This is Women Road warriors with Shelly Johnson and Kathy Tuccaro.
Speaker AFrom the corporate office to the cab of a truck, they're here to inspire and empower women in all professions.
Speaker ASo gear down, sit back and enjoy.
Speaker BWelcome.
Speaker BWe're an award winning show dedicated to empowering women in every profession through inspiring stories and expert insights.
Speaker BNo topics off limits.
Speaker BOn our show, we power women on the road to success with expert and celebrity interviews and information you need.
Speaker BI'm Shelley.
Speaker CAnd I'm Kathy.
Speaker BWe hear a lot today about positive thinking.
Speaker BWhat many people don't know is positive thinking alone is incomplete.
Speaker BReal self empowerment happens when you understand the mechanics of the mind, especially the subconscious processes and train them intentionally.
Speaker BCan you imagine rewiring your brain to empower yourself and overcome your mental barriers?
Speaker BThere are actionable ways to do this.
Speaker BRavinder Taylor is the lead author of the groundbreaking book Mind Training the Science of Self Empowerment.
Speaker BIt combines neuroscience with practical self improvement strategies that offer people insights into unlocking their full potential.
Speaker BIt's psychology and brain science at its best.
Speaker BIt's a science based framework for training the mind.
Speaker BRavinder is a seasoned mind science researcher who transitioned from a biology lab to 30 years in hypnotherapy, psychotherapy and the research of mental empowerment.
Speaker BShe shares tools anyone can use to stop self limiting behaviors and live a more fulfilled and successful life.
Speaker BKathy and I couldn't wait to tap into her insights so we invited her on the show.
Speaker BWelcome Ravinder.
Speaker BThank you so much for being with us.
Speaker DWell, thank you, Shelly.
Speaker DThank you, Kathy.
Speaker DI appreciate you having me on and I'm looking forward to a really fun conversation.
Speaker BOh yes, no kidding.
Speaker CThank you for being on the show.
Speaker BYes, this is going to be really exciting.
Speaker BI mean, your insight is amazing.
Speaker BRavinder, I know Kathy and I are super curious, but before we explore your information, is it possible for you to talk, talk briefly of how you got started and maybe how this methodology's helped you?
Speaker DOh, that's, that's a big question.
Speaker DI've been using the tools, all of the tools and techniques that I talk about in my training.
Speaker DI have been putting into practice in my own life for the last 30 plus years as, as I come across something new, I will try it out for myself and if it works, it ended up in the book.
Speaker DIf it didn't, it got discarded.
Speaker DI think I've always had an interest in the mind, but my background is in microbiology.
Speaker DIt was very much the hard science.
Speaker DAnd so when I was younger and when I went through university and I started working I was very much science based.
Speaker DSo I was working in the path lab and there was a particular event that shifted my entire career focus.
Speaker DIt actually caused the entire transition.
Speaker DAnd one day I was in the path lab and we heard about a lecture that the hospital was sponsoring.
Speaker DAnd the lecture was on hypnosis and hypnotherapy.
Speaker DAt that time, I thought hypnosis was just something entertainers did on stage, try to get people up there to act like idiots and make everybody laugh.
Speaker DSo I didn't take it seriously at all.
Speaker DBut I found the lecture itself absolutely fascinating.
Speaker DAnd one of the stories that had a huge impact on me was an account of a woman who had had a pain in her arm.
Speaker DShe'd had a pain in her arm for about a decade.
Speaker DShe had seen all of the experts, all of the doctors, they hadn't been able to help.
Speaker DSo as a last resort, she went to see this hypnotherapist.
Speaker DActually he practiced hypnotherapy on the side.
Speaker DHe was an anesthesiologist during the day.
Speaker DBut she went to see him and under hypnosis he went back to the triggering event.
Speaker DAnd she did remember an emotional event, but she had put it to the back of her mind.
Speaker DIt was an old situation.
Speaker DYou know, we all have events in our past that have upset us, but it doesn't mean that it has a hold on us right now.
Speaker DBut she remembered this event, didn't think too much of it.
Speaker DBut the following day she called the hypnotherapist up and said the pain had gone.
Speaker DThe pain had actually gone immediately, but she hadn't believed it.
Speaker DSo she had waited until the following day.
Speaker DNow, I found this really, really intriguing to me, how a past event, a trauma in the past, maybe you remembered it, maybe you don't, but either way, you thought you had moved on from it.
Speaker DBut how something like that can have an effect on our current day experiences.
Speaker DAnd with all the research I have done since then, I've discovered quite the kind of impact it has.
Speaker DHow our past experiences can hold us back, how they prevent us from trying our hardest.
Speaker DSo that was where it all started, though, from that one lecture.
Speaker DFrom there I went and did a three year course in hypnosis and psychotherapy.
Speaker DI underwent hypnotherapy myself.
Speaker DI got to experience and then learn how to do hypnotherapy.
Speaker DHypnotic drawing, hypnotic writing.
Speaker DIt just fascinated me, the amount of information that was in the subconscious mind.
Speaker DSo I've been working on how to tap that information and how to have it help us rather than hinder us.
Speaker BThe brain is an amazing organism when you think about it, and I think it's still kind of misunderstood by even the professional neurologists and everything else.
Speaker BThere's so much we're still discovering.
Speaker BWhat exactly is the subconscious mind?
Speaker DThe subconscious mind, you can divide the mind up.
Speaker DNow, there are lots of different models.
Speaker DThere isn't any hard information here, but there are these models that talk about the conscious, the preconscious, and the subconscious.
Speaker DSo the conscious is what we are experiencing right now.
Speaker DThe preconscious will be those things that they're not to the top of our mind.
Speaker DBut that's when we try to remember.
Speaker DRemember someone's name, remember a song from our past.
Speaker DAll of that is stored in the preconscious mind.
Speaker DThe subconscious stores all of our experiences, everything that we have learned, and it tries to guide us as to how we make choices.
Speaker DNow, we tend to think we make choices from our conscious mind.
Speaker DIf you ask me to choose between vanilla ice cream and chocolate ice cream, you think that's coming from the conscious mind.
Speaker DBut what can happen is that these choices actually come from the subconscious mind.
Speaker DThey've actually done hard research to show this.
Speaker DBenjamin Libet started this in the 80s.
Speaker DJohn Dylan Hayes went on and developed it further, as did Itzhaq Farid.
Speaker DThey used different technologies, from FMRI to implanting electrodes.
Speaker DBut what they found was there is activity in the subconscious mind before you make a choice.
Speaker DSo a technician looking at the equipment can predict what you are going to choose up to seven seconds before you indicate you have made a choice.
Speaker DNow, these choices are really simple.
Speaker DIt's am I going to press the button with my right hand or my left hand?
Speaker COr, like, am I going to eat the chocolate?
Speaker DYeah, well, that one's not much of a choice.
Speaker DOf course, I got to eat the chocolates.
Speaker DAs I said, they discovered there's activity in the subconscious part of the mind that indicates what it is we're going to choose.
Speaker DNow, this becomes really, really important, because if our choices are made by our subconscious mind, then are we in charge of anything?
Speaker DWhat happens to the idea of free will?
Speaker DThere are lots of people out there, lots of the greatest minds.
Speaker DSapolsky has written a fabulous book, Determined, that explains in great depth why there is no such thing as free choice.
Speaker DAnd it makes perfect sense because everything has a precursor to it.
Speaker DSo our genetics have an influence.
Speaker DOur past experiences.
Speaker DWhether we're fortunate to be born in a home that supports personal development or whether we're not all of these things.
Speaker DThere's always a precursor event.
Speaker DBut the idea that my husband and I have regarding this is if the choices come from the subconscious mind and the subconscious mind absorbs all of our experiences, what can we do to program the subconscious mind so that it supports us?
Speaker DSo let me give you one particular example.
Speaker DLots of people are afraid of public speaking.
Speaker DThere was a time I was petrified doing an interview like this wouldn't have happened.
Speaker DNow, my husband is a New York Times bestselling author.
Speaker DHe's written lots of books.
Speaker DHe's done lots of interviews.
Speaker DThere were opportunities as he was writing his books for me to go on these interviews with him.
Speaker DI ran a mile.
Speaker DThere was no way I would do such a thing.
Speaker DThrough all of the process, all of the work that I've done, I realized, looking back into my past, that there was one particular event for me.
Speaker DObviously, there are.
Speaker DYou can have the first event, but then you can have lots of other events that reinforce the idea that I didn't want to stand up in public and make an idiot of myself.
Speaker DAnd it was an event that happened when I was in junior school, so I would have been about nine, I believe.
Speaker DAnd we had a school event and one of the other people couldn't attend.
Speaker DSo I ended up having to take two roles.
Speaker DOne of the roles I had was just to hit two coconut shells together to make the sound of horse hooves.
Speaker DAnd then I had to do the speaking part.
Speaker DSo I'm there on stage, and I come to this speaking part.
Speaker DSo I have to quickly put down these coconut shells and pick up my paper and read from it.
Speaker DI was nine years old.
Speaker DI've always been really short.
Speaker DI'm five foot and I'm five foot now.
Speaker DBack then I was a whole lot shorter and small.
Speaker DAnd anyway, the audience, looking back on it now, the audience thought I looked cute, but that wasn't how I took it at the time.
Speaker DI thought, they're laughing at me, and I was embarrassed and I felt stupid.
Speaker DAnd it was in.
Speaker DIt was through hypnosis, hypnotherapy.
Speaker DIt was through understanding the different developmental stages of life.
Speaker DIt was looking at all of this.
Speaker DWhen that information came up from my subconscious mind that says no, that was where it started.
Speaker DThat was when I felt embarrassed speaking in public.
Speaker DAnd so the subconscious mind wants to protect us from future hurt and future pain.
Speaker DSo it would prevent me from doing anything where public speaking was involved.
Speaker DSo our past experience had this huge effect on today.
Speaker DBut if we can uncover it, if we understand how the information gets in there, what we can change it.
Speaker AStay tuned for more of Women Road warriors.
Speaker AComing up.
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Speaker BOur safety champions, the women of trucking, independent contractors, the next generation of truckers, and more help us provide the best of our industry.
Speaker BShare your story and what you love about trucking.
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Speaker BLearn more at truckingmovesamerica.com.
Speaker AWelcome back to Women Road warriors with Shelly Johnson and Kathy Tucaro.
Speaker BIf you're enjoying this informative episode of Women Road Warriors, I wanted to mention Kathy and I explore all kinds of topics that will power you on the road to success.
Speaker BWe feature a lot of expert interviews, plus we feature celebrities and women who've been trailblazers.
Speaker BPlease check out our podcast@womenroadwarriors.com and click on our Episodes page.
Speaker BWe're also available wherever you listen to podcasts.
Speaker BCheck us out and bookmark our podcast.
Speaker BAlso, don't forget to follow us on social media.
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Speaker BWe want to help as many women as possible.
Speaker BWe hear it all the time.
Speaker BThink positive, stay optimistic.
Speaker BJust change your mindset.
Speaker BBut what if that's only part of the equation?
Speaker BWhat if the real power to change your life lives deeper inside the subconscious patterns you've been running on autopilot for years?
Speaker BOur guest, Ravinder Taylor, says lasting empowerment doesn't just happen by wishing, it happens by training the mind.
Speaker BRavinder is the lead author of the groundbreaking book Mind Training the Science of Self Empowerment.
Speaker BIt combines neuroscience with practical self improvement strategies that offers people insights into unlocking their full potential.
Speaker BRavinter blends real neuroscience with practical tools that anyone can use to rewire mental habits that keep us stuck.
Speaker BStay with us.
Speaker BThis is where self empowerment gets real.
Speaker BRavinder.
Speaker BSo basically the subconscious mind, which I've always thought was kind of something that archived the daily events and everything else that we aren't really aware of and then maybe it also kind of intervenes in our dreams, it actually could be responsible for some of the fight flight because of a past experience then definitely, definitely.
Speaker DIf you had a bad experience with a dog as a child.
Speaker DFor me, my mother wasn't into having pets.
Speaker DShe would tend to think that dogs and cats were dirty and get them out of here.
Speaker DSo there was this constant programming when I was a child that if my mom saw animals There'd be lots of screaming and shouting and chasing them off type stuff, which instilled fear in me.
Speaker DI think my family got the first cat.
Speaker DI would have been in my early 20s and I was afraid to pick it up.
Speaker DThere were lots of other events too.
Speaker DSo it wasn't just my mother.
Speaker DBut I mean, everything adds on.
Speaker DWhen I first started doing, when I underwent hypnotherapy myself, we discovered this, but we went back looking for the cause of a particular situation I was dealing with.
Speaker DAnd the hypnotherapist, he went all the way back.
Speaker DAnd what he did was he used an idiomotor response.
Speaker DSo under hypnosis he says, I'm going to take you back, I'm going to count you back from your present age.
Speaker DSo 25, 24, 23.
Speaker DAnd whenever there's a year where there is an event that contributed to your current issue, your index finger will raise.
Speaker DAnd I discovered there that there were lots of them.
Speaker DSo you can have the original event happen when you're five, six, seven years old.
Speaker DBut then it gets reinforced and reinforced and reinforced.
Speaker DSo it ends up you have this constant programming going on that says, be afraid of dogs, be afraid of animals.
Speaker DAnd I had to work consciously to get through that.
Speaker DNow I love my dogs.
Speaker DWe've had lots of dogs.
Speaker DMy dogs are crazy.
Speaker DI'm definitely a dog lover and a cat lover, so that's the way it is.
Speaker DBut it did take work and it took understanding where it all comes from.
Speaker BIt's interesting.
Speaker BIt's almost like our subconscious mind.
Speaker BWe can't remember what it's doing.
Speaker BWe can't remember the events that it's storing.
Speaker BIt almost feels like it might work against us sometimes.
Speaker DIt definitely feels that way.
Speaker DYou know, that's the underpinnings of self sabotage and self destructive behaviors.
Speaker DYou look at the person who always chooses the wrong kind of partner.
Speaker DWell, what kind of programming is there in the subconscious mind that causes that?
Speaker DIt could be that they were told that they didn't deserve anything better.
Speaker DIt could be that they were just taught that this is what a relationship looks like.
Speaker DPerhaps they witnessed their parents.
Speaker DPerhaps one spouse always bullied the other.
Speaker DSo they thought that's what a healthy relationship looks like and that's what they end up looking for because they think it's normal or they think they don't deserve it.
Speaker DThey don't deserve to be in a good relationship.
Speaker DThey don't think they're worthy, don't think they're good enough.
Speaker DThere can be lots of other causes for it.
Speaker DBut it can definitely feel like your subconscious mind is trying to sabotage your goals, where it's in fact trying to give you what it thinks that you want.
Speaker BIt's almost like we have two minds.
Speaker CYou know, sorry, I'm a Gemini.
Speaker CI am definitely too.
Speaker BBut we have our conscious mind that we're using right now to speak, but then we have the subconscious that's taking it all in.
Speaker BAnd it's got its own opinion, essentially.
Speaker DIt does indeed.
Speaker DAnytime you come across an area in your life where you are not doing as well as deep down within you, you know you're capable of, then you definitely want to look at self sabotage.
Speaker DAnd the more you question your subconscious mind, the more the answers will appear.
Speaker DI can tell you that from personal experience, as I've been doing this on myself for about 35 years.
Speaker DAnd when I seriously ask my subconscious mind what the cause is, why am I doing this?
Speaker DWhy am I doing this again?
Speaker DAnd then I go quiet, the answers will come.
Speaker DAt first it doesn't.
Speaker DIt does take practice.
Speaker DIt takes quite a bit of practice.
Speaker DBut I can assure you, the more you believe that the answer is in the subconscious mind, the more you ask yourself, the more it will appear.
Speaker DAnd there are tools in my training that will give you some guidance on how to uncover some of this information.
Speaker DSo one of the things that I do cover is the eight stages of development that Erikson put forward.
Speaker DNow, I don't agree with everything that he says.
Speaker DHe assigns virtues to these different ages and he goes through different categories.
Speaker DSo from birth to one and a half, one and a half to three, and the kinds of things that you are supposed to learn at those stages in your life all the way up.
Speaker DSo, for example, they could look at infants and by assessing the degree of attachment they had to their primary caregiver, their parents or a guardian, whoever it was.
Speaker DBut by assessing that degree of attachment, they could predict how many friends they would have in high school and what their early intimate relationships would look like.
Speaker BWow.
Speaker DSo it gets embedded in there for me.
Speaker DWhen I went back and looked at these eight stages of development, it was looking at the primary school age again.
Speaker D8, 9, 10 years of age.
Speaker DAnd I realized that I used to have great feelings of insecurity, inferiority, inadequacy.
Speaker DAnd you look at that particular stage, that's when you come into yourself and you gain some of that conf.
Speaker DWell, for me, I was brought up in England.
Speaker DWe were the only brown family in the area.
Speaker DIt was very, very, very white.
Speaker DAt a time that England was very much.
Speaker DI just felt like I was surrounded by people that constantly told me, this is the right way to do things and if you do it any other way, you're inferior.
Speaker DI felt like people were constantly looking down there and whether it was real, whether it was quite that bad, I don't know.
Speaker DThat was a feeling I had.
Speaker DBut it was only as I was looking at Erickson's eight stages of development that I looked at that particular stage and said, ah, there it is, the answers.
Speaker DThe memories start popping up as to why.
Speaker DUp until my 20s, I would say I always felt insecure, inadequate, less than.
Speaker DAnd it is something that I still have to guard against.
Speaker BSo is that the subconscious working there or.
Speaker BI know in your book you have a section, I believe beliefs shape biology.
Speaker BIs it a belief system that you basically developed based on how people were treating you?
Speaker DIt's based on all of our experiences.
Speaker DBut we also have a negativity bias, okay, which makes perfect sense because evolutionarily, if you're out in the jungle and you don't respond to that rustle in the grass, well, maybe that snake's going to come out and bite you or the tiger's going to jump on you.
Speaker DSo you have to have a negativity bias for self protection.
Speaker DToday we don't have snakes and tigers about to jump on us.
Speaker DBut.
Speaker DBut we do have society.
Speaker DWe are herd animals.
Speaker DWe need the approval of society.
Speaker DIf we can't be better than other people, we want to at least be normal.
Speaker DWe want to be considered normal because society works together.
Speaker DWe get a great deal of validation from how people view us, but we have this negativity bias.
Speaker DSo for example, if you're talking to a group of friends and someone says something negative about you, you'll remember that.
Speaker DAnd that's the stuff that gets embedded more deeply.
Speaker DThe subconscious mind holds onto all of our experiences, but it remembers more strongly those areas where we could hurt ourselves.
Speaker DIf we don't have approval of our friends and society.
Speaker DIt holds onto those.
Speaker DJohn Gottman at the University of Was looked at relationships and he was able to predict based on how couples were talking to each other.
Speaker DI think he said that within half an hour he could predict if that couple would get a divorce in three years.
Speaker DBecause these small things, when your partner doesn't respect you, when they look down their nose at you or they tut and they sigh or they complain, it can be the small things, those little eye rolls or the disregarding of your opinions, these things go deeply into your subconscious mind.
Speaker DBut what John Gottman found is because of the negativity bias, we grab onto that.
Speaker DSo if you have upset your partner, don't think you can just apologize and move on.
Speaker DIt takes at least five positive affirmations, five acts of love, to counteract that one stupid thing that you said in anger that you didn't really mean but is now we know in your partner's subconscious mind and it would influence their ability to trust you.
Speaker DSo it does take five positives and this has also been replicated in the business area as well.
Speaker DThey actually found, working with teams, that one negative needs at least five positive affirmations in order to counteract it.
Speaker BInteresting.
Speaker AStay tuned for more of Women Road Warriors.
Speaker AComing up.
Speaker BIndustry Movement Trucking Moves America Forward is telling the story of the industry.
Speaker BOur safety champions, the women of trucking, independent contractors, the next generation of truckers, and more.
Speaker BHelp us promote the best of our industry.
Speaker BShare your story and what you love about trucking.
Speaker BShare images of a moment you're proud of and join us on social media.
Speaker BLearn more at truckingmovesamerica.com.
Speaker AWelcome welcome back to Women Road warriors with Shelly Johnson and Kathy Tucaro.
Speaker BIf positive thinking alone worked, we'd all be living our dream lives by now.
Speaker BBut real change happens when you understand how your brain actually works, especially the subconscious processes shaping your decisions every single day.
Speaker BRavinder Taylor is a mind science researcher, helping people break self limiting patterns using proven science based techniques.
Speaker BShe's the lead author of Mind Training the Science of Self Improvement.
Speaker BHer work bridges psychology, neuroscience and real world application.
Speaker BRavinder, in our last segment you talked about how many positive things you have to say for just one negative thing you said or have done to someone.
Speaker BIt takes that much.
Speaker BBecause of our negativity bias, it takes at least five positive affirmations to counteract one stupid thing we may have said in anger to someone, which is pretty amazing.
Speaker BYou're actually hitting somebody's trigger when you think about it.
Speaker BIf it's something that a person's really turned off about, they may not explain it to you, but you say the wrong thing and they'll ruminate.
Speaker BI don't know if guys do it as much as women do, but I know that I think women tend to ruminate on stuff and play it around in their head.
Speaker BIt's like, I can't believe he said that.
Speaker BYou know, Even though they may not be saying it out loud, I can.
Speaker DAssure you, Shirley, guys have the same thing.
Speaker BOh, okay.
Speaker DThey absolutely do.
Speaker DThey can hide it differently.
Speaker DWe have different Compensation strategies.
Speaker DSo women, for me, you know, I cry too easily.
Speaker DI do, I'll get upset.
Speaker DBut men can get angry instead and they can hide it behind that act of being all tough.
Speaker DBut it's not the case.
Speaker DIt is the same for both.
Speaker DAnd I think this is that kind of belief, Shelley, that we have to protect against.
Speaker DYou know, you are about empowering women, but it's important not to fall into these stereotypes that men don't understand this or one of the worst things you can do for your relationship is gather together with your female friends and all start complaining about your partners.
Speaker DWhen you do that, you'll be focusing on that.
Speaker DYou stop expecting them to treat you correctly.
Speaker DWhen you're focused on that, you can end up creating that as well if you don't expect them to trust you.
Speaker DAnd there are micro cues.
Speaker DThere are lots of things that we do that can cause somebody else to treat us badly.
Speaker DThere was a research study that I came across recently and what they did, let me see if I can remember this correctly, but they painted a scar on a subject.
Speaker DThey painted this really vivid looking scar on the subject and told them to go out and speak to other people.
Speaker DAnd when they did that, the person became very self conscious.
Speaker DThey thought that people they were talking to were focused on this big ugly scar that went from ear to the mouth.
Speaker DWhat they didn't realize was that as part of the experiment, they painted the scar on, had them look in the mirror to see the scar and then said, oh, hang on a sec, I need to put some moisturizer on that or something.
Speaker DAnd without the subject knowing, they removed the scar.
Speaker DInteresting.
Speaker DThe subject went out and still reported negative interactions with people.
Speaker DThey felt judged, they felt insecure because of that.
Speaker DSo our perceptions of ourselves can have an influence because what happens is they had what they thought was a scar on their face.
Speaker DIt had been wiped off, but they didn't know that they expected to be treated less than.
Speaker DSo they weren't as open, they wouldn't smile as broadly, they wouldn't be as friendly, they would hesitate, they would slow down.
Speaker DAnd then that gets reflected back.
Speaker DThat forms the basis of the Pygmalion effect that I cover in depth as well.
Speaker DThe Pygmalion research was done.
Speaker DIt began in schools and they dealt with primary school children.
Speaker DSo these were kids from 6, 7, 8 and 9.
Speaker DWhat they did was they actually lied to the teachers.
Speaker DAnd this was important because the teacher had to believe it.
Speaker DBut they administered a test to the children and they said that this test could predict how well the children would do.
Speaker DAnd they told them, the children in their classes, who they expected to do particularly well.
Speaker DNow the teachers believed that they taught the kids.
Speaker DThe kids were tested at the end of the year and lo and behold, the kids that the teachers expected to do better did significantly better.
Speaker DFor the 6 and 7 year olds, they could do 15% better.
Speaker DBut what happens is when the teacher expects a child to be bright, then they give them a little bit more attention, they praise them a little bit more, they call on them more, they boost the child's confidence.
Speaker DNow you could really see this because in the first two years, the six and seven year olds, the results were a whole lot more striking.
Speaker DAfter that, it felt fell back.
Speaker DBut if you think about the school experience, when a child first goes to school, they don't have a track record.
Speaker DThey go into the classroom, they want the approval of the teacher, and when they get it, they thrived.
Speaker DBut when they got to eight or nine, they have a better idea of how they are in comparison with their classmates or if they're going to play up.
Speaker DAnd the teachers would have the same thing as well.
Speaker DThe teachers can be told these kids are brighter, they're expected to do better.
Speaker DBut the teachers would also have an idea of which kids would play up in class.
Speaker DSo they wouldn't believe it as well.
Speaker DBut they did this research, it went on.
Speaker DThey've done this in the business arena, in sales and marketing.
Speaker DThey've done it in physical, mechanical businesses.
Speaker DThey've done, they did it in the military as well.
Speaker DAnd they consistently found when the authority figure believed in you, you did better.
Speaker CI spent my whole life being told how awful I was and how ugly and stupid and useless and you know, I was a waste of air, a waste of skin that I polluted the air anyway, it goes on and on and on.
Speaker CAnd so I spent my life even though, you know, physically I look really good and you know, I modeled for when I was young and did all this stuff, but inside I didn't believe, like I had no self esteem, no self worth, no nothing.
Speaker CIt's like that ugly scar on your, on your cheek.
Speaker CWell, I was carrying that scar on the inside.
Speaker CAnd the most interesting thing happened is I finally went to treatment where I had to unlearn all this, you know, decades of trauma and then relearn who exactly Kathy was at the age of 40.
Speaker CAnd the most interesting thing is that we did a trial session where emdr.
Speaker CAnd that EMDR is eye movement desensitization, retinopathy.
Speaker CI think it's called and where it actually crosses the neural pathways.
Speaker CSo when the counselor worked me backwards into, you know, where this belief of unworthiness came from, well, that came from being sexually abused since I was, you know, the age of 2 and 3 and 4.
Speaker CAnd then when she asked me when did have I ever felt worthy?
Speaker CI was about to say never.
Speaker CAnd it was the most amazing thing because all of a sudden I got this tidal wave of images of every single moment when God has been in my life.
Speaker CAnd so, and I mean by the hundreds and hundreds and hundreds so I've had, it was like images and images and images.
Speaker CAnd that was the moment where all of a sudden I understood, oh my God, like it doesn't matter what man thinks.
Speaker CLike really like if God thinks I'm worthy, who cares?
Speaker CAnd that was my moment because ever since then I don't carry that, that, that unworthiness.
Speaker CI don't carry that low self esteem.
Speaker CAnd so that, that flipping that switch has changed my life.
Speaker CI can really relate to it.
Speaker CI can really understand.
Speaker CAnd how the brain, it's the most interesting thing and it's really what you feed it and how you feed it and what, how you're going to nurture it, whether it's good or bad.
Speaker DI'm truly sorry you had that experience, Kathy.
Speaker DThese things do get buried deep within us and we end up repeating it.
Speaker DWe end up repeating all of that.
Speaker DIt's really good that you found faith as a way through it.
Speaker DI totally relate to that.
Speaker DWhen you have that kind of faith, you can turn this over, you can hand it to me.
Speaker DI actually had an experience kind of like that when I was younger.
Speaker DI was overly passionate, easily upset.
Speaker DIf people didn't behave the way I thought they should.
Speaker DI could get and get really worked up.
Speaker DBut I was also going through a religious phase of my own.
Speaker DAnd a friend said to me, why are you worrying about this?
Speaker DJust turn it over to God.
Speaker DAnd at that time I was able to do that.
Speaker DI could create this picture in my mind of a God figure.
Speaker DI didn't see the head or anything, but just a God figure.
Speaker DAnd I had the ability to take all of my problems and put them in God's lap.
Speaker DWhat I learned in that process, because I did this for a number of months, what I learned in that process was that most of the things I worried about didn't happen at all.
Speaker DAnd even if they did, I hadn't wasted all of that time worrying about them.
Speaker DI could deal with it when it came along.
Speaker DFaith is A really good way to deal with this.
Speaker DAnd some people have it and, and some people don't.
Speaker DAnd mind training is very much a science based book.
Speaker DBut if you read it carefully, you will see all the places that spirituality pops its head up.
Speaker DSpirituality is my primary passion, I have to tell you, but I wanted to make mind training as science based as possible in order not to have those people, you know, putting it down.
Speaker DI wanted everything backed up by hard science and that's precisely what I've done.
Speaker DAnd I've had a number of psychology professors read the book and say, unlike other self help books that just touch things on the surface they're modeling, they're just very superficial.
Speaker DThis is doable, it has all the tools and techniques.
Speaker DThis will make a difference in your life.
Speaker DThey're not difficult tools and techniques.
Speaker DYou just have to have an idea of where these things come from and then start practicing the tools and techniques.
Speaker DMake them part of your everyday process.
Speaker DSo if you're naturally a pessimistic kind of person when you understand all the benefits of being optimistic, there was a longitudinal nurses study that they did and in that one of the things they found was the most optimistic women had a 16% lower risk of dying from cancer, a 39% lower risk of dying from stroke, 52% lower risk of dying from infection.
Speaker DWhen they look at optimism, they show that optimistic people are going to have better relationships, live longer, live healthier, be more prosperous.
Speaker DNow we come into this world with our own experiences, our own genes.
Speaker DSome people are naturally pessimistic, but when you see the amount of data there is on being optimistic, you get the incentive to try to make some changes.
Speaker DSo then you can start observing yourself.
Speaker DAnd when you constantly think that this isn't going to happen, you can catch yourself, you can tell yourself perhaps the worst won't happen.
Speaker DAnd as I said, most of the time it doesn't.
Speaker DSo you can make these changes in yourself, but you have to have an understanding.
Speaker DFirst of all, you have to see the benefits.
Speaker DI believe part of the experience, our subconscious mind embeds all of our experiences.
Speaker DBut if you start making these changes in your life, if you take the risk and say, okay, I'm going to learn how the mind works, I believe I can improve my life, I believe I can do better, I just need the right tools.
Speaker DAnd you start to put these things into practice, then your life will change.
Speaker DAbsolutely guaranteed, 100%.
Speaker DYou will start to feel healthier, happier, people will gravitate towards you, you'll have more friends, but in that process, you become part of somebody else's experience.
Speaker DSo those people around you can look at you and they can say, oh, you always used to be so negative and pessimistic.
Speaker DThings didn't work out for you.
Speaker DYou were constantly gravitating towards the wrong relationships and now look how you are doing.
Speaker DIf it worked for you, perhaps it can work for me too.
Speaker DSo you become part of their experience.
Speaker DAnd there to me is one of the places spirituality really comes forward.
Speaker DIt's about be the change that you wish to see in the world.
Speaker DReflect to the world how you want the world to be.
Speaker AStay tuned for more of Women Road warriors coming up.
Speaker BIndustry movement Trucking Moves America Forward is telling the story of the industry.
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Speaker BLearn more at truckingmovesamerica.com.
Speaker AWelcome back to Women Road warriors with Shelly Johnson and Kathy Tucaro.
Speaker BWhat if you could train your mind the same way you train a muscle?
Speaker BIntentionally, scientifically, and with lasting results?
Speaker BThat's exactly what Ravinder Taylor teaches.
Speaker BFrom her early work in biology labs to decades in hypnotherapy and psychotherapy, she's developed practical tools that help people stop sabotaging themselves and start living with clarity and confidence.
Speaker BThis isn't theory, it's transformation, backed by brain science.
Speaker BWe're delving heavily into transformation right now, so stay right here.
Speaker BRayvinder so your book covers mind training and basically rewiring the brain and what changing our mindsets.
Speaker BYou have steps you take the reader through.
Speaker BAm I correct?
Speaker DYes.
Speaker DYes.
Speaker DEach chapter in the book, I go through the science.
Speaker DBut then at the end of each chapter, I talk about why that information was important, why it's significant for this personal development journey.
Speaker DAnd then I give you exercises to put it into practice.
Speaker DSo every chapter will have exercises.
Speaker DThey're short, they're easy.
Speaker DThere's nothing complicated.
Speaker DBut there's no better teacher than experience.
Speaker DWhen you start doing these things and you start feeling better, it gives you the incentive to continue doing this work.
Speaker BAnd you're helping people with their mindset, which is really impactful.
Speaker BI was reading that research shows mindset alone can reverse markers of aging.
Speaker BSo, I mean, this can help people in terms of maybe even their memory.
Speaker BWhen you think about it, there are a lot of benefits in the brain because we kind of are.
Speaker BWe're told, oh, you're getting older.
Speaker BSo people kind of go in that groove.
Speaker BIs that part of it?
Speaker DYes, it's the biggest.
Speaker DI think as we get older, it's the area that we have to pay most attention to.
Speaker DSociety teaches us that getting older means becoming more feeble.
Speaker DI think from the time I turned 40, I heard people around me saying, oh, I can't move like I used to.
Speaker DI can't do this, I can't do that.
Speaker DAnd what happens is when they have that kind of belief, then they stop trying to do these things.
Speaker DAnd that creates the aging process.
Speaker DAnd you're absolutely correct when it comes to memory and cognitive abilities.
Speaker DHow many jokes have we all heard about the senior brain?
Speaker DOh, I keep forgetting this as though it's a natural part.
Speaker DBut now what happens is you get that messaging.
Speaker DIt goes into your subconscious mind.
Speaker DSo the subconscious mind stops trying to remember.
Speaker DIt starts assuming that you're not going to remember.
Speaker DSo it doesn't do the work that you can do.
Speaker DReverse all of that.
Speaker DWe actually have programs.
Speaker DI've been talking to people just this last week about the memory program.
Speaker DWe have a technology, inner talk.
Speaker DIt is a subliminal technology, but it has been researched by numerous independent universities and institutions and been demonstrated effective at priming your self talk.
Speaker DSo we've spoken a great deal about the subconscious mind, but look at it from a slightly different angle.
Speaker DWe talk to ourselves all the time as we're going through the day.
Speaker DYou can say, if you're having a good day, that self talk is, oh, this is fun.
Speaker DI enjoy life.
Speaker DLife is great.
Speaker DIf you're having a bad day, that self talk is going to go along the lines of, I can't wait till I get home, I hate my job.
Speaker DPeople don't like me.
Speaker DI can't do this.
Speaker DI always fail.
Speaker DI'm stupid, I'm dumb.
Speaker DThis just goes on.
Speaker DInner talk works by changing that.
Speaker DThe affirmations are embedded in the soundtrack.
Speaker DYou don't hear them consciously, although you can be aware of talking going on in the background.
Speaker DBut the affirmations on the programs are all positive.
Speaker DSo when it comes to memory, the affirmations on our programs are going to be, I can remember, my brain is strong, my mind is strong, I learn easy, I remember easy, I pay attention.
Speaker DWhen that is your kind of self talk, then that is exactly what you are going to do.
Speaker DWe've got programs for advanced memory, cognitive enhancement, learning easily.
Speaker DI pulled them all and created a playlist, and I played those programs.
Speaker DAnd I promise you, I've had that experience.
Speaker DPeople talk about going from one room to the next and then they can't do remember what they went to the second room for.
Speaker DThere's actually a scientific basis for this, is to do with boundaries.
Speaker DAs you go from one to the other, you kind of shift gears and so you forget.
Speaker DBut it's a common thing that older people can talk about these senior moments.
Speaker DAnd I was having these more and more.
Speaker DBut after I worked with the programs and I actually worked with the programs pretty constantly because we don't live in pristine environments, that messaging out there about getting older means losing cognitive abilities is very strong.
Speaker DSo we have to protect against it constantly.
Speaker DBut I've had this experience after working with these programs myself and having experience going from one room to the next and I can't remember what the heck I went there for.
Speaker DI would stop and say I can remember.
Speaker DAnd I can visualize in my mind as I crossed that boundary, I could feel that memory walking away.
Speaker DBut after working with our programs, I could see it turn around and come back to me.
Speaker DI told myself I can remember and I did remember, and I do remember.
Speaker DAnd I have that experience frequently now.
Speaker DSo now I don't have that boundary issue of going from one room to the next because it can happen.
Speaker DI have that experience, but immediately I have that self talk that comes back that says I can remember and the memory appears.
Speaker DIt works really well.
Speaker DBut you have to believe in yourself.
Speaker DIf you don't believe in yourself, you won't try your hardest to achieve it.
Speaker DSo it works for memory, it works for relationships, it works for business, it works for health, it works for your careers.
Speaker DIf you don't believe in yourself, you will put a cap on your own abilities.
Speaker DAnd mind training is all about becoming the best version of ourselves.
Speaker DIt's not about competing with other people, but I can be the person that I choose to be.
Speaker DI can decide for myself what is important to me.
Speaker DMind training is about becoming who you choose to be and it's making that choice on a more conscious level.
Speaker DIt's about ironing out those things in your past that can bring you down.
Speaker DIt's by changing that.
Speaker DAnd it's about exploring how high is your up.
Speaker BI like that.
Speaker BSo where do people find your book?
Speaker BThis is just fascinating.
Speaker BMind training, the science of self empowerment.
Speaker BWhere do people find that and find out more information about you?
Speaker DYou can get the book anywhere books are sold.
Speaker DIf your local bookstore doesn't have it, they can order it in.
Speaker DYou can of course, order it on Amazon and Barnes and Noble or whatever your big bookstore is.
Speaker DI think it's Waterstones in England.
Speaker DYou can order it through all of those sites.
Speaker DYou can learn more about me by going to my website that is simply Ravinda Taylor.
Speaker DSo if you do read the book, if you do enjoy the content of this discussion that we're having right now, if you have questions, feel free to reach out to me.
Speaker BThank you, Ravinder, for a terrific interview.
Speaker DWell, thank you, Shelley.
Speaker DThank you, Kathy.
Speaker DI love the work that you are doing.
Speaker DI'm very much about.
Speaker DI'm into empowering everyone, but empowering women, because we come from behind already.
Speaker DSo the more that we can do to support each other, to believe in ourselves, to help those around us, our sisters and I look at all women around the world as being our sisters.
Speaker DWhatever we can do to assist them, to empower them, that has become a bigger and bigger focus of my life, actually, right now.
Speaker DThat's really important to me.
Speaker BThat's wonderful.
Speaker BAnd you're doing it.
Speaker BThank you, Ravinder.
Speaker BThis is just.
Speaker BThis is wonderful.
Speaker DWell, thank you for having me on.
Speaker DI appreciate it.
Speaker BWe hope you've enjoyed this latest episode.
Speaker BAnd if you want to hear more episodes of Women Road warriors or learn more about our show, be sure to check out womenroadwarriors.com and please follow us wherever you listen to podcasts.
Speaker BThanks for listening.
Speaker AYou've been listening to Women Road War, Road warriors with Shelly Johnson and Kathy Takaro.
Speaker AIf you want to be a guest on the show or have a topic or feedback, email us at sjohnsonomenroadwarriors.
Speaker ACom.