Welcome to the VP Life Podcast, the show
Speaker:where we bring you actionable health
Speaker:advice from leading minds.
Speaker:I'm your host Rob.
Speaker:My guest today is Hazel Cotton, a nervous
Speaker:system practitioner who works with people
Speaker:suffering from chronic unexplained
Speaker:symptoms such as ME, CFS, fibromyalgia,
Speaker:long COVID and burnout, conditions that
Speaker:often fall through the cracks of
Speaker:conventional medicine.
Speaker:Expect to learn why chronic illness is
Speaker:often driven by nervous system
Speaker:dysregulation rather than structural
Speaker:damage or misdiagnosis, how chronic
Speaker:stress, trauma and limbic system
Speaker:overdrive keep the body stuck in survival
Speaker:mode and what actually helps people
Speaker:recover when tests are normal but
Speaker:symptoms are very real.
Speaker:Now, on to the
Speaker:conversation with Hazel Cotton.
Speaker:Good afternoon Hazel.
Speaker:Thank you for joining us
Speaker:on the VP Life Podcast.
Speaker:I must admit it's great interviewing
Speaker:someone in the UK for a change.
Speaker:Don't get me wrong, I love every chance I
Speaker:get to to speak to the people I do and
Speaker:that I've looked up for years but when
Speaker:they're in the States and on the West
Speaker:Coast that it does get pretty tiring
Speaker:pretty quickly especially when you're
Speaker:trying to be cognitively functional at 6
Speaker:or 7 o'clock at night.
Speaker:Anyway, you've caught the story.
Speaker:Before we dive into everything sort of
Speaker:central nervous system and central
Speaker:nervous system related today, I'd love to
Speaker:hear all about it, how you ended up in
Speaker:the space you're in and how you're
Speaker:working with the people you are.
Speaker:We've tiled plenty,
Speaker:so yeah, go on to all
Speaker:the detail you like.
Speaker:It's great to be the Brit
Speaker:and thank you for having me.
Speaker:Though I have a history of chronic
Speaker:illnesses, I had a lot of symptoms
Speaker:throughout many years, a couple of
Speaker:decades, starting off with chronic pain
Speaker:which originated from a shoulder injury
Speaker:actually, carrying a laptop, nothing
Speaker:exciting and gradually the pain just
Speaker:spread and spread and spread and I went
Speaker:to see so many different people and no
Speaker:one knew what to do with it.
Speaker:The pain just kept on spreading.
Speaker:I saw surgeons and physiotherapists and
Speaker:all sorts of people and so I was in a lot
Speaker:of pain for a lot of my late 20s, early
Speaker:30s and then gradually
Speaker:it kind of got better.
Speaker:I actually was seeing a muscle activation
Speaker:technique guy in New York that somehow
Speaker:managed to do something with me.
Speaker:I'd also had some other underlying
Speaker:symptoms which now I look back were also
Speaker:warning signs like painful joints in my
Speaker:hands, noise sensitivity,
Speaker:constant like tonsillitis ulcers, little
Speaker:things that you don't really put your
Speaker:finger on and then I was back in the UK
Speaker:and I was going to get a
Speaker:surgery on my shoulder.
Speaker:Finally I was going to be ready, rearing
Speaker:to go, ready to do exercise again.
Speaker:Had this surgery which went perfectly
Speaker:well, it was just for an impingement, it
Speaker:wasn't like a big surgery and a week
Speaker:later my body just crashed, crashed to
Speaker:the floor and I didn't
Speaker:know what earth was going on.
Speaker:I literally couldn't
Speaker:move, the fatigue was immense.
Speaker:I developed extreme food sensitivities to
Speaker:the point where I didn't even
Speaker:know what I could eat anymore.
Speaker:It did actually end up running a pattern
Speaker:of kind of nuts and seafood but there was
Speaker:lots of other random things so there was
Speaker:a kind of fear created around food, not
Speaker:knowing how I was going to react and it
Speaker:would come on immediately and then I
Speaker:would be basically just extremely ill,
Speaker:like an immune
Speaker:response ill, not digestive.
Speaker:Then I was gradually getting better for
Speaker:over three years so I had chronic fatigue
Speaker:syndrome essentially.
Speaker:I didn't get formally diagnosed with it.
Speaker:We'll come on to diagnosis later in terms
Speaker:of why I am not a massive fan of them in
Speaker:general but I knew it.
Speaker:I tried lots of different therapies, lots
Speaker:of different things, some
Speaker:of them worked to a degree.
Speaker:I got myself gradually better.
Speaker:I still had limitations over what I could
Speaker:do but I was a lot better.
Speaker:I could actually like function as a human
Speaker:being and then 2020, COVID came and I got
Speaker:COVID and I was no sicker
Speaker:than your average person.
Speaker:I mean it wasn't pleasant but it wasn't
Speaker:debilitating, it wasn't
Speaker:hospitalized or anything.
Speaker:It did end up in a ventilator.
Speaker:Yeah and then just as I thought I was on
Speaker:my road to recovery, out of the weeds,
Speaker:crushed down completely again and it was
Speaker:just like going back in time and the fear
Speaker:and panic that came over me from
Speaker:thinking, "Oh my goodness, what if this
Speaker:is another three years
Speaker:or whatever of this?"
Speaker:It wasn't just the fatigue as well.
Speaker:I actually developed a really bad brain
Speaker:fog and really bad noise sensitivity and
Speaker:kind of was prone to overwhelm.
Speaker:So when my system became overwhelmed
Speaker:essentially, which could be just doing
Speaker:anything to be honest, like going into an
Speaker:environment I didn't like or if I did too
Speaker:much of anything, which at the beginning
Speaker:the window of tolerance was very small, I
Speaker:would just start coming
Speaker:out in flood of tears.
Speaker:I wasn't actually upset as such, it was
Speaker:just like the overwhelm
Speaker:of the nervous system.
Speaker:So the only benefit of getting sick twice
Speaker:was that I knew what to do.
Speaker:So I went back to all the things I was
Speaker:trying previously, gradually was getting
Speaker:better but the symptoms were not
Speaker:shifting, especially the brain fog and I
Speaker:was just struggling with this kind of
Speaker:plateau and trying to just get better.
Speaker:All the time that I had the symptoms for
Speaker:like probably like six, seven years, I
Speaker:knew that there was something not quite
Speaker:right but I couldn't put my finger on it.
Speaker:I knew that there must be, I wasn't sick
Speaker:before so I always had the hope that I
Speaker:was going to get better, I just hadn't
Speaker:worked out what it was yet and then I
Speaker:just came across the nervous system
Speaker:because it suddenly was in the public
Speaker:domain, people were suddenly talking
Speaker:about the nervous system and they weren't
Speaker:previously and once I found out about the
Speaker:nervous system it just was like oh my
Speaker:goodness this makes sense.
Speaker:So I then left my corporate job, once I'd
Speaker:learned how to basically heal all my
Speaker:symptoms and work out how to do it, I
Speaker:then retrained and I left my corporate
Speaker:job and I set up my business to now help
Speaker:other people who are
Speaker:in similar situations.
Speaker:It's around awareness of the nervous
Speaker:system, awareness of what chronic
Speaker:illnesses really mean, what burnout of
Speaker:the nervous system really means and
Speaker:helping people to get better essentially
Speaker:when there's no help available in our
Speaker:health system for conditions like this.
Speaker:Yeah, no that's an amazing story and it
Speaker:speaks to your ability to push through
Speaker:which I think, and this is something
Speaker:we'll come to later, where so many people
Speaker:just will not only push through but
Speaker:become self-reliant.
Speaker:I think so many people just fall victim
Speaker:to this idea that they should just rely
Speaker:on their doctor and the NHS or whatever
Speaker:the equivalent social welfare health
Speaker:system is that the listener is
Speaker:whichever country they're in.
Speaker:Yeah, yeah.
Speaker:So yeah, no that's remarkable and the
Speaker:fact that you were able to sort of work
Speaker:that out is just a sort of a world
Speaker:testament to I suppose
Speaker:your ability to push through.
Speaker:I would love to come back to
Speaker:some of that stuff in a second.
Speaker:Something you talked about earlier sort
Speaker:of really struck home though and that was
Speaker:it almost started unfold
Speaker:sort of after the initial op.
Speaker:Do you think you had a negative reaction
Speaker:to the anesthesia or anything like that?
Speaker:No, that's what I initially thought and
Speaker:what people may think.
Speaker:I think that what happened was my nervous
Speaker:system had been dysregulated for years.
Speaker:It was susceptible to some kind of crash
Speaker:as we now know, as I now know caused by
Speaker:chronic extra assets in the body that
Speaker:therefore weakens the functions within
Speaker:the body essentially.
Speaker:And I don't think it had anything to do
Speaker:with the anaesthetic per se apart from it
Speaker:was a I guess the operation the
Speaker:anaesthetic essentially was
Speaker:maybe a trauma to the body.
Speaker:It was something that happened to the
Speaker:body that was out of the norm.
Speaker:And it just kind of threw it over which
Speaker:is why when people find themselves in
Speaker:these situations with chronic illnesses
Speaker:there's only a number of different routes
Speaker:that people come in from to get there.
Speaker:Covid being one.
Speaker:I don't think that Covid in general is
Speaker:anything particular apart from it's a
Speaker:strong virus that throws
Speaker:systems off that are already weak.
Speaker:There are some anomalies with Covid in
Speaker:terms of the organ damage and stuff which
Speaker:is kind of separate but in terms of the
Speaker:post viral fatigue element, glandular
Speaker:fever, other strong viruses,
Speaker:Covid it's just a strong it could be a
Speaker:car crash, it could be a significant life
Speaker:event like a divorce, like a death.
Speaker:It's something that if your system is I
Speaker:don't know weeks the wrong way but like
Speaker:susceptible it can it will push you over
Speaker:the edge and that's why it people come in
Speaker:from any number of different life stories
Speaker:and what's got them there
Speaker:and it's also cumulative.
Speaker:So if you've got lots of small things
Speaker:happening it could be just that final one
Speaker:that pushes you over.
Speaker:Most people are when they do end up kind
Speaker:of crashing as such they probably would
Speaker:look back and say I was probably quite
Speaker:stressed at the time or oh yeah I think
Speaker:of some other things that happened in the
Speaker:past that maybe had contributed towards
Speaker:it but it's generally like
Speaker:retrospectively people can then attribute
Speaker:what's kind of going on in their life to
Speaker:then what kind of
Speaker:happens to them physically.
Speaker:Fair enough yeah that makes complete
Speaker:sense and I suppose that's really the
Speaker:perfect segue to talking about the
Speaker:nervous system which is what I'd really
Speaker:like to sort of to maybe dive into now
Speaker:but before we get into I suppose the the
Speaker:meat and the potatoes of today's
Speaker:conversation which is essentially I
Speaker:suppose how you fix this but at a high
Speaker:level would you mind walking us through
Speaker:what the central nervous system is.
Speaker:Obviously it's composed of two branches
Speaker:and there's also something there called
Speaker:the vagus nerve but I feel if we can just
Speaker:lay out that basic sort of biology and
Speaker:physiology the rest of the conversation
Speaker:will just flow just a
Speaker:little bit more naturally.
Speaker:So yeah would you mind running us through
Speaker:how the nervous system works like that's
Speaker:a little one-on-one as it were.
Speaker:Yeah so we've got the central nervous
Speaker:system and the autonomic nervous system
Speaker:and it's actually the autonomic nervous
Speaker:system which we pay most attention to
Speaker:when it comes to dysregulation and the
Speaker:chronic symptoms that people experience
Speaker:and there's two putting it simply there's
Speaker:the two main branches there's the
Speaker:sympathetic and there's the
Speaker:parasympathetic and the sympathetic is
Speaker:what we know is the fight or flight it
Speaker:what activates when we are in danger if
Speaker:we're about to cross the road and there's
Speaker:a lorry coming or if there's a bear in
Speaker:the woods we would switch on and we
Speaker:would, you know, symptoms have happened
Speaker:like fast heart rate well coming palms
Speaker:and we'd be in like fight or flight mode.
Speaker:There's also then the parasympathetic
Speaker:branch which is our rest and digest which
Speaker:is what we should be in most of the time
Speaker:it's when we are at rest it's when we're
Speaker:kind of our heart rate is steady it's
Speaker:when we're kind of calm and and that's
Speaker:kind of the two different states that
Speaker:we're in so you've got the two different
Speaker:nervous system states which is then the
Speaker:parasympathetic and the sympathetic and
Speaker:what a regulated nervous system will do
Speaker:is it will switch between the two as and
Speaker:when it's needed it will switch quickly
Speaker:into one and it will switch
Speaker:quickly out into the other.
Speaker:When you are dysregulated when you've
Speaker:been in a state of chronic stress for a
Speaker:long time that's when that shift doesn't
Speaker:happen and you can get stuck in fight or
Speaker:flight for too long and then if you've
Speaker:been in that for too long you can then
Speaker:end up going into shutdown mode
Speaker:essentially and the vagus nerve which a
Speaker:lot of people are talking about these
Speaker:days is so critical it's like the longest
Speaker:nerve that we have going on in our body
Speaker:and it determines whether to switch on
Speaker:the parasympathetic or the sympathetic
Speaker:branch so it's super important that we
Speaker:are able to learn how to control as such
Speaker:our vagus nerve so that we are able to
Speaker:then effectively switch into the rest and
Speaker:digest or the fight or flight as we
Speaker:needed so that's kind
Speaker:of it in a nutshell.
Speaker:Now that's perfect now from what I
Speaker:understand there are a few different
Speaker:branches of the vagus nerve is that
Speaker:correct and sort of depending on which
Speaker:branch you're in that's going to dictate
Speaker:maybe whether you're more sympathetic or
Speaker:parasympathetic and now there are various
Speaker:ways that you can activate the vagus
Speaker:nerve do you always want the vagus nerve
Speaker:activated or is that sort of a bit of a
Speaker:misnomer do you want it to sort of I
Speaker:suppose vacillate a bit like everything
Speaker:else in life I assume you don't want this
Speaker:vagus nerve to be on
Speaker:all the time as it were.
Speaker:No it is around activating it when you
Speaker:need to and when you need to be able to
Speaker:get yourself into rest and digest more
Speaker:easily and more quickly there's lots of
Speaker:exercises that you could do they're
Speaker:called like vagal toning exercises
Speaker:essentially which is getting your vagus
Speaker:nerve to be more toned especially imagine
Speaker:it's like a muscle that you're using and
Speaker:it's going to become increasingly used it
Speaker:will increasingly know how to be able to
Speaker:switch into the right state that you need
Speaker:so if you were to do like any vagal
Speaker:toning exercises I mean there's little
Speaker:ones like just pulling your ear down and
Speaker:there's ones where you can kind of follow
Speaker:your finger around with your eye and
Speaker:you're looking up to the right there's a
Speaker:few different ones that you can do you
Speaker:will generally speaking start yawning or
Speaker:sighing and that demonstrates that you
Speaker:are switching into the parasympathetic
Speaker:because it's therefore putting you into
Speaker:that rest and digest state so if you are
Speaker:in a state of like anxiety and feeling
Speaker:fraught and feeling kind of on edge if
Speaker:you could do these practices frequently
Speaker:then it will your system will get used to
Speaker:kind of being in that rest and digest
Speaker:state more often rather than just often
Speaker:being in fight or flight continuously and
Speaker:that's what you want to learn to do is
Speaker:shift into the rest and digest at
Speaker:parasympathetic state
Speaker:as often as you can.
Speaker:That's perfect thank you for breaking
Speaker:that all down now I get to talk to a fair
Speaker:number of experts on this podcast and the
Speaker:one question I tend to ask them most of
Speaker:them actually is why they feel people get
Speaker:sick it's well or maybe are unwell it's
Speaker:largely a selfish question I'll be honest
Speaker:however it does fascinate me because so
Speaker:many of these experts and they are
Speaker:experts again tend to actually get people
Speaker:well you're always sort of hear about how
Speaker:so and so whoever has this program or has
Speaker:this methodology that really works for a
Speaker:lot of people now not all the time of
Speaker:course because there is this idea this
Speaker:biochemical individuality and but it does
Speaker:pose an interesting notion and that being
Speaker:that there are many sorts of ways to
Speaker:optimal health anyway that will be a
Speaker:rabbit hole probably for another podcast
Speaker:something we could spend all day
Speaker:discussing but in your view I suppose why
Speaker:do we get as a society these these
Speaker:chronic health conditions I know you sort
Speaker:of touched on a bit already but maybe we
Speaker:can dive just a bit deeper into that
Speaker:it's such an interesting question I don't
Speaker:think there's any catholic answer out
Speaker:there I think there's lots of suggestions
Speaker:and ideas that it could could be and
Speaker:there isn't enough research at the moment
Speaker:happening in this in this place because
Speaker:most research is funded by farmer
Speaker:companies and a lot of this is not going
Speaker:to be giving towards profit or a quick
Speaker:fix pill so I don't think there's any
Speaker:hard and fast pure data on it there's an
Speaker:element of genetics of which there is
Speaker:research going on at the moment but it
Speaker:seems that this is probably a smaller
Speaker:part to play than people used to think a
Speaker:lot of it comes down to the way you were
Speaker:raised and your childhood experiences why
Speaker:is it that some people are more
Speaker:susceptible to stress and why is it that
Speaker:others people could have parallel jobs or
Speaker:parallel situations happening at work for
Speaker:example why is it that some people get
Speaker:stressed and some people don't there's
Speaker:quite a lot of research that's happened
Speaker:that does relate back to how you
Speaker:experienced things as a child so if we
Speaker:think of ACE which is the adverse
Speaker:childhood experiences things that happen
Speaker:to you when you were young like neglect
Speaker:or abuse a lot of people when they grow
Speaker:older they have chronic illnesses they
Speaker:have addictions they have challenging
Speaker:lives so that's fairly well known to a
Speaker:degree especially around some of the
Speaker:addictions and behavioral issues maybe
Speaker:less so around chronic illnesses although
Speaker:it's becoming more well known so that's
Speaker:kind of a trauma element of too much
Speaker:that's happened to you too soon too much
Speaker:that you your nervous system was able to
Speaker:help with at a time that's affected how
Speaker:your brain has developed that means that
Speaker:you are more susceptible to stressful
Speaker:events essentially but there's also the
Speaker:trauma which is much less talked about
Speaker:which is too little too often and that is
Speaker:around not having sufficient
Speaker:co-regulation when you are a child and
Speaker:this can come through no malintent from
Speaker:the the parents it's part of the way that
Speaker:some of our generations have been brought
Speaker:up which is not to I guess give emotional
Speaker:support it's the fact that people don't
Speaker:really know how to do it some of our
Speaker:parents didn't have the tools that they
Speaker:needed to be able to give the emotional
Speaker:support that the child needed to enable
Speaker:their nervous system to become resilient
Speaker:because what the nervous system really
Speaker:needs in a nutshell is to feel safe it
Speaker:needs to feel safe and if it feels safe
Speaker:then it will be regulated and it will
Speaker:everything will work as it should do but
Speaker:if it feels unsafe which could be that
Speaker:something bad happened but it could be
Speaker:that it just didn't get enough care and
Speaker:attention that seems to be a very common
Speaker:pattern for people who have chronic
Speaker:illnesses there's a huge correlation
Speaker:between personality traits and chronic
Speaker:illnesses perfectionism highly analytical
Speaker:high achievers very very driven what's
Speaker:that like ring and any
Speaker:and if you if you then think back to when
Speaker:you were a child and how these behaviors
Speaker:develop of course some of it is
Speaker:gymnastics to a degree but most of these
Speaker:things are learned behaviors and we learn
Speaker:our behaviors from how our parents were
Speaker:with us or how other adults around us
Speaker:were what our schooling experiences were
Speaker:and so we therefore start to drive and
Speaker:push ourselves so if we're constantly
Speaker:trying to overachieve or push through and
Speaker:put that drive we're creating that stress
Speaker:ongoing stress in our body which over
Speaker:time gradually just builds up and that's
Speaker:why often you won't see the repercussions
Speaker:of it until much later in life because
Speaker:you've had an accumulation of small
Speaker:stresses that are personality driven and
Speaker:then you've got events that happen and
Speaker:they just kind of accumulate and that
Speaker:seems to be a lot of reasons as to from
Speaker:my experience and from the research we've
Speaker:seen is to why certain people get sick
Speaker:and why certain people don't get sick
Speaker:yeah that's thank you for that that's a
Speaker:perfect answer I would probably push back
Speaker:on the genetic piece I think I think
Speaker:everything is genetics oh I'm almost sure
Speaker:everything is genetics at the end of the
Speaker:day when somebody has a genetic
Speaker:predisposition to a
Speaker:certain nervous system stance
Speaker:then or not stance what's the correct
Speaker:word state there we go then by default
Speaker:that is going to upregulate all the
Speaker:disease processes that we've that we've
Speaker:talked about then we're going to talk
Speaker:about I think if somebody is far if
Speaker:somebody is more predispositioned to
Speaker:creating more of these catecholamines
Speaker:these stress hormones that then trickle
Speaker:down and affect the immune system and
Speaker:then sort of develop these th17 responses
Speaker:and th2 responses and all the big words
Speaker:nobody cares about then by default that
Speaker:is going to result in a certain
Speaker:individual if they have a sort of a less
Speaker:than ideal quote unquote genetic makeup
Speaker:being more susceptible to these sorts of
Speaker:issues to begin with I mean you there are
Speaker:plenty of sort of anecdotal and case
Speaker:studies and reports where
Speaker:you have siblings in the same environment
Speaker:grow up one goes on to thrive and the
Speaker:other one doesn't now if it if there
Speaker:isn't if the environment's the same yet
Speaker:the outcome is different then there has
Speaker:to be something within that individual
Speaker:that is contributing to whether or not
Speaker:they succeed versus fail putting it very
Speaker:black and white and fundamentally I think
Speaker:that comes down to genetic differences
Speaker:now of course that isn't all of it and we
Speaker:discussed off air about this idea of
Speaker:terrain and germ theory as well germ
Speaker:theory suggests that germs are what we
Speaker:need to worry about sorry and we need to
Speaker:keep finding ways I suppose just to keep
Speaker:on killing them off whereas terrain
Speaker:theory sort of posits or argues that the
Speaker:idea that if the body is well balanced
Speaker:then germs I suppose are a natural part
Speaker:of life and the environment will be dealt
Speaker:with by the body without it causing
Speaker:distress I mean this speaks a lot to some
Speaker:of the stuff we've talked about or fair
Speaker:about the toxic load on the body do you
Speaker:think having a high toxic load is going
Speaker:to contribute towards this sort of this
Speaker:autonomia in general
Speaker:yes I think it's a huge contributory
Speaker:factor because the stress that you're
Speaker:putting on the body regardless of what
Speaker:aspect it is whether it's to do with the
Speaker:toxic load it's to do with the
Speaker:environment it's to do with your makeup
Speaker:all of those things elements are
Speaker:definitely going to be contributing
Speaker:towards your ability to withstand
Speaker:stressful events as as you evolve because
Speaker:they impact all the different functions
Speaker:of the body you know the liver function
Speaker:you bla... go on a bit but they affect
Speaker:all the different functions of your body
Speaker:so toxic load is yeah I
Speaker:think hugely important here
Speaker:yeah I think ultimately what this all
Speaker:sort of speaks to in my view again when
Speaker:you sort of peel away the layers of it is
Speaker:mitochondrial dysfunction the cell
Speaker:dangerous one something I know we've
Speaker:talked about a lot a fair amount and so
Speaker:the way I view it all of this sort of
Speaker:central nervous system dysfunction
Speaker:ultimately drives what is I feel is the
Speaker:central sort of unifying theory to what
Speaker:disease fundamentally is and that is the
Speaker:so-called cell danger response now I've
Speaker:hopped on about this before but
Speaker:essentially the CDR the cell danger
Speaker:response is how our cells react when they
Speaker:are threatened and in CDR they will shift
Speaker:into a state of defense and that can be
Speaker:triggered by any threat whether it's an
Speaker:infection a toxin an injury speaking of
Speaker:injuries potentially shoulder injury even
Speaker:or psychological stress and instead of
Speaker:focusing on growth and repair
Speaker:the cell then changes its priorities
Speaker:essentially working towards survival this
Speaker:then affects all the other systems in the
Speaker:body especially the immune system as
Speaker:there simply just isn't enough energy for
Speaker:the the body to function properly I'll
Speaker:not get too much into the weeds here but
Speaker:I suppose at the heart of the sort of CDR
Speaker:model are the are mitochondria normally
Speaker:which as we all know are work to act like
Speaker:sort of cellular power plants making
Speaker:energy in the form of ATP but when they
Speaker:enter into this sort of cell danger
Speaker:response a cell or response they
Speaker:deliberately become less efficient it
Speaker:makes complete sense if if the body's
Speaker:under a threat under attack they're going
Speaker:to down regulate to conserve energy it's
Speaker:sort of it's a nice sort of evolutionary
Speaker:way of looking at it
Speaker:now it's yeah and they cut back on energy
Speaker:production essentially what they also do
Speaker:is they actually release ATP
Speaker:extracellularly so outside of the cell
Speaker:it's called strangely enough
Speaker:extracellular ATP and this fuel outside
Speaker:of the cell is actually then seen by the
Speaker:immune system uh as a a danger signal
Speaker:essentially um it's why I'm not a fan of
Speaker:people just taking NAD supplements
Speaker:willy-nilly because the more uh NAD
Speaker:supplements you're taking the more ATP
Speaker:you are producing but potentially if
Speaker:you're an inflamed state you are going to
Speaker:produce ATP that's then going to leak out
Speaker:of the cell or out of the mitochondria
Speaker:and create uh all of these issues that's
Speaker:getting into electron leak and electron
Speaker:electron and proton gradients and I
Speaker:should stop there before everybody turns
Speaker:off I suppose but yeah anyway just to
Speaker:sort of run through the the CDR stages
Speaker:quickly you have three of them uh it was
Speaker:uh put together by a Dr.
Speaker:Robert Navio who's the hero of mine
Speaker:obviously and in CDR1 fundamentally what
Speaker:happens is that the cell senses a threat
Speaker:um mitochondrial mitochondria leak these
Speaker:electrons like I said uh talked about
Speaker:earlier they start to make more reactive
Speaker:oxygen species which then create
Speaker:inflammation and oxidase stress terms I'm
Speaker:sure we're all familiar with and then
Speaker:there's a shift into how the body
Speaker:utilizes different types of energy
Speaker:sources the mitochondria sort of shift
Speaker:into this state of glycolysis where
Speaker:they're not utilizing fatty acids to
Speaker:reduce fuel they're using um sugars and
Speaker:that's a good and a bad thing but
Speaker:fundamentally you are limiting the
Speaker:capacity of the mitochondria to produce
Speaker:enough energy um now in theory what would
Speaker:happen is um once the body has sort of
Speaker:seen a threat it's sort of gone into CDR1
Speaker:it will then sort of slowly transition
Speaker:into CDR2 which is thought to be the
Speaker:repair stage and and once the threat is
Speaker:controlled I suppose the focus of the of
Speaker:the cell excuse me is to shift into sort
Speaker:of a rebuilding state um the mitochondria
Speaker:slowly start to work again and they start
Speaker:to help produce various proteins and
Speaker:lipids or fats and what are called
Speaker:nucleotides all of which are essentially
Speaker:cellular building blocks and um you then
Speaker:are able to start slowly rebuilding the
Speaker:cell and then finally you have this sort
Speaker:of transition into CDR3 which happens
Speaker:when the cell I suppose sort of is
Speaker:colloquially put it sort of reintegrates
Speaker:into the network or the matrix and that
Speaker:means sort of your metabolism comes back
Speaker:online hormones start to be produced
Speaker:properly um and you are able to then
Speaker:effectively start utilizing
Speaker:the mitochondria as they are supposed to
Speaker:work um the challenge comes in when an
Speaker:individual gets stuck in the sort of CDR1
Speaker:or CDR2 states uh and they just the
Speaker:individual at question just is not able
Speaker:to function optimally because of this
Speaker:sort of impaired energy balance this
Speaker:these energy dynamics within the cell now
Speaker:coming full circle if you buy into the
Speaker:sort of mitochondrial theory of disease
Speaker:which evidently I do um then you'll agree
Speaker:that there are are likely a few triggers
Speaker:here um central nervous system
Speaker:dysfunction dysautonomia stress in this
Speaker:context obviously being a major driver um
Speaker:now there's a lot to obviously be to be
Speaker:said upstream of that in terms of that
Speaker:that limbic system dysfunction that I
Speaker:know you're all too familiar with um but
Speaker:before we dive into that rubital I
Speaker:suppose I'd like to get maybe your
Speaker:perspective on this and your thoughts uh
Speaker:on whether or not this is ultimately sort
Speaker:of mitochondrial dysfunction that is this
Speaker:triggered by um well in this case stress
Speaker:of some sort to another or if uh yeah
Speaker:what do you think of that idea as a whole
Speaker:I think if we consider how impactful the
Speaker:nervous system is or the autonomic
Speaker:nervous system is in terms of in um if we
Speaker:think about how influential the nervous
Speaker:system is on determining our overall
Speaker:health then it makes sense and stands to
Speaker:reason that actually it's our environment
Speaker:that's influencing our nervous system
Speaker:that's then creating this dysfunction
Speaker:that's happening within the cells so my
Speaker:view is that of course there is
Speaker:dysfunction happening in the body but if
Speaker:we can externally start to regulate our
Speaker:nervous system then that will in turn
Speaker:start to increase the overall function
Speaker:that's happening in the body gradually
Speaker:which is why I work with the nervous
Speaker:system with the limbic system influencing
Speaker:how they behave which then in turn will
Speaker:then start to influence how the functions
Speaker:and cells are working and mitochondria is
Speaker:working in the body that is how I
Speaker:perceive it which is why sometimes when
Speaker:especially when after I had covid and I
Speaker:was reading all these millions of reports
Speaker:getting obsessed into rabbit holes of
Speaker:looking for the magic fix to fix all of
Speaker:these different things that weren't
Speaker:working properly in the body that was
Speaker:causing all these issues and why
Speaker:generally speaking that doesn't help
Speaker:people is because you need to take it
Speaker:back up a level and go what's actually
Speaker:causing this more broadly if you then
Speaker:start to actually work on your nervous
Speaker:system and your brain then that will then
Speaker:in turn influence all of the different
Speaker:functions that are
Speaker:happening beneath that.
Speaker:Fair enough and then I suppose I've
Speaker:mentioned this term and so have you.
Speaker:There's this idea of a lot of this being
Speaker:controlled by the limbic system.
Speaker:Now we sort of we've talked about the
Speaker:sympathetic and the parasympathetic and
Speaker:the vagus nerve but within the brain
Speaker:specifically there's this area called the
Speaker:limbic system, the limbic region of the
Speaker:brain which controls a
Speaker:lot of these processes.
Speaker:Could you maybe break down what the
Speaker:limbic system is and then how
Speaker:dysregulation in that specific brain area
Speaker:seems to then drive this these issues
Speaker:with the amygdala and this stress
Speaker:response that just seems to be ultimately
Speaker:creating so much of this dysfunction.
Speaker:Yes so as you mentioned we've got the
Speaker:limbic system there's a couple of core
Speaker:components within that.
Speaker:We've got the amygdala which is our
Speaker:stress alert which then informs a
Speaker:hypothalamus like how to also then
Speaker:respond which then triggers the hpa axis
Speaker:which then releases the stress hormones
Speaker:so it's got that kind of layered response
Speaker:as to how the limbic system operates in a
Speaker:stressful environment but it's getting
Speaker:its information from the nervous system
Speaker:so that's why when I work with people I
Speaker:work with them on how they are feeling
Speaker:and functioning in their body in relation
Speaker:to how they're breathing, how they're
Speaker:thinking, how they are standing, their
Speaker:posture, their emotions, all of these
Speaker:different aspects are informing the brain
Speaker:as to whether there's danger essentially.
Speaker:So if our nervous system has symptoms or
Speaker:I guess behaviors which are indicating
Speaker:that there is danger around like for
Speaker:example I could be sitting like this, I
Speaker:could be breathing really fast, I could
Speaker:be thinking oh my god the world is
Speaker:ending, the world is ending, oh my
Speaker:goodness all these things I think the
Speaker:brain's like oh my goodness there's
Speaker:something going wrong here we need to
Speaker:switch on this stress, this danger.
Speaker:So therefore if you are presenting in a
Speaker:way that represents stress or danger the
Speaker:brain therefore thinks there's danger and
Speaker:therefore it triggers the response and
Speaker:therefore your body is
Speaker:flooded with stress hormones.
Speaker:Now if there is danger and you just see
Speaker:you're out to like have a car curtling
Speaker:towards you then there would be danger
Speaker:and then you would need to have all of
Speaker:those mechanisms happening and then it
Speaker:would be great to have cortisol and
Speaker:adrenaline to like get you out the way
Speaker:and all of those things but if when it
Speaker:happens with people with chronic stress
Speaker:they get themselves in this pattern that
Speaker:they don't even know that they're in
Speaker:until you actually create an awareness
Speaker:around it and I can guarantee that anyone
Speaker:who has got chronic symptoms, chronic
Speaker:stress, they will be doing some of those
Speaker:things probably all of the
Speaker:time even without knowing it.
Speaker:They'll be sitting like this or they'll
Speaker:be hunched like that or their breathing
Speaker:will be really shallow from their chest
Speaker:or they'll just be thinking negative
Speaker:thoughts or just being like thinking in
Speaker:an emotional way that's not conducive to
Speaker:positivity which is how much our thoughts
Speaker:can kind of power and empower like how
Speaker:we're thinking and things so that's why
Speaker:it's so critical that we work on both the
Speaker:brain and the body together because they
Speaker:both feed each other and that's my view
Speaker:on how they work and how you then can
Speaker:start to improve your symptoms is by
Speaker:working on how you are responding as a
Speaker:person, how you're being and then over
Speaker:time your brain will start to switch out
Speaker:of thinking that it needs
Speaker:to be on alert all the time.
Speaker:You'll stop being in fight or flight mode
Speaker:all the time, you'll just start to
Speaker:gradually relax and as your nervous
Speaker:system just relaxes as you relax over
Speaker:time suddenly your symptoms disappear and
Speaker:you'll notice most people notice that
Speaker:their symptoms are worse when they're
Speaker:stressed and then people maybe go on
Speaker:holiday for a week or they are off
Speaker:selling themselves somewhere where they
Speaker:don't have to think about what they're
Speaker:doing oh suddenly they feel so much
Speaker:better and then they go back into the
Speaker:environment that made them sick in the
Speaker:first place and suddenly the symptoms
Speaker:have come on and if that isn't a really
Speaker:strong indicator that your environment
Speaker:and how you are being is influencing your
Speaker:health and your symptoms then you know
Speaker:it's it's just there it's it's it's clear
Speaker:clear to see and everyone who I speak to
Speaker:once they actually create the awareness
Speaker:they start to notice it it's just that
Speaker:when people have been sick for a long
Speaker:time they start to focus in on their
Speaker:symptoms and they almost become like
Speaker:buried and embroiled in like the misery
Speaker:of it and counting what symptom is coming
Speaker:next and oh I can feel this and I can
Speaker:feel this and what's this oh my god
Speaker:what's going on so there's this worry
Speaker:there's this fear there's this resentment
Speaker:and self-fulfilling prophecy of that is
Speaker:just feeding your brain with there's
Speaker:danger there's fear let's keep let's keep
Speaker:everyone in alert let's keep you in fight
Speaker:or flight so it's just this ongoing cycle
Speaker:that people don't know that they're in
Speaker:but once you do and you're open to it and
Speaker:not just expecting some magical pill from
Speaker:somewhere if you're open to it suddenly
Speaker:people are like oh my goodness and that's
Speaker:when you can start to impact change on
Speaker:yourself by actually then taking action
Speaker:according to how you are
Speaker:operating as an individual
Speaker:so fundamentally what you're saying is
Speaker:win the lotto and go and
Speaker:live on a spanish island
Speaker:pretty much yeah yeah although you'd have
Speaker:to be careful you don't take your brain
Speaker:your misery brain with you you'd have to
Speaker:actually embrace it because what some
Speaker:people could do when they go and live on
Speaker:their spanish island is still start
Speaker:complaining that it's too hot that it's
Speaker:it's uh i don't know
Speaker:at that point i'd to be completely blunt
Speaker:i might just say you
Speaker:deserve to be sick um yeah
Speaker:you know some people will find that you
Speaker:know the glass half full or the rain
Speaker:perspective some people will find
Speaker:problems with everything and they're not
Speaker:willing to like make a change they could
Speaker:go to the nicest place but they're still
Speaker:like you know looking for the worst case
Speaker:scenario everywhere and
Speaker:they're the people who will
Speaker:struggle the most yeah no i do think
Speaker:carol deweck's book their uh mindset the
Speaker:sort of the growth versus fixed mindset
Speaker:is probably almost required reading when
Speaker:trying to work through something like
Speaker:this you sort of got to flip that
Speaker:perspective on what's real what isn't um
Speaker:and that you you fundamentally can heal
Speaker:um even if it is difficult i mean this
Speaker:obviously isn't a walk in the park but i
Speaker:think well as you've just alluded to um
Speaker:if you sort of maintain that mindset
Speaker:around everything constant being terrible
Speaker:all the time it's just going to sort of
Speaker:reinforce that sort of negative feedback
Speaker:loop and you're not going to get out of
Speaker:it and i personally and sort of
Speaker:observationally i think that's the
Speaker:hardest part i think trying to sort of
Speaker:convince yourself that it is going to be
Speaker:okay and that you can heal and then be
Speaker:consistent in that thought process that's
Speaker:the trick i think personally um maybe
Speaker:it's just because i'm soft in the head i
Speaker:don't know but trying to maintain that um
Speaker:uh yeah that's that sort of that that
Speaker:that thought process and are constantly
Speaker:constantly even when you are
Speaker:struggling is really tricky
Speaker:it is the most difficult thing and that's
Speaker:why healing takes a long time and why
Speaker:some people don't get better and because
Speaker:it's not something that happens just
Speaker:overnight you've got to have such
Speaker:perseverance to keep on going when you're
Speaker:not seeing those results immediately and
Speaker:it is just the small things that you keep
Speaker:on doing that will eventually make that
Speaker:change and the other reason it's so
Speaker:difficult is because you are essentially
Speaker:having to make changes within your
Speaker:personality potentially your way of doing
Speaker:things the way you've been doing
Speaker:something for decades that's difficult
Speaker:and not everybody is able or willing to
Speaker:do it but if you really want to get
Speaker:better and just think well what got me
Speaker:here is not hopeful i'm going to have to
Speaker:make a change if i actually want to get
Speaker:better and once you start becoming
Speaker:observational about your thoughts
Speaker:patterns behaviors and what's driving it
Speaker:and why you're like that suddenly you can
Speaker:be like okay maybe that's not as helpful
Speaker:as i thought it was but it's totally what
Speaker:you said about the mindset of growth
Speaker:versus fixed if you've got a fixed
Speaker:mindset like i speak to people all the
Speaker:time who've got this fixed mindset who
Speaker:won't get better because they're still
Speaker:just buried buried over there somewhere
Speaker:and they're not changing and they're not
Speaker:open to it but there's the people who are
Speaker:ready willing trying and they will get
Speaker:better if they can just keep it on
Speaker:consistent but it's about having it's
Speaker:helpful to have like accountability
Speaker:partners or people you're doing it with
Speaker:to keep you motivated because it is it's
Speaker:difficult and it takes a long time but
Speaker:you can get there with perseverance
Speaker:yeah and that's something i know we'll be
Speaker:talking about later when we sort of touch
Speaker:on your program um what do you think
Speaker:about vagus vagal vagal nerve stimulators
Speaker:um these sort of contraptions that um
Speaker:sort of almost force and maybe that is
Speaker:the dichotomy there um the body into uh
Speaker:is that the right word things so into a
Speaker:sort of parasympathetic state do you do
Speaker:you think that they are effective have
Speaker:you seen any um any case reports among
Speaker:your community to show that they are
Speaker:helpful or are they
Speaker:kind of been hit and miss i
Speaker:think that would be the term i would use
Speaker:hit and miss i think they help some
Speaker:people but they don't help other people i
Speaker:tried two of them and they did not help
Speaker:me um that could just be me but i do know
Speaker:some people who've tried them and they
Speaker:found it very relaxing and the more that
Speaker:you can be relaxed the better that's
Speaker:going to be for your overall health i
Speaker:know some people have been overstimulated
Speaker:by them and it's actually caused their
Speaker:systems to crash um if you're very
Speaker:sensitive so to be honest i'm totally
Speaker:almost indifferent to them if they are
Speaker:helpful to you give it a go but if
Speaker:they're not then don't it's that kind of
Speaker:one size does not fit all approach again
Speaker:i mean it again it's that kind of magic
Speaker:fix isn't that a quick fix if i just buy
Speaker:this contraption i'll magically get
Speaker:better and the other thing is that
Speaker:although it may help with switching you
Speaker:into your parasympathetic which is always
Speaker:going to be helpful it's not it's only
Speaker:one component of it it's not going to
Speaker:change your patterns and behaviors so it
Speaker:could well be seen as more of a temporary
Speaker:fix who knows but you need to also be
Speaker:looking at the bigger picture it feels
Speaker:like even if it does work for you it's
Speaker:still one component of multiple
Speaker:components in terms
Speaker:of fully getting better
Speaker:yeah i like to view them um as sort of
Speaker:aids so i think they can be helpful in uh
Speaker:in the same way that yeah maybe a sleep
Speaker:aid is effectively helping somebody to
Speaker:sleep that doesn't mean that you should
Speaker:just take a sleeping pill to get to sleep
Speaker:every night but if you are struggling to
Speaker:sleep and you have poor sleep habits you
Speaker:can take the sleeping pill to support the
Speaker:sleep while you are improving the habits
Speaker:and i think the same thing is true of
Speaker:these vagal nerve stimulators i think
Speaker:that they can get the body into a
Speaker:parasympathetic state which then helps
Speaker:the individual maybe hopefully feel a
Speaker:little better and in that during that
Speaker:window of opportunity i think they it
Speaker:provides somebody with the ability to
Speaker:then sort of uh reinforce the the
Speaker:baseline behaviors that need to be there
Speaker:in order to to sort of maintain it with a
Speaker:without the device and then also to sort
Speaker:of heal independently of it um
Speaker:okay that's a good analogy yeah
Speaker:so yeah that's the way i'd like to view
Speaker:them anyway um uh hey so i'd like to
Speaker:close up this section of the convo but
Speaker:before we get there what do you think
Speaker:about testing again something we've
Speaker:talked or fair about a fair amount um now
Speaker:in the functional medicine space it's
Speaker:kind of blown up and wherever you go
Speaker:somebody is testing something whether
Speaker:it's the gut your hormone levels heavy
Speaker:metals whatever and and truthfully i
Speaker:think it can be useful um in in the right
Speaker:context when the order of operations is
Speaker:maybe looked at a bit more closely um but
Speaker:i do think that just testing for the sake
Speaker:of testing is oftentimes not helpful um
Speaker:i don't think i'm going to get any
Speaker:endorsement from genova diagnostics for
Speaker:that statement however um what do you
Speaker:think about testing especially in this
Speaker:sort of functional medicine space and for
Speaker:people who are going through these
Speaker:complex health issues do you think it's
Speaker:effective or not ready
Speaker:yes and no sometimes it will just provide
Speaker:you with a lot of information and which
Speaker:is overwhelming the question is does the
Speaker:practitioner who you're working with know
Speaker:how to resolve those issues if for
Speaker:example there are heavy metals in your
Speaker:body and there's a way to dispel them
Speaker:then detoxification for example that's
Speaker:probably going to be helpful for somebody
Speaker:but a lot of the time you get all these
Speaker:results there's really not a an obvious
Speaker:answer for them to be quite frank if we
Speaker:go back to again the functions of the
Speaker:body we talk about the mitochondria it
Speaker:will come back down to your nervous
Speaker:system and your brain so the reason that
Speaker:a lot of these tests might show that
Speaker:you've got malfunctions going on is
Speaker:because of that so if you work on the
Speaker:bigger picture you'll find that these
Speaker:functions gradually start to to improve i
Speaker:went down the functional medicine medical
Speaker:route um when i was sick with covid i was
Speaker:put on all these different supplements
Speaker:and i was you know given all these
Speaker:different tests sebo all these different
Speaker:things but essentially i'm not sure that
Speaker:it got me anywhere because essentially
Speaker:what i needed to do was learn about the
Speaker:nervous system because that was the the
Speaker:crux of it so you can spend thousands on
Speaker:different tests i think it depends what
Speaker:test you're getting who you're working
Speaker:with and can they help you to do that i
Speaker:mean i know you mentioned specifically
Speaker:functional functional medicine but for me
Speaker:if we go to the our GP and not the
Speaker:standardized testing that's done that's
Speaker:where i think people can fall into a huge
Speaker:well of going nowhere because doctors
Speaker:will send you for all of these different
Speaker:tests because they don't really have
Speaker:anything else to do and then they'll just
Speaker:generally come back that you're totally
Speaker:fine and so then the patient is then just
Speaker:left with not well they had hope and now
Speaker:they've got no hope so then they'll be
Speaker:sent for more tests and more scans and
Speaker:people can just get in this cycle of
Speaker:wanting more and more and more tests
Speaker:because they're like but what if it fine
Speaker:what if i find this and what if it shows
Speaker:this you know looking for that magical
Speaker:little cure again that magical little
Speaker:thing that will suddenly explain
Speaker:everything so i think that whichever
Speaker:route you're going down with testing you
Speaker:just have to be really careful that you
Speaker:just don't go down a rabbit hole when
Speaker:there's no solution because unless
Speaker:there's a solution for the
Speaker:test result that you're getting
Speaker:it's not really adding a lot of value and
Speaker:it also can just create more worry and
Speaker:keep you more stuck and keep you in fear
Speaker:like it's just not particularly helpful
Speaker:yeah uh i might push back on that
Speaker:slightly i i think testing it can be
Speaker:effective uh taking everything to account
Speaker:you said working with a practitioner who
Speaker:has an idea of what they're doing i i
Speaker:think if you just go to your gp
Speaker:especially when it's on the nhs for
Speaker:example um not to sort of throw them
Speaker:under the bus but they sort of work off
Speaker:this sort of of model uh that's that's
Speaker:given to them so they work off guidance
Speaker:and if somebody uh presents with a
Speaker:certain set of symptoms they are then
Speaker:told which tests that they can run for
Speaker:that individual um a classic example
Speaker:being a thyroid test if you're lucky
Speaker:you'll get a tsh and a t4 um for most
Speaker:people that's not enough um you need a
Speaker:tsh a total t4 total t3 etc you and then
Speaker:and even then that just shows that
Speaker:there's a problem with thyroid with
Speaker:thyroid physiology with thyroid um
Speaker:function it doesn't highlight why the
Speaker:thyroid is wrong so that indicates to me
Speaker:well that suggests to me that it's it's
Speaker:not the testing that's the problem it's
Speaker:the sort of the whole sort of system
Speaker:around the testing that's at fault and
Speaker:then you go down the route calls rabbit
Speaker:hole um which is fundamentally what
Speaker:functional medicine is and is supposed to
Speaker:be about and that should work the problem
Speaker:there being in my opinion is that
Speaker:functional medicine isn't necessarily yet
Speaker:standardized so instead of having an idea
Speaker:of what should be tested and when um
Speaker:every practitioner has their own sort of
Speaker:flavor of functional medicine and
Speaker:consequently you will go to somebody for
Speaker:potentially for whatever let's and most
Speaker:people end up with a functional medicine
Speaker:physician 90 of the time because there's
Speaker:some sort of overlying fatigue um so
Speaker:consequently you will go to a
Speaker:practitioner and they will they'll maybe
Speaker:they'll test the gut or heavy metals or
Speaker:hormones um and it's very very tricky to
Speaker:then sort of start putting this together
Speaker:without spending a huge amount of money
Speaker:and then being able to actually identify
Speaker:which one of these many tests is
Speaker:fundamentally highlighting the actual
Speaker:problem because you have a gut issue you
Speaker:have heavy metals issue uh but for most
Speaker:people a gut issue could be the result of
Speaker:the heavy metals because something like a
Speaker:candida infection can feed off heavy
Speaker:metals or consequently if you have high
Speaker:iron you can also have a candida
Speaker:overgrowth because candida feeds off
Speaker:excess iron so is that now a gut issue is
Speaker:that an issue with iron metabolism is
Speaker:that an issue with not enough copper okay
Speaker:so let's run i'm going on a rant here a
Speaker:metabolomics profile to sort of look at
Speaker:all our nutrients um but then following
Speaker:on from that oh wait a minute we've got
Speaker:issues with b9 and b2 so it has to be a
Speaker:genetic issue which probably is but
Speaker:that's another kettle of fish so i think
Speaker:testing is is great and i think
Speaker:fundamentally that it that it works but
Speaker:you have to have a very savvy
Speaker:practitioner and i think in this whole
Speaker:field we need more standardization which
Speaker:is why i'm personally sort of a proponent
Speaker:of this sort of terrain theory as a
Speaker:starting point and the nervous system
Speaker:regulation work that you do as a starting
Speaker:point because it clears the baseline by
Speaker:default and when you have this when you
Speaker:have a body that is as free from toxins
Speaker:and is free from stress and is as
Speaker:nourished as it can be then what you can
Speaker:do is you can start layering testing to
Speaker:potentially find out what's still missing
Speaker:but sort of starting with this well let's
Speaker:just test everything let's throw the
Speaker:kitchen sink at it and then start sort of
Speaker:just pulling strings hoping that one of
Speaker:them will uh help an individual feel
Speaker:better help them sort of get symptom
Speaker:relief i think that is it's just there's
Speaker:no reason rhyme or logic to it and i
Speaker:think that's where people really do get
Speaker:uh stuck and caught up and then they sort
Speaker:of feed into this sort of cycle of oh the
Speaker:test says ergo i am and and anyway um
Speaker:that what you've explained is why i don't
Speaker:always advocate going and going down the
Speaker:testing route for exactly all those
Speaker:reasons like if you have the an amazing
Speaker:practitioner and you've got loads of
Speaker:money and you can run all the tests you
Speaker:need and you kind of know how to resolve
Speaker:from those different tasks then awesome
Speaker:but that's such a small like percentage
Speaker:of getting all those pieces in the puzzle
Speaker:for the vast majority of people it's just
Speaker:not as effective um yeah and as you say
Speaker:it's it's unregulated it's all private um
Speaker:it's it's just a my a minefield for
Speaker:people to kind of get embroiled in and
Speaker:you can just as you say get all these
Speaker:different results and then still not
Speaker:really know like what to
Speaker:do about it so theoretically
Speaker:great but in practice it
Speaker:can be yeah challenging
Speaker:yeah i think so and uh yeah it's great in
Speaker:that it paints if you can do it it paints
Speaker:this beautiful picture but then you again
Speaker:uh at the risk of uh sounding like a
Speaker:crack record uh you've got to have
Speaker:somebody who can interpret this data and
Speaker:um i think that's yeah and when you have
Speaker:labs that are private and they aren't
Speaker:sort of taught in a medical curriculum it
Speaker:gets complicated anyway um i'm gonna give
Speaker:my soapbox now because i would like to
Speaker:get back to the nervous system um anyway
Speaker:we've i suppose gone around in circles
Speaker:which is likely my fault um but could you
Speaker:share your i suppose overarching
Speaker:philosophy with us with regards to why a
Speaker:mindset first approach is so vital for
Speaker:helping people to start feeling better i
Speaker:know we sort of already covered this but
Speaker:i'd i'd like it if we could maybe dig a
Speaker:little deeper into that i mean we've
Speaker:we've discussed why the biology behind
Speaker:the mindset but i think if we could maybe
Speaker:uh yeah talk a bit more about it from
Speaker:this sort of glass half-full approach
Speaker:that would be helpful for people and then
Speaker:i'd love to jump into your process a
Speaker:little later but if we could just be able
Speaker:to start there i
Speaker:think that would be great
Speaker:so mindset is incredibly important for
Speaker:healing recovery because it enables you
Speaker:to think forward and not be stuck in the
Speaker:past you need to believe that you can get
Speaker:better because you're feeding your brain
Speaker:with that information that you can get
Speaker:better instead of the kind of the
Speaker:negative cycle that you you can't so
Speaker:fundamentally you need to have the
Speaker:mindset element you also then can play
Speaker:into like the visualization aspect of it
Speaker:of visualizing um how your future can be
Speaker:and how well you can be so thinking in a
Speaker:positive mindset in terms of how your
Speaker:future life could look like because the
Speaker:brain doesn't really know the difference
Speaker:in reality and visualization so the more
Speaker:that you can feed it with that
Speaker:information the more it's going to
Speaker:receive that and then the neuroplasticity
Speaker:element will happen having said that
Speaker:getting well is not just about positive
Speaker:thinking if it was just that simple then
Speaker:we'd all be fine well not everybody
Speaker:because some people will never be able to
Speaker:get in that zone but it's not just about
Speaker:positive thinking if i go back 10 years i
Speaker:read all these books on the mind-body
Speaker:connection which was essentially as i
Speaker:read it was think yourself better and if
Speaker:you're not getting better then it's your
Speaker:fault because you're not thinking
Speaker:positively enough and it's just not that
Speaker:simple there is the bit i mentioned about
Speaker:mindset having that growth mindset
Speaker:believe you get better it's super
Speaker:important but neuroplasticity retraining
Speaker:the neural pathways in your in your brain
Speaker:retraining how your nervous system
Speaker:responds to stress they are fundamental
Speaker:components to getting well you need all
Speaker:of those things and before i work with
Speaker:anybody i have to know that they will
Speaker:learn to be able to think that they can
Speaker:get well and i said that in that kind of
Speaker:convoluted way because sometimes when i
Speaker:speak to people and they're quite sick
Speaker:they they just they're struggling to be
Speaker:able to get themselves in that mindset
Speaker:but they are open to it so you need to be
Speaker:open to the possibility that you can
Speaker:definitely get well and as you progress
Speaker:you that will be reinforced because
Speaker:you'll be like i i can feel i'm getting a
Speaker:bit better okay i now have hope i know i
Speaker:can get well so you have to be open to
Speaker:the possibility that you can get well and
Speaker:if you're not open to it and you're stuck
Speaker:in that rut and you're not going to be
Speaker:willing to move forward i don't work with
Speaker:those people because they're not going to
Speaker:they're just not going to benefit from
Speaker:from the the nervous system
Speaker:mindset kind of work essentially
Speaker:hazel i i couldn't agree more again i
Speaker:think mindset is completely critical and
Speaker:it's important that's required how do you
Speaker:work with people who have developed an
Speaker:identity around their disease their
Speaker:disorder um i know we were talking about
Speaker:this again um previously where we sort of
Speaker:noted that people will often create
Speaker:literal identities around this disease
Speaker:they have their instagram profiles of
Speaker:facebook profiles will be littered with
Speaker:fibro warrior or whatever is sort of
Speaker:whatever struggle they're going through
Speaker:um do you actually work with these sorts
Speaker:of people at all how do you sort of take
Speaker:someone who has sort of created this
Speaker:sickness identity and then i suppose get
Speaker:them back into a state of being of not
Speaker:identifying with their illness
Speaker:i haven't worked with anybody who's
Speaker:actually got it put all over their
Speaker:facebook profile i've worked with people
Speaker:who are quite consumed with their illness
Speaker:and that's quite common and quite natural
Speaker:to be like that i don't know from my
Speaker:experience of interacting with people who
Speaker:do have the labels whether they're the
Speaker:people who would be open to recovery it
Speaker:feels like they've almost become
Speaker:ingrained in this identity they i'm not
Speaker:saying that they enjoy being there but
Speaker:there's something about being stuck there
Speaker:that makes them feel like they want to be
Speaker:stuck there maybe there's an element of
Speaker:safety around it i imagine they must have
Speaker:probably some kind of fixed mindset to
Speaker:actually be okay with putting that label
Speaker:on making sure everybody knows that
Speaker:they've got that label and from
Speaker:experience they haven't been super open
Speaker:to the idea that you can get well i think
Speaker:that people who've been ill for quite a
Speaker:long time and i'm going to say in the UK
Speaker:but i think it's the same in the u.s as
Speaker:well in terms of the the associations
Speaker:that envelop around these conditions so
Speaker:we're talking about the ME association,
Speaker:the long cover association, the fabriero
Speaker:association they've got a lot to answer
Speaker:for to be honest because their websites
Speaker:will tell you that there's no cure and
Speaker:there's no solution and there's no
Speaker:nothing so if you're the type of person
Speaker:who believes these the doctors because
Speaker:they you know they have professors they
Speaker:have all these experts who kind of
Speaker:support these associations and they they
Speaker:tell you that so if you're the type of
Speaker:person who who believes that and believe
Speaker:the doctor's always right and believes
Speaker:that there's no no way of getting better
Speaker:then that's what you will always believe
Speaker:if you're not willing to question it and
Speaker:actually if i have a i'm getting trolled
Speaker:trolled on anything that i put out there
Speaker:um on long covid or fibromyalgia the
Speaker:abuse i get is quite insane and that i'm
Speaker:selling snake oil and actually conning
Speaker:people because it's people will tell me
Speaker:it's fundamentally impossible to get
Speaker:better from fibromyalgia it's
Speaker:fundamentally impossible to get better
Speaker:from cfs because this doctor told me or i
Speaker:read it over here or this person and or
Speaker:they or they use themselves an example i
Speaker:know it's impossible to get better
Speaker:because i haven't got better and it's
Speaker:that mentality that i've well it's not
Speaker:that i wouldn't work with them i wouldn't
Speaker:work with them they wouldn't work with me
Speaker:because they think i'm talking absolute
Speaker:nonsense but i struggle with the mindset
Speaker:of people who are not open to it because
Speaker:i was always believed that there was a
Speaker:route to get better always i just hadn't
Speaker:found it yet and to be of the mindset
Speaker:where you would rather have all this pain
Speaker:have all this fatigue have this terrible
Speaker:terrible life that they keep telling you
Speaker:about their terrible terrible life you
Speaker:still would rather stick there waiting
Speaker:for something magical to happen the
Speaker:emitia so the association just suddenly
Speaker:turned around and go sorry we got it all
Speaker:wrong yes you can get better if they ever
Speaker:did turn around and did that there would
Speaker:be a huge shift in like people being able
Speaker:to get better but until that happens um
Speaker:you're going to keep having these
Speaker:warriors and keep having these people who
Speaker:these identities are consumed by chronic
Speaker:illness you know kind of a comfort
Speaker:blanket in some some ways i think you
Speaker:know but it's not something
Speaker:i personally can relate to
Speaker:yeah no i i think you touched on a lot of
Speaker:points and i think i think for what is
Speaker:worth fundamentally that people get
Speaker:wrapped up in these ideologies in their
Speaker:belief systems because as you said
Speaker:they're safe and i think um there's also
Speaker:community there there are other people
Speaker:who share these same belief systems and
Speaker:as a result of that if you can then
Speaker:identify as being part of this community
Speaker:you now have other
Speaker:people in your life to make
Speaker:it distracting from the misery but the
Speaker:community element is super important but
Speaker:it is it's that safety net isn't it
Speaker:yeah and it just feeds into another
Speaker:ideology i mean uh people will get uh the
Speaker:dietary the dietary tribes that sort of
Speaker:develop are the same way aren't they
Speaker:people will sort of literally tear you
Speaker:apart if you dare sort of question their
Speaker:carnivore or vegan diet irrespective of
Speaker:whether it's helping that person or not
Speaker:or irrespective and it just comes down to
Speaker:these sort of these tribal belief
Speaker:patterns that people pick up and again
Speaker:it's it's i don't think it's got anything
Speaker:to do with the diet it's got to do with a
Speaker:belief system or yeah that makes them
Speaker:feel safe that makes them again feel part
Speaker:of this community and that's i think
Speaker:incredibly powerful and nobody
Speaker:fundamentally wants to be alone and when
Speaker:you are not well you are for the most
Speaker:part alone and that is an incredibly
Speaker:unpleasant place to be so um and i and i
Speaker:think i think that's maybe the silver
Speaker:lining of covid and in that it's brought
Speaker:a lot more awareness to these sorts of
Speaker:issues broadly speaking um i mean
Speaker:fundamentally what covid long covid is
Speaker:sort of all things uh sort of removed in
Speaker:terms of whether it's active reactivated
Speaker:ebbv or whatever um it's essentially this
Speaker:sort of me cfs stuff and i think that um
Speaker:this awareness that's now growing as a
Speaker:result of that is definitely going to do
Speaker:the whole community a lot of good now
Speaker:that has to sort of evolve past this
Speaker:again fixed mindset of the me association
Speaker:says it's not curable unless someone
Speaker:happens to develop a drug that is going
Speaker:to sort of solve that problem um but yeah
Speaker:no i think fundamentally that's the issue
Speaker:that most people have is just this sort
Speaker:of this isolation and this need for
Speaker:community around it and i'm being verbose
Speaker:again so i'm going to stop talking but
Speaker:your world becomes a lot smaller and
Speaker:you're you're basically living through
Speaker:the internet and we know that the
Speaker:internet can be a very negative and
Speaker:dangerous place and actually my biggest
Speaker:bug bear with people who are chronically
Speaker:ill so if somebody who say who's got had
Speaker:cfs or me and they get better there will
Speaker:be a group of people who say you didn't
Speaker:have it in the first place because it's
Speaker:not possible to get back better from it
Speaker:so what i have or what you had are not
Speaker:the same thing that like dismissive
Speaker:accusatory behavior i find difficult to
Speaker:get my head around you know putting down
Speaker:other people's experiences because they
Speaker:were able to actually get themselves
Speaker:better dismissing
Speaker:somebody else's experiences
Speaker:it's just disappointment isn't it it's
Speaker:almost it's just it's a envy you don't
Speaker:want to acknowledge that somebody else
Speaker:has been able to achieve what you've not
Speaker:been able to choose yourself and i think
Speaker:that it's very hard to celebrate somebody
Speaker:else's win when you are still sort of
Speaker:just trying to get past the start line so
Speaker:i think that just comes
Speaker:down to a certain level of risk
Speaker:again it's the fixed mindset because you
Speaker:could be of the view how did you get
Speaker:better you managed to get better please
Speaker:help me how did you do it you could be a
Speaker:fat or you could be
Speaker:like well you weren't a
Speaker:human condition though isn't it it's hard
Speaker:to not feel that resentment and it's and
Speaker:and and if you if you feel resentment by
Speaker:default it's very hard to then actually
Speaker:ask someone how they achieve something
Speaker:it's much easier just to sort of throw
Speaker:them their anecdotal success under the
Speaker:bus and say well you didn't have it as
Speaker:bad as me you didn't
Speaker:have it at all whatever
Speaker:competition going on with who's the worst
Speaker:who's got the worst symptoms who's had it
Speaker:the longest and i when i was sick and i
Speaker:was super sick you can say i wasn't sick
Speaker:because i got better but i was really
Speaker:sick when i had um cfs and long covid but
Speaker:i never was of that mindset of hatred
Speaker:towards people who are getting better or
Speaker:believing that they weren't sick you know
Speaker:i was always just like how did you get
Speaker:better and how can i get better you know
Speaker:i just would never have you know gone
Speaker:gone down that room and it's again just
Speaker:different mindsets of people
Speaker:yeah i'm afraid i don't have a a retort
Speaker:or a comeback or any of for that one i
Speaker:don't know how anyone can sort of alter
Speaker:that perception i suppose is the best
Speaker:word on on on appreciating somebody
Speaker:else's success and then being willing to
Speaker:learn from them i i don't know what
Speaker:fundamentally drives that sort of
Speaker:behavior in somebody um i'm trying to
Speaker:think which is a bad idea but anyway okay
Speaker:we've been going around in this circle
Speaker:for a while so um hey so what about what
Speaker:actually works now uh for the listeners
Speaker:who are still here i assume they are
Speaker:probably after a few tidbits of
Speaker:information that you have found and
Speaker:developed that help people to sort of
Speaker:move the needle now i'm not expecting you
Speaker:to give away your ip well maybe not all
Speaker:of it but yeah would you be open to
Speaker:sharing sort of just broadly speaking of
Speaker:course what you found is effective for
Speaker:people at helping them to maybe get out
Speaker:of uh the worst of it
Speaker:yeah so it's it's a combination of things
Speaker:it's around different techniques to
Speaker:regulate your nervous system it's around
Speaker:different techniques to rewire your brain
Speaker:and then it's also looking into what's
Speaker:causing it in the first place what
Speaker:patterns and behaviors are kind of
Speaker:getting getting you there what i
Speaker:generally start people off with is
Speaker:actually increasing their capacity to be
Speaker:able to heal so it is actually a lot
Speaker:around doing visualization meditations
Speaker:and mindset work so that you're actually
Speaker:prepared and ready to be able to start
Speaker:regulating your nervous system because if
Speaker:you are sick you can get overwhelmed
Speaker:quite quickly not so much psychologically
Speaker:overwhelmed but your nervous system
Speaker:become become overwhelmed but one of the
Speaker:key techniques that i then introduce is
Speaker:what i call the TED method and it relates
Speaker:to what i was talking about earlier in
Speaker:terms of how your nervous system is
Speaker:informing your brain essentially so it's
Speaker:thoughts emotions breathing and body so
Speaker:every 15 minutes so i would say 15
Speaker:minutes if you are dysregulated and you
Speaker:can put a timer on and then you can
Speaker:reduce it as you become weller every 15
Speaker:minutes do a scan of your body and just
Speaker:be like hey what are my thoughts like are
Speaker:they neutral are they positive are they
Speaker:negative what are my emotions like are
Speaker:they strained are they happy are they sad
Speaker:are they angry what's my breathing like
Speaker:is it sharp shallow breathing from the
Speaker:chest slow and what is my body like am i
Speaker:tense am i relaxed am i how am i sitting
Speaker:what's my positioning and then you can
Speaker:basically reset all of those things and
Speaker:just be like okay so any negative
Speaker:thoughts are gone i'm going to be
Speaker:thinking mutually or whatever just if
Speaker:you're in a kind of some kind of dark
Speaker:hole or going down a rabbit hole it can
Speaker:be quite easy for people to get in sort
Speaker:of spirals ruminations switch off any of
Speaker:those ruminations relax all of your
Speaker:muscles your jaw your tongue really kind
Speaker:of do that body scan you could be holding
Speaker:onto muscles that you're not even aware
Speaker:that you're holding on to and then you
Speaker:can get up or get up and
Speaker:just shake for like a minute
Speaker:yoga nidra sort of stuff
Speaker:yeah and just um and that will release
Speaker:any kind of the i guess pent up energy
Speaker:that's inside your your body and if you
Speaker:do that on a regular basis you will start
Speaker:to see some shifts because what you're
Speaker:doing is that if you were in a state of
Speaker:fight or flight with those things kind of
Speaker:pent up you're then switching yourself
Speaker:into then the rest and digestate and then
Speaker:you're kind of resetting essentially use
Speaker:the word resetting but you're basically
Speaker:resetting the state that your nervous
Speaker:system was in and over time once your
Speaker:system becomes normalized into it's
Speaker:actually relaxing then that's when you
Speaker:can start to see those shifts happening
Speaker:in terms of your symptoms but it's about
Speaker:that awareness and people are always
Speaker:amazed by how much they were kind of
Speaker:holding in a kind of day to day but they
Speaker:didn't even realize that they were they
Speaker:were doing so that for me is one of the
Speaker:really thing that people can take away
Speaker:and just do really regularly and just see
Speaker:see what their natural state
Speaker:is um on a day to day basis
Speaker:fair enough and i suppose you're talking
Speaker:to chemists what are there any sort of
Speaker:supplements that you do like are there
Speaker:any sort of dietary interventions that
Speaker:you find are effective at helping people
Speaker:to sort of support these uh
Speaker:excuse me the behavioral aspect of what
Speaker:it is that you do or do you sort of
Speaker:generally steer clear that sort of thing
Speaker:i generally steer clear of anything
Speaker:supplement related because i would be
Speaker:giving advice anecdotally or based on
Speaker:things that i've read or experiences i've
Speaker:had and supplements generally people need
Speaker:different things for different reasons
Speaker:having said that i would always say
Speaker:magnesium is a great um supplement taking
Speaker:but i don't really think it's in my
Speaker:wheelhouse to be talking about
Speaker:supplements diet is super important again
Speaker:not going into different types of diets
Speaker:but making sure you're having a balanced
Speaker:diet with a good amount of protein and
Speaker:enough vegetables and fruit um basically
Speaker:steering away from processed food as much
Speaker:as possible because it's going to be not
Speaker:doing your body any good whatsoever so
Speaker:having a healthy diet is very important
Speaker:having good sleep a lot of people i work
Speaker:with however i do not have good sleep and
Speaker:that's because their nervous system is
Speaker:dysregulated so as a as part of doing the
Speaker:work that i do with people over time
Speaker:their sleep improves but it's about
Speaker:making sure you've got a routine you're
Speaker:going to bed at the same time you're
Speaker:getting up at the same time and trying to
Speaker:put those practices in place so it is
Speaker:about your lifestyle you know making sure
Speaker:that you've got the right nutrients in
Speaker:your body either through supplements or
Speaker:through food getting enough sleep getting
Speaker:enough rest don't be off up at the crack
Speaker:of dawn going on a run rushing to work
Speaker:never taking a break out in the evening
Speaker:drinking going to a hit class doing the
Speaker:same thing over and over again
Speaker:you're going to burn out um so it's about
Speaker:being sensible and taking breaks and just
Speaker:checking in on how your body is feeling
Speaker:most of us are stuck in our heads most
Speaker:people who work in the corporate
Speaker:environment are so used to being
Speaker:analytical and just thinking with their
Speaker:heads they have no idea what's going on
Speaker:in their body they don't know how to feel
Speaker:anymore they don't know what their body
Speaker:is feeling they don't pick up on any
Speaker:sensations they either can't feel it they
Speaker:don't know it they ignore it brush it
Speaker:under the carpet it's it's really
Speaker:starting to take notice take
Speaker:accountability take responsibility for
Speaker:your own health you can't rely on other
Speaker:people and i think that's the difference
Speaker:between nervous system work and other
Speaker:types of work is people are so used to
Speaker:outsourcing their health i'll go see a
Speaker:therapist i'll go see an acupuncturist
Speaker:i'll go and get a medication i'll go have
Speaker:a massage i'll go somewhere for an hour
Speaker:and someone will make me better and
Speaker:that's not going to cut it if you've got
Speaker:yourself into a state of chronic illness
Speaker:you've got to work on yourself from
Speaker:within there's no quick fixes that's the
Speaker:only way that you can really start to
Speaker:make inroads on your health really
Speaker:yeah one argument might be and that's
Speaker:psychedelics now um i know you have
Speaker:thoughts and opinions on these um there's
Speaker:a lot of research uh obviously with
Speaker:within the maps community uh run by rick
Speaker:dopplin actually i saw you some research
Speaker:there i think i'm going to send it to you
Speaker:at some point sorry about that um uh
Speaker:about utilizing um these so-called
Speaker:psychedelic compounds to help and get the
Speaker:to help uh with this ego dissolution side
Speaker:of things to help to help the reticular
Speaker:activating system the part of that brain
Speaker:that sort of uh what's the best word
Speaker:tends to uh mulch over the same thoughts
Speaker:continuously to disconnect um now
Speaker:essentially in this research what happens
Speaker:is you you take the you take a
Speaker:psychedelic whether it's mdma mescaline
Speaker:most of them are serogenic compounds
Speaker:normally sort of derived from psilocybin
Speaker:or the aforementioned other drugs um and
Speaker:they there is some data especially within
Speaker:the ptsd community which is as you know
Speaker:sort of central nervous system
Speaker:dysfunction autonomic dysregulation 101
Speaker:um where these compounds have been shown
Speaker:to be very effective at helping to to
Speaker:modulate these thinking patterns um and
Speaker:then subsequently downstream of that
Speaker:there are a whole bunch of immunological
Speaker:and inflammatory um well improvements
Speaker:fundamentally uh now i don't suppose you
Speaker:have a huge amount of uh personal
Speaker:experiences with academics um but what do
Speaker:you think of this body of research in
Speaker:general do you think that there's
Speaker:something there or is there is it a bit
Speaker:sort of asking for trouble do you think
Speaker:i think it's awesome to be honest i know
Speaker:that there's been a lot of success in the
Speaker:trials that have been done in relation to
Speaker:addictions and to ptsd and i know there's
Speaker:some trials now in relation to long covid
Speaker:i think anything that can be helpful
Speaker:should be pursued and funded and
Speaker:researched more it takes us away from the
Speaker:pharmaceutical reliance and with the
Speaker:psychedelics it can actually you know
Speaker:rewire the brain which has got itself
Speaker:into a bit of a dysregulation as such so
Speaker:anything that can help i'm fully
Speaker:supportive of it's a shame that it is
Speaker:illegal in the uk many countries some
Speaker:states in america i think have been
Speaker:opening up um but i think there is some
Speaker:open for funding in in these countries so
Speaker:i'm fully supportive of it the only thing
Speaker:i would say is with some of the stronger
Speaker:psychedelics like iraq rusca you have to
Speaker:be i think a little bit cautious going in
Speaker:if you are extremely traumatized it can
Speaker:obviously be helpful with trauma and some
Speaker:people have found huge benefits from it
Speaker:but some people can get re-traumatized
Speaker:and be affected afterwards so i think
Speaker:it's just going in with a you know a
Speaker:cautious mind open mind and uh just
Speaker:looking after yourself but
Speaker:yeah big big supporter of it
Speaker:fair enough yeah i i think intention is
Speaker:everything and these compounds have to be
Speaker:utilized in a safe manner it's not a case
Speaker:of just going to whales finding a sheep
Speaker:farming picking a bunch of uh mushrooms
Speaker:and then lying there and sort of
Speaker:wondering why it's all gone wrong
Speaker:afterwards you have to have an intention
Speaker:you have to have uh and uh the support
Speaker:there to help you through this process
Speaker:and uh i think that psychedelic assisted
Speaker:psychotherapy is really is a breakthrough
Speaker:for a lot of people but yeah as you said
Speaker:it's very fringe um that i know there is
Speaker:a lot more research and uh in the
Speaker:synthetic psychedelics your dissociative
Speaker:compounds like ketamine uh for a lot of
Speaker:people that seems to be pretty hit and
Speaker:miss though the ones that do seem to be
Speaker:effective are your uh your plant oculoids
Speaker:your mesculin your psilocybin but um
Speaker:those are a lot of strings attached as
Speaker:you've alluded to just regarding the
Speaker:legalities and the laws but hopefully um
Speaker:the research that people like rick dobbel
Speaker:in doing at the maps institute will start
Speaker:to sort of expedite some of those some of
Speaker:that research and bring it into clinical
Speaker:practice um but yeah uh this has been
Speaker:amazing paisle thank you for your time um
Speaker:before i let you go though would you mind
Speaker:running through a few rapid fire
Speaker:questions for us of course cool uh your
Speaker:personal favorite daily
Speaker:nervous system regulating practice
Speaker:i would say either shaking depending on
Speaker:whether i'm trying to release some pent
Speaker:up um energy or otherwise if you feel
Speaker:like you need a little bit of a a hug and
Speaker:something to actually reassure your
Speaker:nervous system you can just do this kind
Speaker:of gentle rocking it mimics like when you
Speaker:were a baby essentially when you're being
Speaker:rocked it gives your nervous system that
Speaker:kind of safety and security so bit of
Speaker:rocking or a bit of shaking
Speaker:perfect thoughts on uh i think with david
Speaker:viselli's work with
Speaker:trauma release exercises t re
Speaker:what's my thoughts on t re i think like
Speaker:it's good i mean i have the result of t
Speaker:re i guess through doing the somatic
Speaker:exercises in general they do create a
Speaker:release so i think that it's super
Speaker:helpful i don't go through the i think
Speaker:there's with t re there's a specific kind
Speaker:of process you'll spruce and follow
Speaker:protocol to get to that particular
Speaker:shaking i have tried it in the past that
Speaker:was before i even knew about somatics and
Speaker:release and all those kind of things so i
Speaker:think that shaking itself is really good
Speaker:whether you need to do that t re protocol
Speaker:i would question because you can also get
Speaker:um fascia and trauma release from other
Speaker:different types of
Speaker:somatic exercises as well
Speaker:perfect um one myth about chronic fatigue
Speaker:you would like to dispel i
Speaker:think i might have labored that already
Speaker:you can actually get a better but you
Speaker:know the fact that you've got it for life
Speaker:there's no cure you're there forever
Speaker:you're going to have to count spoons for
Speaker:the rest of your life just have the
Speaker:mindset you can get better yeah
Speaker:perfect and then finally one book on a
Speaker:resource that you really love that you
Speaker:think anyone in this space should read
Speaker:i would say the body keeps the score you
Speaker:know i put gabbo mate but i don't think
Speaker:you wrote it i need to suddenly had a
Speaker:brain i've got so many others in my um
Speaker:mind it's what's his name
Speaker:not a clue i'll tell you now keeps the
Speaker:score um vessel vander yep
Speaker:vessel vander cook i would say the body
Speaker:keeps the score by vessel vander cook
Speaker:it's it's revolutionary in terms of how
Speaker:it informs people about what's happening
Speaker:in your body and how it remembers what's
Speaker:what's going on if you're new to mind
Speaker:body or new to this kind of way of
Speaker:thinking around the nervous system and
Speaker:healing yourself it's it's
Speaker:super good one to start with
Speaker:yeah i think the one i really like as
Speaker:well is zebras don't get ulcers yeah
Speaker:yeah yeah that's a great one there's
Speaker:quite a few um books out there which are
Speaker:helpful in terms of
Speaker:explaining some of these concepts
Speaker:yeah there really are there a bunch of
Speaker:them um hazel again you've been a star
Speaker:absolute treasure um i know you have a
Speaker:program that walks people through this
Speaker:from beginning to end uh would you like
Speaker:to run us through it quickly and then
Speaker:where people can find you the best place
Speaker:that they can connect
Speaker:and all that good stuff
Speaker:yeah sure it's called the neuro
Speaker:resilience program it's 12 modules it's
Speaker:six months so there's no rush and you're
Speaker:kind of supported through it it's a
Speaker:coaching group coaching program and it's
Speaker:really helps people who have got
Speaker:themselves stuck into this kind of
Speaker:chronic illness world or in burnout a
Speaker:sense of burnout and it's a supportive
Speaker:program to help you through with a
Speaker:approach on somatics brain retraining and
Speaker:then the root cause element as well you
Speaker:can find me at my website which is
Speaker:rebalancerepaisal.com the program details
Speaker:are on there and for anybody watching you
Speaker:can have a 10 discount which i cope with
Speaker:the code i'm going to share i also do a
Speaker:one hour nervous system reset hour if
Speaker:that's something that you kind of feel
Speaker:like you could just do with an hour of
Speaker:bringing yourself back into your body and
Speaker:learning some some techniques to kind of
Speaker:get you on with the day then
Speaker:um i offer 10 off that as well
Speaker:perfect we'll link to all that in the
Speaker:show notes along with the code and your
Speaker:uh all your social platforms as well um
Speaker:hazel thank you so much your time we'll
Speaker:have to do this again soon
Speaker:thank you for having me Rob