennel ring on it. So it claw, it crosses the blood brain barrier more effectively, but it has different effects. The effects of the fennel, Prasad, Tam to me, were it, have you ever been like, let me see. So I like to get tattoos and sometimes if you get a tattoo and if you're sitting there for seven or eight hours, your body almost goes into like a state of shock and we're, you know, for me, I start to get cold, you know, and then like you kind of start shaking a little bit or whatever, fiddle harassing him in that particular situation for me, when it would ease the shock of the body.
So it wouldn't, it would keep your body temperature a little warmer. It would keep you from getting it kept me from getting cold. Additionally, the mental clarity provided by federal the town was vastly superior to any of the other race towns.
The thing about the race Tams a well is, is that there's, I have found there to be no side effects. If you read the literature they've been around for a really long time, and it doesn't seem to have any long term lasting side effects. In fact, you know, I think with a lot of the smart drugs, you know, what, whether it be siliciden or whether it be the race Tams or, or some other ones that we're going to get into.
I think that once you've created a, a more connected superhighway or once you've established new patterns of thinking or create a new neural pathways, I think that there's long lasting effects in a positive manner, right? Because that's what, you know, I had a friend of mine that his father had a stroke when he was young and he had to teach, the father, had to teach himself how to speak again.
And the way he explained to me how it was very difficult for him to watch and that it was sad, but ultimately it was awesome because his dad taught himself how to speech again, I'm sorry, how to speak again. You know, not that interested me greatly. So I looked up and researched that a little bit in basically when people do that, when people have a stroke and they can't with whether they lose their ability to speak, or maybe they lose the ability to move an arm. And in the rare cases where people can relearn that what is happening inside the brain is that there is, think of it as like a roadblock.
What the information that used to go from one part of the brain to the other part of the brain is blocked off. So you can't move your right side of the phase, or you slur your words because the neural pathway has been blocked or it's been severed or it's die. However you want to explain it. It doesn't work. So you have to, you have to create a new, like a bypass, the same way you would have like a bypass heart surgery or the valve goes over, or like the, you know, you get the bypass, you have to have a new neural bypass and you can, it can be done by relearning.
That's what learning is, right? Like the repetition of mother, the mother of repetition is skill. Is that right? The, the mother, the mother of skill is repetition. That sounds better, right? Yeah. That sounds right. Yeah. The mother of skill is repetition. So when you, when you learn something, the reason it's difficult is because you don't have a neural pathway for it. So if you want to relearn something, you have to create a new neural pathway. And that's what a lot of the smart drugs, I think do have the ability to do, which leads me down.
Another kind of interesting pathway is that right now, if you look at neural link or some of the, the ideas coming out of Silicon Valley or the tech industry, or all these startups about having a chip implanted in your brain, like, it seems to me like we're in a race between the biological evolution of our bodies and the mechanistic evolution of our bodies.
You know what I mean? Like we are, we're beginning to understand the brain at a level where you know how a lot of the people are like, look, let's implant this little diode, or let's implant this, this chip in your brain. So you can access the web via your eyes. Like that sounds, that just sounds like, that sounds like dr.
Mengele to me, like, Hey, let's just let me open up your head. And then I'm going to shove this microchip in here. I'm going to shut this windows 75 right in your brain. Don't yeah, it might crash maybe, but then we'll just open up your head and we'll put it in a new one. Forget about the software crashes. That's probably going to happen. Like not to mention like, you know why they call it window, right? Because bill Gates has a window into your computer.
I don't want someone to have a window into my head. I mean, they already have that with all my search history and stuff, but you want that in your body. That's ridiculous. So I, I think I kind of was meander in there. I think a lot of these new compounds people are, you know, you can take an organic compound or you can take a, even a synthetic compound that can fundamentally change the way you think isn't that a better isn't that a better method of, of evolution.
Isn't that a better way of, of moving the ball forward than trying to implant this piece of hardware. That's patented by a company that has made all of its money on surveillance, capitalism that I'm taking. I think I'll take the mushrooms versus the Silicon chip. Wouldn't you?
I think so. I think it's crazy. I hear ya. Some people are like, dude, what are, you know, you're a truck driver. I'm like, yeah, I'm a truck driver that reads a hundred books a year. When I listened to some of these guys in the, in the tech industry or the finance industry. Like I was listening to these guys yesterday. Talk about like the future of finance and Bitcoin. And these guys were like in their twenties, maybe thirties, maybe these guys were at 33 and this guy, the balls on this guy, this guy wrote an open letter to Ray Dali.
Like, I don't know a whole lot about finance, but I know that that guy is like as $150 billion in his hedge fund. And here's these two swinging dicks talking about, well, you know, Ray, the you're really wrong on Bitcoin because unlike the guy, the guy he gave this really long winded argument, it was just based in logical fallacies supported by nonsequitors.
He was like, listen, I think if we dif this was, this was his argument, let me know what you think. Like it was something he started off and I get what he tried to do. He's to set up a narrow definition. So it's difficult to wiggle out of his argument. But if you know that, and you're in a debate with a dummy like that, the first thing that you have to do, you have to get me to agree to your definition. And I, I don't think anybody would agree to his definition. His definition was stupid.
He goes, listen, I think that we can define money as a tool. He, that was the very first part. And then he goes, you know, and the purpose of all tools is to save time. That's a fucking retarded argument, right? First off. No one, no, I don't think, I think a lot of people would not agree that money is a tool.
I think a much better. Kevin I'll get to my definition in a minute. So he says, I think money is a tool. That's one part of your argument. And then in the next breath, he tries to further define money by talking about the purpose of all tools. I think that guy's a tool or you can't say, Hey, the purpose of all tools is there's no, it's not. So not only did you have a poor definition, not only did you have a poor definition of money, but then you immediately used an abstract explanation of a purpose, and then you have all tools.
Like why the fuck would you say all, anything? I think all these people are this. I think all birds are that, Hey, dummy. Don't use the fucking word all. How about that? So anyway, that's the first part of your argument. These guys were there. God damn it. These guys, I don't know this guys. I was the CFO of this company and I'm like, dude, you fucking argue like that.
And you were a CFO with a company, like no wonder our world is fucked up. You can't even have a goddamn coherent argument. And you're the CFO of a company. So they continue talking and don't get me wrong. I like crypto. I want crypto to win. However, the more that I listened to so called these young bucks that understand the crypto landscape, the more I realized it just seems to me like a bunch of young people, all butt hurt that the system sucks, which it does.
It definitely sucks. Lot of people are losing, but it seems to me like these guys solution is like, Hey, we've got to get rid of all these people on top that are cheating. The system of this corruption. We've got to get rid of all of these people. I'm going to start this new system where we can be in charge of the corrupt system. You know, like it does no good to tear down a corrupt system, just going to build a new corrupt system. That's just being, that's just being a bitch. And the more that their conversation continued, they started throwing out stuff like, like in order to solve any issue, you need to have a clear understanding of reality.
Think about that on one level. That sounds pretty good. Yeah. You should have a clear understanding of reality. And then you look at this knucklehead talk and he's like 33. And he went to some Ivy league school where he went to school where he learned economics from a professor who learned from a professor who learned from another professor. There probably never worked a day in his fucking life. So if you want to have a clear understanding of reality, maybe you should define whose reality your reality at 33 of not having kids or a family or not having fucking work for a living.
Your reality of being a CFO that can't make a coherent argument, or maybe the reality of an economics professor, or I know how about the economics of a wall street trader? How about their reality or what about the reality of a truck driver? What about the reality of a goat herder? You want to implement this digital system, this abstract level of currency? Like how do you explain Bitcoin to a guy in a third world country that makes money grazing goats?
Like how do you explain to him this, Hey, I have this magical virtual currency that guy's going to, what the fuck are you talking about a magic? I don't want your magic beans, bro. I don't want your magic beans. Then he goes on to talk about how he goes on to try and talk about scarcity and how we introduced the zero into the number system and how it, how it look.
I get it. I get like zero is an important abstract idea. And he's right that adding zero to the numerical system in the West helped us out with mathematics and a lot of ways. But what the fuck is zero Viro is zero is the concept of nothingness. You want to build our financial system on the concept of nothingness. And if you just take a few minutes to think about that, that's a horrible foundation.
Well, let's build our monetary system on nothingness. I get, it just seems to me that there's zero philosophy. That there's zero, there's zero hard thinking. That's gone into the world of finance. And like these guys are chickens with their beaks to the chalk line. Like I don't think you should even be able to be in finance until you have a family. You stayed married and you've had a job for 20 years. I think then you should be able to begin to become familiar with the levers of the monetary system, but not until then not until then.
You don't know shit until then. Did I ever, did I give my definition of money? I think, I think the best definition of money should be a set of lies. Agreed upon isn't that a better definition of money than a tool. Like a tool is way to simplify it. Anyways.
Anyways, I gotta, I gotta go. I gotta go into work like a man, like a provider, someone that builds something, someone that works with his hands, I had to go provide a service for people because they need things. So my love goes out to everyone of you who is out there doing something productive. Who's out there trying to build something is out there trying to chase down some corruption. Who's out there trying to make this world a little bit better instead of trying to build a financial vehicle that moves from a to B and just skims money off the top, right?
Let's call it a thief. And somehow I went from smart drugs on, from drugs to smart drugs to finance. I don't know how I manage that, but I did, but I love you guys. I hope you have a great weekend. I hope you. I hope you take a little bit of time to think about the, the nature of our evolution as far as mechanistic versus organic versus the organism versus the mechanism.
And man go home and tell your partner. You love him. Give him a kiss on the cheek. If you've got kids, give them a big squeeze and try to focus on all the beauty in life and your, and just know that I love you. And I hope you have a great weekend. Alright, everybody Aloha.
Right? We all do them. We all do them. Pick your poison. They say, what's your favorite poison? It's a good question. It's a good question. But I don't want to talk about just any kind of drug today. I thought we'd talk about a new type of drug that's been on the market for a while. And that type of drug, I guess, would be classified as no tropics in Oh, O tropics.
No. Oh, tropics. And what this family of drugs claims to do is to make you smarter. Think about that kind of abstractive first you think of what there's a drug that makes me smarter. I know how that works. Well, let's start with some of the drugs we know that people use that may make them a little bit smarter.
Yeah. And try and think about the mechanism of action that would make them smarter. First off you want to think about writers like Stephen King and Christopher Hitchens and all these, all these writers. At least when I was growing up, they were pretty big smokers. And what is the, what is the drug? And in of choice of smokers, usually nicotine, right.
And nicotine is almost like a neurotransmitter. And if you listen to some, I think there was a, I think that there was a interview with Stephen King Ray talked about how much he smoked and how, when he was writing and he would smoke a lot. And if you've never been the smoker or you never had a seat, you're right. You're probably like, dude, that's just, that's just disgusting. And you're right.
Cigarette smoking is pretty gross. However, it, it definitely does something to you. You know, at first it can give you like a bus. Like when you first start smoking cigarettes, you you'd get like a nicotine buzz. But then after a while it's more of like a common sensation. So it's definitely flooding part of your brain. The nicotine goes in action, like some sort of a neurotransmitter and stuff, simulates parts of the brain, which seems to lead to a more creative process.
So you could say that nicotine while ultimately bad for your health. Well, I don't know if nicotine's bad for, you know, smoke is definitely bad for your health active ingredient that leads to creativity and cigarettes is nicotine. And while smoking is bad, nicotine may be an agent of creativity. So there's one caffeine, right? Again, people that tend to, well, how many people wake up and have a cup of coffee in the morning?
I don't know if that makes you more creative, but it might make you more productive. And I think you could argue that that is a level of intelligence that that's kind of an abstract argument. However, you could say that being productive leads you to a better life, which would be a smarter way of, I know that's kind of reaching. So those are a couple of mainstream drugs people use to maybe make their life a little bit better.
Not sure smarter. I'm not sure it's smarter. I would say the nicotine may lead to creativity. And then you start getting into today's writers. Like if you look at today's journalists, there's probably a pretty good chance. They're like on Adderall. Adderall is like legal meth. You take Mike, if you take Adderall, I think the, one of the best ways to describe it would be like kind of a clear headed, extremely focused high intensity coffee buzz.
But it's almost not fair to describe it that way because the level of focus and the level of energy is, is makes coffee look like having a bite of chocolate. Does that make sense? I hope so. On top of that, Adderall lasts, I don't know, eight hours. You gotta remind yourself.
You could say that a lot, the different drugs, they put you into a different state of consciousness, thus, allowing you to see things different than you normally do, right? Nat is what in fact creates the creative process big. Now what seems to do big now is kind of psychedelics. And if you look at say mushrooms, it's magic mushrooms, or siliciden for example, there's a lot of work being done at a John Hopkins right now that they thought a lot of success treating people with PTSD.
They have had a lot of success helping people, helping stroke victims. And on top of that, what's awesome about that. Research is a lot of it is public. It can, you can see, you can read the reports and you can look at the brain mapping technology. They've used to see kind of what's happening in the brain. And according to some research that I read, it's a lot of, it's a lot big words.
And it's a lot of so stuff that you really have to kind of like you start reading something, right? I didn't even know what that word is. They gotta stop. Look it up and you gotta go back to reading it. And then you find another one you got dang, man, I'm not a doctor. Anyways. I'll try to spare you the technical jargon and break it down into digestible chunks that everybody can understand. So in your brain, you have this thing called the default default mode network.
Think of it like a, like a black box at the base of your back of your head. Like that's all like the circuitry goes through there and then kind of gets dispersed. And then it goes to these different channels, these big grooves that have been cut since birth, like you've been creating these channels, which is a good way to think about that. Is have you ever gone skiing or do you gone like to the top of the mountain? And there's like, Hey, here's the here is the devil's run. And here is the Pike's peak run.
And here is the double diamond Harvey Limon run. And here is the tomato run. There's all these grooves, what'd you to the top of the mountain. There's this sign. And there's all of these cut grooves where people have already been going down the trail. That's that's like the white matter in your brain, right there already been these links, these, these pathways carved into the white matter. And those pathways are carved by continually thinking and remembering and restructuring your memories.
So you have these established patterns. Now imagine if you, you go to the ski slopes and you're the very first one at the top of the mountain. Now there's just fresh powder up there, right? There's no, even though the signs are there, there's fresh powder and it was a big storm. And now there's no grooves cut, right? There's no, there's, it's a clean slate. Okay. So most of us listening to this are, you know, way above 20, 30, 40, and we already have the grooves cut.
So the default mode network is like the chairlift. And then it takes the, the, you get on the information, gets onto the chair, nothing. It goes to the top. So, so the chair lift is the default mode network. And then it disperses you out to all the ski runs. When you take mushrooms, it shuts down that default mode network.
So you can no longer take that particular chair lift to the top of the mountain. So instead of no, now the chair knows close. So now you've got to find an alternative route to the top of the mountain. You can either walk up the back way or, you know, maybe there's an old chair lift working on the other side of the slope that you didn't know about. So you got, got to go over there and take that one, or maybe there's a helicopter. You know, there's other ways to get to the top of the mountain that you didn't know about because you've been relying on this particular chair lift.
So as you're using the new method to get to the top of the mountain, be it the helicopter, be it hiking up the backside of the mountain, be taken a snowmobile or be it taking a new chairlift. You begin to see new scenery. Hey, I never noticed that tree over there before. Hey, I never noticed was a cabin over here. Wow. From this helicopter things look a lot different from this point of view. So when you take the psychosis, when you take mushrooms, you can, you can begin the more you take them, the more familiar you get with the new pathways to get to the top of the mountain.
So let's say whether you're a microdosing a little bit, or whether you're, you've decided to say, Hey, you know, at once a week, I'm going to take seven grams or whatever method people are choosing to do. You know, let's say you decide to do the seven grams a week and you decide to focus on, Hey, I'm going to take, I'm going to take the, the new chairlift route up every time now.
So now you begin thinking friend than you normally did, right? You begin seeing the different scenery consistently because once a week you're taking in this substance that allows you to take a different route to the top. Thus, you see the news scenery. So you're beginning to think differently once a week. And now when you're, when you don't take the mushrooms, boom, your brain goes back to working on the default mode network.
You're also aware of this other way, right? You've create, you've created this new run to get to the top of the mountain. You've created this new alternative. So now you can kind of switch between the default mode network and your plan B. You can switch to this other way of thinking. So you do that for a little bit and you become comfortable and you become familiar with the scenery or the thought produced by taking the mushrooms.
And now you can apply. You're able to apply a different thought process to different situations. Now you have an alternative pathway. Let's see you've taken the psychedelics. You keep taking the mushrooms. And now, instead of you've gotten kind of bored with the, you know, the second chair lift, and now you've decided to take the helicopter. So you do that for a little while. And you know, just like the, just like the first time you took him.
Now you knew, I notice things from a higher point of view because you're looking down on them via the helicopter. And then a couple of months later, you decided to walk up. What I'm explaining is a form of hyper-connectivity that's happening in the brain. So you've stopped using the one you're familiar with and started exploring new routes. And thus you've created new neural pathways. You've created new ways of thinking.
You've created different ways of looking at the world than you would normally do. And that is what creates the creator of process. That is what allows you to, to see things differently that allows you to learn from things that may have been monotonous in your life. See things, you know, it's like the old saying that says, some people, people see things the way they are. I see things the way they've never been in. Say, why not?
You know? And especially a spouse,
Speaker 1 (14m 54s): Especially in today's world where we're so hyper focused on, on abstraction.
Speaker 0 (15m 5s): You know what I mean by that? Like, it's like we get so
Speaker 1 (15m 9s): Caught up in our own world of tunnel vision that we almost
Speaker 0 (15m 12s): Can't see the bigger picture. If you take like a chicken yeah.
Speaker 1 (15m 18s): Or a hand or whatever you,
Speaker 0 (15m 21s): If you have to put, do you just put them down to the
Speaker 1 (15m 23s): Chocolate? Like you grabbed their head and you push into the chocolate,
Speaker 0 (15m 27s): That chicken will be, it's a weird thing. I don't know what they call it. But once he's focused in, on that chalk line, he can't move. He's stuck
Speaker 1 (15m 37s): For whatever sort of bird brain in ability to move. We know whatever kind of wizardry or, or lack of ability to comprehend, whatever, whatever it is, they're stuck on that chocolate and they can't move. And it's the same thing for us. You know, you start doing something, get up, go to work, come home, get up, go to work, come home, get up, go to work, come home, get up, go to work, come home.
Speaker 0 (16m 8s): Like you, you get caught. You get stuck
Speaker 1 (16m 10s): On this never ending wheel and you can't get off.
Speaker 0 (16m 15s): And so what some of these smart, what, you know,
Speaker 1 (16m 19s): If we argue that siliciden or mushrooms,
Speaker 0 (16m 23s): In fact, a agent of change
Speaker 1 (16m 25s): Or a smart drug, you know,
Speaker 0 (16m 29s): Then you could say that the reason this
Speaker 1 (16m 34s): Is a smart drug is because it allows us to revisit different ways of thinking. It allows us to reinvision ourselves. It allows us to reinvision our environment. It allows us to,
Speaker 0 (16m 48s): To maybe see ourselves the way other people could see us and that having the ability to see yourself the way other people see you, that's like a super power, because then you can get some real work done. You can
Speaker 1 (17m 9s): Get some work done on yourself that, and you could do it.
Speaker 0 (17m 14s): If you can get to that point
Speaker 1 (17m 15s): Where you're honest with yourself and you can
Speaker 0 (17m 17s): Go, wow, man. You know what I figured?
Speaker 1 (17m 21s): I figured out the things that I don't like and these other
Speaker 0 (17m 23s): Or people or things I don't like in myself. And once you figure that out, man, it's a game changer,
Speaker 1 (17m 30s): Game changer. And I think that that comes from changing
Speaker 0 (17m 34s): Your state of consciousness.
Speaker 1 (17m 36s): And I would argue that that's what silicide
Speaker 0 (17m 38s): Five and does. So that's, that's one of the smart drugs.
Speaker 1 (17m 47s): Another other classes, smart drugs are called race Tams. And it's your, like your Parasso Tam, your Neffer race town, your fiddle, harassed the town and harass the town. There's all these, it's like a family of, of no tropics. And what these do these activate, man, I haven't read the literature on it for awhile. So bear with me here.
I believe that this particular set of drugs are more like a, allow you to focus better as a whole. Now, each one of these drugs has, has a little bit different mechanism, you know? So crass, the Tam being the foundation on which the other raised hands are built to me, it seems to have kind of a bit of a focus slash calming effect.
And it's subtle. It's not like you take it and you're ready. It's not like a Adderall where you take it. And you're just like all of a sudden you're chewing the inside of your mouth or you're like fence, your fists are clenched and you're just, you know, your focus. And if somebody bothers you, you get upset. Like those are some of the side effects of Adderall, but the prasadam is more of a, like a really subtle focus and a Rasta Tam for me, I got, I felt that my verbal fluency, my ability to recall words, I guess maybe the ability just to recall is heightened, but it doesn't last long.
It's like a couple hours, maybe two hours, at least for me, that's where I can really feel the effects that that may be the initial half-life. I'm not sure. I'm never asked, never asked him that to me seems to be, that was one of, one of the ones I found most effective when I, when I tried the different race towns and that one seemed to work on like the nicotine nicotinic nicotine receptors, or, you know, it seemed to do a little bit, it seemed to be a little bit like nicotine to me, which that could be awesome for smokers, federal paroxetine.
That's a different animal fennel Prasad, Tam to me is a it's Parasso tan with a fennel ring on it. So it claw, it crosses the blood brain barrier more effectively, but it has different effects. The effects of the fennel, Prasad, Tam to me, were it, have you ever been like, let me see. So I like to get tattoos and sometimes if you get a tattoo and if you're sitting there for seven or eight hours, your body almost goes into like a state of shock and we're, you know, for me, I start to get cold, you know, and then like you kind of start shaking a little bit or whatever, fiddle harassing him in that particular situation for me, when it would ease the shock of the body.
So it wouldn't, it would keep your body temperature a little warmer. It would keep you from getting it kept me from getting cold. Additionally, the mental clarity provided by federal the town was vastly superior to any of the other race towns.
The thing about the race Tams a well is, is that there's, I have found there to be no side effects. If you read the literature they've been around for a really long time, and it doesn't seem to have any long term lasting side effects. In fact, you know, I think with a lot of the smart drugs, you know, what, whether it be siliciden or whether it be the race Tams or, or some other ones that we're going to get into.
I think that once you've created a, a more connected superhighway or once you've established new patterns of thinking or create a new neural pathways, I think that there's long lasting effects in a positive manner, right? Because that's what, you know, I had a friend of mine that his father had a stroke when he was young and he had to teach, the father, had to teach himself how to speak again.
And the way he explained to me how it was very difficult for him to watch and that it was sad, but ultimately it was awesome because his dad taught himself how to speech again, I'm sorry, how to speak again. You know, not that interested me greatly. So I looked up and researched that a little bit in basically when people do that, when people have a stroke and they can't with whether they lose their ability to speak, or maybe they lose the ability to move an arm. And in the rare cases where people can relearn that what is happening inside the brain is that there is, think of it as like a roadblock.
What the information that used to go from one part of the brain to the other part of the brain is blocked off. So you can't move your right side of the phase, or you slur your words because the neural pathway has been blocked or it's been severed or it's die. However you want to explain it. It doesn't work. So you have to, you have to create a new, like a bypass, the same way you would have like a bypass heart surgery or the valve goes over, or like the, you know, you get the bypass, you have to have a new neural bypass and you can, it can be done by relearning.
That's what learning is, right? Like the repetition of mother, the mother of repetition is skill. Is that right? The, the mother, the mother of skill is repetition. That sounds better, right? Yeah. That sounds right. Yeah. The mother of skill is repetition. So when you, when you learn something, the reason it's difficult is because you don't have a neural pathway for it. So if you want to relearn something, you have to create a new neural pathway. And that's what a lot of the smart drugs, I think do have the ability to do, which leads me down.
Another kind of interesting pathway is that right now, if you look at neural link or some of the, the ideas coming out of Silicon Valley or the tech industry, or all these startups about having a chip implanted in your brain, like, it seems to me like we're in a race between the biological evolution of our bodies and the mechanistic evolution of our bodies.
You know what I mean? Like we are, we're beginning to understand the brain at a level where you know how a lot of the people are like, look, let's implant this little diode, or let's implant this, this chip in your brain. So you can access the web via your eyes. Like that sounds, that just sounds like, that sounds like dr.
Mengele to me, like, Hey, let's just let me open up your head. And then I'm going to shove this microchip in here. I'm going to shut this windows 75 right in your brain. Don't yeah, it might crash maybe, but then we'll just open up your head and we'll put it in a new one. Forget about the software crashes. That's probably going to happen. Like not to mention like, you know why they call it window, right? Because bill Gates has a window into your computer.
I don't want someone to have a window into my head. I mean, they already have that with all my search history and stuff, but you want that in your body. That's ridiculous. So I, I think I kind of was meander in there. I think a lot of these new compounds people are, you know, you can take an organic compound or you can take a, even a synthetic compound that can fundamentally change the way you think isn't that a better isn't that a better method of, of evolution.
Isn't that a better way of, of moving the ball forward than trying to implant this piece of hardware. That's patented by a company that has made all of its money on surveillance, capitalism that I'm taking. I think I'll take the mushrooms versus the Silicon chip. Wouldn't you?
I think so. I think it's crazy. I hear ya. Some people are like, dude, what are, you know, you're a truck driver. I'm like, yeah, I'm a truck driver that reads a hundred books a year. When I listened to some of these guys in the, in the tech industry or the finance industry. Like I was listening to these guys yesterday. Talk about like the future of finance and Bitcoin. And these guys were like in their twenties, maybe thirties, maybe these guys were at 33 and this guy, the balls on this guy, this guy wrote an open letter to Ray Dali.
Like, I don't know a whole lot about finance, but I know that that guy is like as $150 billion in his hedge fund. And here's these two swinging dicks talking about, well, you know, Ray, the you're really wrong on Bitcoin because unlike the guy, the guy he gave this really long winded argument, it was just based in logical fallacies supported by nonsequitors.
He was like, listen, I think if we dif this was, this was his argument, let me know what you think. Like it was something he started off and I get what he tried to do. He's to set up a narrow definition. So it's difficult to wiggle out of his argument. But if you know that, and you're in a debate with a dummy like that, the first thing that you have to do, you have to get me to agree to your definition. And I, I don't think anybody would agree to his definition. His definition was stupid.
He goes, listen, I think that we can define money as a tool. He, that was the very first part. And then he goes, you know, and the purpose of all tools is to save time. That's a fucking retarded argument, right? First off. No one, no, I don't think, I think a lot of people would not agree that money is a tool.
I think a much better. Kevin I'll get to my definition in a minute. So he says, I think money is a tool. That's one part of your argument. And then in the next breath, he tries to further define money by talking about the purpose of all tools. I think that guy's a tool or you can't say, Hey, the purpose of all tools is there's no, it's not. So not only did you have a poor definition, not only did you have a poor definition of money, but then you immediately used an abstract explanation of a purpose, and then you have all tools.
Like why the fuck would you say all, anything? I think all these people are this. I think all birds are that, Hey, dummy. Don't use the fucking word all. How about that? So anyway, that's the first part of your argument. These guys were there. God damn it. These guys, I don't know this guys. I was the CFO of this company and I'm like, dude, you fucking argue like that.
And you were a CFO with a company, like no wonder our world is fucked up. You can't even have a goddamn coherent argument. And you're the CFO of a company. So they continue talking and don't get me wrong. I like crypto. I want crypto to win. However, the more that I listened to so called these young bucks that understand the crypto landscape, the more I realized it just seems to me like a bunch of young people, all butt hurt that the system sucks, which it does.
It definitely sucks. Lot of people are losing, but it seems to me like these guys solution is like, Hey, we've got to get rid of all these people on top that are cheating. The system of this corruption. We've got to get rid of all of these people. I'm going to start this new system where we can be in charge of the corrupt system. You know, like it does no good to tear down a corrupt system, just going to build a new corrupt system. That's just being, that's just being a bitch. And the more that their conversation continued, they started throwing out stuff like, like in order to solve any issue, you need to have a clear understanding of reality.
Think about that on one level. That sounds pretty good. Yeah. You should have a clear understanding of reality. And then you look at this knucklehead talk and he's like 33. And he went to some Ivy league school where he went to school where he learned economics from a professor who learned from a professor who learned from another professor. There probably never worked a day in his fucking life. So if you want to have a clear understanding of reality, maybe you should define whose reality your reality at 33 of not having kids or a family or not having fucking work for a living.
Your reality of being a CFO that can't make a coherent argument, or maybe the reality of an economics professor, or I know how about the economics of a wall street trader? How about their reality or what about the reality of a truck driver? What about the reality of a goat herder? You want to implement this digital system, this abstract level of currency? Like how do you explain Bitcoin to a guy in a third world country that makes money grazing goats?
Like how do you explain to him this, Hey, I have this magical virtual currency that guy's going to, what the fuck are you talking about a magic? I don't want your magic beans, bro. I don't want your magic beans. Then he goes on to talk about how he goes on to try and talk about scarcity and how we introduced the zero into the number system and how it, how it look.
I get it. I get like zero is an important abstract idea. And he's right that adding zero to the numerical system in the West helped us out with mathematics and a lot of ways. But what the fuck is zero Viro is zero is the concept of nothingness. You want to build our financial system on the concept of nothingness. And if you just take a few minutes to think about that, that's a horrible foundation.
Well, let's build our monetary system on nothingness. I get, it just seems to me that there's zero philosophy. That there's zero, there's zero hard thinking. That's gone into the world of finance. And like these guys are chickens with their beaks to the chalk line. Like I don't think you should even be able to be in finance until you have a family. You stayed married and you've had a job for 20 years. I think then you should be able to begin to become familiar with the levers of the monetary system, but not until then not until then.
You don't know shit until then. Did I ever, did I give my definition of money? I think, I think the best definition of money should be a set of lies. Agreed upon isn't that a better definition of money than a tool. Like a tool is way to simplify it. Anyways.
Anyways, I gotta, I gotta go. I gotta go into work like a man, like a provider, someone that builds something, someone that works with his hands, I had to go provide a service for people because they need things. So my love goes out to everyone of you who is out there doing something productive. Who's out there trying to build something is out there trying to chase down some corruption. Who's out there trying to make this world a little bit better instead of trying to build a financial vehicle that moves from a to B and just skims money off the top, right?
Let's call it a thief. And somehow I went from smart drugs on, from drugs to smart drugs to finance. I don't know how I manage that, but I did, but I love you guys. I hope you have a great weekend. I hope you. I hope you take a little bit of time to think about the, the nature of our evolution as far as mechanistic versus organic versus the organism versus the mechanism.
And man go home and tell your partner. You love him. Give him a kiss on the cheek. If you've got kids, give them a big squeeze and try to focus on all the beauty in life and your, and just know that I love you. And I hope you have a great weekend. Alright, everybody Aloha.
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