Guest Episode
August 28, 2024
Episode 12:
Covid 19, Humility & Solutions
Listen or watch on your favorite platforms
Dr. Willbourn is a market researcher, psychotherapist and long term collaborator with the famous hypnotherapist Paul McKenna.
Dr. Willbourn is from the UK, but now lives in Vietnam. Today we are going to be having a solution based discussion around how we move forward and create the best of our situations.
0:05
all right Hugh thank you so much for joining me today how are you doing over there in
0:10
Vietnam I'm doing pretty well thank you Simon yes and thank you for inviting me on the show no well thank you for being
0:17
here very excited to have a interesting conversation today and I think many of our listeners would love to know a
0:23
little bit more about you your experience your background so maybe you could give us a little bit of a rundown
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a bit of an intro sure um uh there are two ways of looking
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at it on the one hand I've had about six separate careers and on the other hand
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I've basically been doing the same thing but with a different hat on so um the first thing I did when I
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left University was I went into theater and um in England there's a tradition if
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you're a young person interested in theater you go to the Edinburgh Festival and you lose money so I did that
1:04
um I then became a therapist um kind of
1:09
by accident really um but very few people really become a therapist by
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accident really therapists are people who need a lot of therapy but they don't realize that so they go and train and
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try and think they're going to fix other people and gradually gradually they they fix themselves and if they're lucky they
1:28
can then give up being a therapist you know or maybe they really like being a therapist and then they carry on so I
1:34
still do a tiny little bit of therapy to be honest but um I don't have regular clients anymore I'll either do a little
1:40
burst uh if somebody tracks me down and really needs some help and I have a few people I who check in with me from time
1:48
to time um what happened next I was invited by a good friend to um
1:57
start a qualitative Market research business I'd been helping his business a
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little bit and um the situation changed so we set up a market research business
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qualitative research is essentially going in depth it's talking to people about feelings understandings all the
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sort of complicated stuff as opposed to quantitative which is asking a short
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series of questions of a large number of people qualitative is asking a lot of
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questions of a small number of people and the two basically complement each other they will really help if you
2:34
understand want to understand a market or potential policy or a new product or whatever
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um while I was a therapist I was running a a small I was for for a time I was
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running a small learned society and got in touch with a a chat called well a chat called Paul McKenna got in touch
2:54
with me at the time he was a a DJ and he wanted to become a stage hypnotist so I
3:00
helped him to make sure that his stage Act was safe and then he moved into helping
3:07
people into initially I think we started with stress and smoking and we ended up doing a whole load of other things um so
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I collaborated with him for oh 20 more than 25 years I think helping him with a
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bunch of books we wrote one together called I can M mend your broken heart
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and I helped him on a bunch of other ones so essentially uh oh I also wrote a
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book about negotiation along the way and I've done a bit of teaching and I'm just about to do some more teaching actually
3:37
in in the University here so my experience covers
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Psychotherapy uh performance like storytelling and theater business
3:50
negotiation uh and qualitative market research and the one thing I forgot to mention is that after I'd been a
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therapist for a little while I went back to University and did a a PhD in philosophy so philosophy as well so you
4:05
weren you weren you weren't joking when you said many hats absolutely wasn't a
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joke I mean for a while I thought one day I'm gonna find out what I really am gonna do you know and then then it
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occurred to me this is it I do the same thing but we're in lots of different fields and what am I doing I'm helping
4:23
make sense of things I'm telling stories and I'm finding Solutions yeah I think um from just
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hearing that that all those experiences all those different um Avenues it sounds like you just really love
4:37
learning you really love taking information yeah yeah I it well here's an
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interesting thing it's not so much taking in information because the kind of modern belief about all of this is
4:51
that the more you know the better you know let's have more knowledge let's get more data and I think of that as a kind
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of horizontal thing you know let's get some more of this let's know know some more of that as though we're I don't
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know walking around a map trying to find more and more stuff inside it but it you
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only have to think for a moment or click on something on Google and you realize that's kind of hopeless strategy there's
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way too much stuff to know in however small the field there's still too much
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stuff to know I mean it's it's completely absurd so recently it's occurred to me that what I'm really
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interested in is something I would call more vertical which is going deeper into
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stuff and I would call that understanding so actually I'm not so
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interested in more knowledge I've kind of got enough right but I am interested in understanding better the stuff that I
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know but don't yet understand well enough is that got a lot to do with you know it's important to obviously know
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but knowing how and to actually apply your knowledge into certain aspects of your life is is a very important part
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you know it makes it makes that it makes that knowledge and that learning active and engaging in the in the kind of real
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world absolutely and and you know I don't know what you any skills you you
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have but think about them and if you're a musician you might say okay I know how to play for El right and you know pretty
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much every piano student pretty soon knows how to do it but then you listen to a really great musician player and
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you go oh okay I know how but I don't know how as well as that person knows how so knowing how is is exactly it is
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something but it has a depth to it uh which we can kind of pursue indefinitely
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to be honest interesting yeah that's that's that's a great way of looking at it absolutely I would really love to
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know um in your words what Psychotherapy
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is if you don't mind because you know we hear a lot we hear a lot of words
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especially in the you know within true hope you know we do we work with um brain and body Health we hear these
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words about you know cognition and mental and psychology Psychotherapy you know all these there's so many words
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kind of intertwined into a realm and I I'd love to just get not only from my own clarification but I'm sure a lot of
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other people would probably benefit from hearing you know from yourself kind of what Psychotherapy actually
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is okay well if you um imagine you're a fly on the
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wall uh to most I mean there's family therapy and group therapy and all sorts of things but let's take the basic one
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which is one person a therapist talking to another person a client or a patient okay so if you're a fly on the
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wall the therapist therapist is sitting there the client comes in and for 55
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minutes usually they talk to each other it's a conversation that's what
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Psychotherapy is now there's any number of labels that pertain to the theoretical
8:03
training that psychotherapists have yeah so you could be Behavioral or
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psychodynamic or cognitive or gal or whatever but
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um that's a bit like what's what's the simil it's a bit like
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saying um the way I drive my car is the way and then you give the name of your
8:27
driving instructor actually the way you drive your car is the way you drive your car right he or
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she taught you something and then you learn to do it your way
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um there are all sorts of really good questions about like what are you trying
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to do in Psychotherapy and and what's happening so you know are you fixing
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trauma you know or are you bringing Insight whatever um again those are kind
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of disc this descriptive from the outside what what I would say and what I did say to all do say to all my clients
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is that let's you and me Let's us agree what we're going to try and do yeah
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people come they're very distressed and they they often say oh like I can't do such and such or whatever I'm very depressed and it's
9:19
unusual that the presenting problem is actually the key there's normally
9:25
something else going on yeah but what I say is well let's work and let's we can
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chunk it up we can say let's try and achieve this let's try and Achieve that you know if somebody's agrob let's try
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and Achieve uh let's say something you know I know walk down the street or something like that we could have a little goal but that's an interim one
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ultimately what I'm trying to do and what I'm kind of negotiating with my clients is that I want them to leave me
9:50
happy to face the challenges that life offers and kind of if you are happy to
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face the challenges life offers you're doing pretty well absolutely yeah I mean especially
10:04
with someone with agoraphobia or so many other things that you know somebody might come in with but as you say you're
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sitting across from somebody and they are coming in for the reason that they think that they need to come and see you
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for but I'm sure as you kind of you you both get into it you're kind of digging kind of getting into the the root of
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what's leading to somebody to to kind of that that perspective and would you say that a lot
10:30
of the times when you're having these conversations these these therapeutic sessions with people that that primary
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reason that they initially came in for is is not is never really the that key aspect that you're talking about it's
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usually something else well certainly often something else I mean maybe people are completely right
10:48
about it we just don't know but uh typically I would say that you know Psychotherapy in the
10:55
modern sense started with the psychodynamic people with Freud essentially who t to people and Freud had a theory that basically every came
11:01
everything came down to Sexual Energy being expressed in different ways and getting stuck at various levels and I
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think he was reductionist I think clearly Sexual Energy is important you know we all have to deal with it but
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it's not the only uh driver for development for growth or for or indeed
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for difficulties but that whole um psychoanalytic approach
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was predicated on the fact that if you really understood what's going on then you're better right that Insight is
11:37
Curative well I used to find a lot of people who had a lot of insight into their problems but didn't actually
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manage to change their behavior and I found it was kind of the other way around I found that if people changed their behavior then a little while later
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they'd say you know what something I I I I've just realize something da da da da da and then they would uh maybe tell me
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something about their upbringing or where they think something had come from or whatever but I'm I'm very interested
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as a psychotherapist I'm very interested in helping people change their behavior after all that's what they want nobody
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goes and wastes a $100 an hour just to have a conversation right if I can fix it myself I'm not GNA bother go and see
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a therapist am I I'm going into Psychotherapy because I can't work out some weird stuff is happening either in
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my behavior or in my mind that is distressing again otherwise I wouldn't be coming it's distressing and I can't
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get a handle of it on it so I go and see somebody else and if I do that that's a
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very brave thing I've already made a strong commitment towards my own health
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and I would like to congratulate everyone who's had the courage to do that especially because sooner or later
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something's going to be embarrassing that's that's kind of the deal you know if if it's not embarrassing we can just
12:52
talk to our friends and sort it all out but when we are willing to go and talk to a stranger and admit I don't know
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something that we're afraid of that seems weird or some inhibition that we can't come over then that's that's a
13:05
very brave thing and and it's one of the good things about it is that's the beginning of the energy you can use to
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continue that change and positive progress yeah absolutely like so so
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brave and courageous for somebody to first of all even make a phone call to make to make an appointment then to go
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there and keep themselves accountable to you know they're taking very strong actions towards wanting to make a change
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and I love I love what you're saying there about how you often see significant progression when you help
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people change their behaviors because those individuals most likely have a lot of insight and experience to what's
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going on for them and they just maybe need some practical application of how
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they can kind of get towards their their goal whether that's large medium or
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small yeah I I have a friend who um one of his sons was very very depressed
13:59
and my friend said to me you I just don't understand it why can't he just put his socks up and get on with it and
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I said well so and said the thing is that's what depression is it's the
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lack of motivation is an integral part of depression that's why they can't do
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it I mean it's clinically proven that the single most powerful intervention
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Bar None in depression is physical exercise much more powerful than any
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other single intervention okay but depressed people really really don't
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feel like taking physical exercise they really don't it's very challenging
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indeed okay so one of the things that you can do if you are depressed is start
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with something super small wherever you are wherever you're sitting or standing
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if you're depressed and you're listening to this now you're maybe you're walking along with on an iPod or a headphones
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maybe you're sitting at home ask yourself you know if I could just go for a walk somewhere from where I am now
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which direction is the best Direction you know do I want to walk to the park do I go and want to go and walk down to
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the river do I want to walk towards somewhere where I can see my friends and you know it's a good
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question and you know what's the best bit of exercise I can do now I mean if
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you want to run great go for it but you can start even smaller than that you can start okay where do I want to
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go I think that's yeah that's wonderful and I think it's a really great segue because you and I were chatting a couple
15:36
of weeks ago and kind of how this conversation could go and we both decided that we want it to wanted it to be you know a Solutions based discussion
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because ultimately a lot of people right now um have only themselves to keep
15:48
themselves motivated and positive and and accountable during this kind of wild and stressed time so how do you feel
15:56
people can actively begin to help themselves during what seems to be you know a kind of never ending world of of
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Co um well first of all I would I would say do what works right
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I'm not the expert on your life or anybody's life for that matter not even my own I have to say I'm still finding
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things out so um you know if you're not sure you could you could say to yourself
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okay well Mo I felt pretty terrible all this week I was okay a little bit on Monday afternoon but the rest of the time was CH okay so what was it about
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Monday afternoon that was good when you last felt good what was
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the good thing that happened did you have a cup of herbal tea did you I don't know take a supplement did you go for a
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run did you do some yoga did you watch some crazy stuff on TV I don't really
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care but there's some things that make you feel a little bit better than other things so pay attention to those things
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and do more of them now that sounds like a really almost too simple to be true
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suggestion but it's actually one of the primary suggestions of the brief therapy center from in Milwaukee and it turns
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out to be incredibly effective do more of what works so second so I don't want
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to diminish that do more of what works the second thing I would say is do
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something really small ask yourself not what like you might think to yourself what I'd really like to do is get
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together all my mes and go on a fabulous two week holiday in the Caribbean well
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okay maybe you would but what's the smallest possible thing you could do
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that would make a noticeable difference I mean would it be for me really
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interesting one is to sit upright yeah I typically tend to slouch a little bit
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forward but if I sit upright somehow I just feel a little better in myself and that's absurdly small but it really
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helps when I'm out on my little motorbike thing I eat often find myself slim you know like tipping forward a
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little bit I sit upright and I just feel a tiny bit better so I'm I'm really
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talking tiny bit better here what's the tiniest thing that can help you feel a little bit
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better and when you start doing that try and find half a dozen I don't know sitting upright having a glass of
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water let's say you think you want to meditate and you say oh I can't meditate you can you can meditate for five
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minutes not for two hours not for 10 days without talking you can do it for
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five minutes yeah something like that so try all these tiny little things and as
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you do them pay attention to the process of
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change very many people during this time have you typically people are eating too
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much they're drinking too much they're not getting enough exercise and they're feeling depressed and they're not seeing their friends okay so somebody who will
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uh remain uh nameless told me the the other day she said she'd arranged to
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meet a a friend for a socially distanced walk you know keeping two meters apart she hadn't seen this woman for I don't
19:22
know four five months and she didn't actually know her that well but she was a colleague from work and as she got
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there she said oh I wish I could give you a hug and her friend said be my guest and so they had a hug and they had
19:35
a great old time talking and walking for two and a half hours and they did each other a power of
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good so what can we do we need to pay
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attention to the Small Things pay attention to the most immediate things in our own
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worlds um the the The NeverEnding world of Co is actually a little bit of a a
20:01
mystery because it's out there in the media it's out there on the on the screens in the you know uh the threads
20:09
of social media and posts and everybody being scared and frightened and so forth but if you pay attention to where you
20:17
actually live and the people you're seeing okay some of them are very frightened but some of them
20:23
aren't and there are things you can do little things for your yourself with
20:29
your family and the more you pay attention to where you really
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live the less scary all the weird and terrible things are that are happening
20:40
in the rest of the world and you can become one of those little places that's
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creating a little bit more joy and
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happiness kill people sadly those people are overwhelmingly people
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who are already sick who are very old and overweight and that is a problem right dying is a problem but you know
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it's a problem all of us have to face we're all going to die okay and we
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don't know when we're going to die last year A friend of mine drowned he was a very wonderful man he doesn't drown of
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covid he drowned because although he could swim the two people who clung to him couldn't that's tragic you know he's
21:29
left a family and it's you know death is not is not a light experience but at the
21:35
same time it's one that's coming for all of us every every single one of us yeah
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there's a lot of there's a lot of power and responsibility in just that statement that can be a really really
21:47
know self-proclaimed powerful statement that you know you can project you to do some really wonderful things and I love
21:53
what you're talking about when it comes to being trying to become aware and a bit conscious of like what does work
21:59
what is simple what can you apply kind of immediately and now I've got a question in regards to do you think we
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pay more attention to do we put more attention on the things that don't work
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do we put more attention on the these be more attracted to the things in our life
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that maybe make us feel anxious or depressed you know it's it's interesting because those small things you are
22:23
talking about can make profound profound changes and it's weird that we don't try and do the them all of the time whether
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that's to take 10 minutes to have a nice cup of tea go for a walk around the block meditate for 5 minutes do a
22:36
10-minute yoga video like all these things are accessible to everybody all the time but for some reason we are more
22:42
I think a lot of people are a lot more attracted to the things that actually might cause us a little bit more harm
22:49
whether that's psychological or physical and I think that that's interesting what what's your take on
22:55
that I I think few people are actually attracted to harm but we're very easily
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um overcome by drama drama and
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and what happens in uh on the internet and all the news media is that the the
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the internet and and it started with television really and goes back a bit
23:19
but all of these media are attracted to conflict and to conflict is a much more
23:26
interesting story than oh oh a few people in British Columbia had a really nice day yesterday that's just like not
23:33
a story you know whereas some people had a huge argument about going into a supermarket without masks that's a story
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you know and we can take sides and Shout at each other and all that kind of stuff so drama and conflict and simplicity I
23:48
mean simp oversimplified conflict is is um is compellingly
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interesting we all run on habits so if I have a habit of paying attention
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to the bad stuff I'm going to do more of it it's just a habit right so I for
24:09
example noticed that during all of this even though I'm relatively skeptical about I think you know generally
24:15
speaking lockdowns cause more damage than than the covid
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but I you know I'm I'm not the the point I want to make is I was reading about
24:26
that stuff and I just got more and more upset even when I was reading stuff I did agree with so so I decided two
24:34
things one is I got to limit the amount of time I spend reading news articles
24:39
about things that I find offensive but simultaneously it's also useful to read
24:45
one or two articles of from the other perspective so rather than thinking you
24:51
know oh my goodness I can't believe how many people believe such and such you know how dangerous la la la
24:57
la I read another article saying it's so wonderful la la la la la yeah so that I
25:04
I I don't get stuck in a little self-righteous bubble you know which is a very easy thing to do so
25:12
um what what what can we do about all of this we can notice our habits and then
25:19
say well is that a habit I want you know most of the time we pick them up accidentally very few people say oh I'm
25:24
going to be plenty negative today let me get on with it they just don't it just happens right so I have to notice it
25:31
happening and think oh now maybe I can put a different ending catch the same
25:37
beginning oh maybe the world's going terribly mad but maybe it's time for me to have a nice cup of tea and have a
25:44
call with my friend absolutely yeah I just as you're
25:50
you know talking about that that word drama is sticking out for me because you can't see there's no show show or movie
25:56
available on Netflix that is is just joy and happiness for an hour you know there
26:02
significant drama there's spikes in the motion it's very interesting my my parents have watched EastEnders for what
26:08
I want to say 25 years it's incredible like some five days a week it's the same
26:13
Pub it's the same street it's the same people it's remarkable but you know this
26:19
it's just it's pure it's pure drama constantly and it's wild and it's addicting it's very very it's wildly
26:26
attractive and addicting and I suppose it's very very difficult to get out of that habit of watching something like
26:32
that and being connected with these individuals that go through all these dramas that we can associate because we're human beings with emotions as well
26:39
and it's a really tough thing to break like to have like a social media Purge or to um stop watching the news or to
26:48
look at alternative news sources that might be you know rightwing if you're left and the other way around you know
26:53
like that's a it's a very you have to be really I feel like you have to be really conscious and aware of where your mind's
26:59
at and what you're looking to achieve with you know changing your sources of
27:04
information and stimuli I would say yeah I agree I mean I think it's
27:10
it's also quite hard if you say I've got to stop doing this that and the other um that kind of doesn't work please stop
27:16
thinking of elephants right it just doesn't work much better is to say have you thought
27:23
about giraffes in other words you start doing something better and gradually the stuff
27:30
you don't want kind of gets pushed out a little bit um it yeah just a top tip
27:37
there really yeah so starting simple recognizing kind of like what works what is good and kind of bringing a little
27:43
bit more awareness to that and you you pointed out some really simple easy examples that a lot of people can do
27:50
even if they're you know lockdown at home like right now it's um yeah I think
27:56
they're the kind of like little little tools that I think people people know but maybe have forgotten about that
28:02
they've got these at at their disposal to again like help change their environment and help change their mood a
28:07
little bit absolutely I mean I think it is um
28:13
uh important to recognize some people are very very frightened you know there's been a lot of very frightening
28:19
messaging going out there now uh there are typically you know people
28:25
talk about the fight or flight response you know when there's a threat coming you know I'm going to fight it or I'm
28:31
going to run away but um and and and that you know that's well documented but there is a third response which is also
28:38
common and less well documented which is freezing absolutely just freezing and a lot of people are effectively Frozen
28:45
emotionally they've been so frightened by all these messages that they they've
28:51
lost a sense of proportion and perspective everything is terrifying and that's debilitating that's a really it's
28:59
like having all your own energy taken away so if you are really really scared
29:04
you need again to find the smallest possible thing that you can do that will
29:11
help you give have a bit more of your own power back and and what is it that
29:16
will make you feel a little bit more safe now probably talking to someone like me isn't necessarily a good thing
29:24
because I'm relatively good at feeling safe you need to talk to other people who are who are kind of scared but maybe
29:29
someone who's a tiny bit less scared and see what they're doing and see if you can play with them for a little
29:36
bit yeah I like that that's that's a very good recommendation yeah a lot of people as you say Frozen at the moment
29:44
the last year or so and if they can find something to help kind of start to think
29:50
of some of other things you that's literally going to change your biochemistry and you know kind of get you out of that constant stress response
29:57
that we know is like you know the leading cause of chronic disease and that's kind of like where we want to be
30:02
like talking to because this has been going on for a long period of time now and without covid before that people
30:09
were quite quite fearful and scared anyway and you Chuck something like this into it and a lot of people like just go
30:16
into this different level and you know the body can only only do so much when it comes to you know spurting out stress
30:24
hormones it there's a there's a there's a point where where it uh will kind of
30:30
manifest into something a little bit more serious so I think these tools and these tips are super important for your
30:36
psychological and physical health and without question like you mentioned before like changing your environment
30:43
and exercising whether that's like going for a walk or doing something else like that can really really change your um
30:49
physical body very very quickly yeah there's a um there's a guy
30:55
called Ernie Rossy back in I think the 80s he he did a lot of work with Milton Ericson who was a psychiatrist very
31:01
interested in hypnosis and he wrote a Rossy wrote a book called State dependent memory learning and behavior
31:08
what he's saying is that essentially the there's a there's a a kind of circle if you can imagine it of there's your
31:16
behavior there's your cognition there's your hormonal State um and then there's
31:23
your emotional state and we're not one one of those things we
31:29
are a process that manifests all the way around that Circle so you can intervene
31:35
at the hormonal State you can intervene at the behavioral State you can intervene cognitively and emotionally
31:40
and you are that process you are it's not as if one drives the other it's not
31:46
that the hormones drive your brain they're the same thing your thinking and the hormones they're different aspects
31:52
of the same thing yeah so the neuropeptides and the electronic signal
31:58
and your cognition we don't know actually that much about it but the simplest description is to say that's
32:05
the process that a human being is it manifests physiologically it manifests
32:12
behaviorally and it manifests cognitively that's who we are and you can interview at any one of those
32:19
levels interesting I love that um a lot of people around the world are really
32:24
split right now and have been for some time basically we've got a lot of people who think the reaction to covid
32:31
worldwide has been appropriate and you know they're happy to kind of like go along with government regulations and
32:36
then you've got other people people who are you know not so happy with lockdowns mass mandates social distancing the
32:43
prospect of vaccine passports Etc and this has you know SP split a lot of people up friends families colleagues
32:49
you know I I've I've experienced this so I wonder um I wanted to ask you how can we start to create maybe a healthy
32:57
healthier dialogue with each other because at the start of 2020 we were all
33:03
friends but now things things are things are wildly different even between even between family members and people who
33:09
are relatively or really close before things have changed and I think everybody has got one of those P people
33:15
in their life yeah I mean to be fair Simon I
33:21
don't think we were all friends at the beginning of 2020 okay um it the you
33:26
know Co has been a big kind of topic and a big issue but it's not the only one so
33:32
we have to remember that that actually it's fairly normal to disagree with
33:37
people it's it's really okay to disagree with people let's say I mean I certainly
33:43
have the experience for many years I've had friends who say politically are to the right of me or to the left of me but
33:50
they are friends of mine and we enjoy you
33:56
know we enjoy dinner together we enjoy traveling or whatever it is that we're doing and it's okay to
34:02
disagree and one of the things that makes me know it's okay to disagree is
34:07
that I know that I am not guaranteed to be
34:14
right if I know that I personally might be wrong right now then it's easier to hang
34:23
out with people I disagree with so I might think well I know a certain amount
34:29
this is the way it looks to me but I don't know 100% that I am absolutely
34:35
right and if I do know that for example it's a good idea for that person over
34:41
there to keep themselves well away from all these people over here and protect themselves from the virus it doesn't
34:47
mean that an entire class of people should definitely do that at all times
34:53
indefinitely so the two things that help are one is knowing that I'm
34:59
definitely possibly wrong and
35:05
secondly be very careful about generalizations um never generalize
35:12
that's what I say um it's it it we I mean there's a deeper
35:18
root for this actually Simon we can't really go into it in less than about six hours but there's a way of thinking that
35:26
is dominant in modernity which prioritizes abstraction it prioritizes
35:32
fixity and it under represents emotional significance so if you like the
35:38
scientific model the academic model where we get to describe things a lot and what we're looking for is the kind
35:44
of essence we abstract that yeah and so pretty much every political ideology
35:50
works like that and it's why pretty much every political ideology fails because
35:56
we don't live in an abstract world we live in a concrete world we live in an emotionally inflected world and an
36:03
abstraction is not the Deep essence of something it's a tiny
36:10
onedimensional abstraction taken out that we throw back at reality and
36:16
imagine we've understood it but no we've understood one tiny Glimpse imagine reality is a hologram
36:23
right it's a big glass sheet and you can see 36 degrees around it then you drop
36:29
it and in one tiny sliver you can see the whole of that hologram but in just
36:35
one tiny sliver and the delusion is that that sliver tells you the truth it
36:41
doesn't it's part of the truth absolutely but it's not the whole truth and we typically in modernity par
36:49
you know all these kind of overarching rules regulations protocols and policies Focus to our
36:58
detriment on a single element I mean actually Co is a really good example because Co is indeed a dangerous virus
37:06
particularly for old sick obese people but we've abstracted that from healthare
37:12
like what are most people die of cancer heart disease and um COPD and diabetes
37:18
coming up behind that those Remain the most dangerous things in our most common
37:24
causes of death even throughout all of this covid problem but we've as it were pulled out Co and
37:30
said that's the one that matters and most of the other health services have been
37:35
downgraded that's probably going to cause us some problems so we we should really be very very wary of confusing an
37:44
abstraction which is some part of the truth with the whole of
37:50
reality yeah I think I I I completely agree with you I think uh being open to
37:56
being wrong is is very very important and it should always be on on the on on the edge of your mind would you say
38:02
that's something like would that be like a a tip you might have for for people who are you know H having conversations
38:09
or looking to actually start to reconnect with people who they they may have disagreed with because I I totally
38:15
agree with you that people have disagreed with each other on many many different topics all of the time and
38:22
weren't in this happy la la Rainbow Land preco but like I would say in my group
38:28
of 100 friends preco I was very very close and
38:33
connected with a lot of them but you you throw covid into it and different opinions and different information you
38:39
know at the beginning of all of this I was very very very very strong willed and I was kind this is this is my my
38:44
thoughts this is it this is my belief this is my perception this is it this is that and it took my emotional state to
38:49
come down before I could start intally understanding that you know maybe I don't know everything there's a
38:55
lot of information out there and there's a lot of other people people who quite rightly are are open to their own
39:00
opinions and beliefs and it it certainly took a bit
39:05
of understanding and self-reflection on my part to start changing how I was having conversations with people um but
39:12
I'm hearing so hearing from so many other people that they have lost friends they have lost they can't communicate with their family members anymore
39:19
because they I don't think they know how how to do it I don't I think we have a very big problem in our society anyway
39:27
that we um we don't really communicate brilliantly with each other we don't really learn it at school very well like
39:34
how we can create relationships how we can repair them it's not something it's not really it's kind of something you
39:40
have to just figure out or you don't we have and we have a lot of people walking around the world um who have very very
39:48
poor communication skills and it's it's a Hu it's a huge problem and when you
39:54
know you can you can you can have your your political belief and your religious belief and all these other kind of
40:00
dinner table conversations and you can obviously have mutual respect and have kind of like a
40:05
you know civil discourse with people but there's something different about covid I think in regards to
40:14
bringing it up as a conversation piece and you know I go I go to certain people's houses and I just I just do my
40:21
best to not bring it up because I know it's just going to cause problems yeah I understand that I I do
40:27
understand that I mean I think focusing back on the solution things first of all yeah um if we if we just step back a bit
40:37
there's a a tendency now particularly because we have so much information is
40:42
basically any opinion you have go onto the internet and you can find a bunch of people to support you right anything
40:49
Flat Earth definitely hundreds of people up for that um and on from there right
40:55
so conspiracy theory no absolutely down the line whatever right so that's the defic that's the problem
41:03
with the Internet it's incredibly flat but it's incredibly wide and it's
41:08
incredibly narrow setting that aside one of the things that has predated the internet
41:15
but goes along with our modern version of education is that we pay a lot of attention to Theory and facts and we
41:20
don't tell enough stories now you want to go and hang out with your mates and you don't want to
41:26
talk about Co just tell them a story and I'm serious about this tell them a story um let me tell you one of my favorite
41:33
stories I worked as a Storyteller for a while and this one actually comes from Canada um uh the the Inuit people uh my
41:42
understanding it's an Ino story again I'm not into it so hey but it's a great story so I'm going to share it these
41:48
people believe that before everything else there was Raven great Raven and he
41:54
had a nephew who was known as little Raven and one day little Raven stole his
42:01
uncle's box of light he picked it up in his beak and he
42:06
flew away and he flew and flew and flew he flew as far as he could he flew until
42:11
he was so exhausted that he couldn't fly anymore and he just landed and he found
42:18
himself surrounded by strangers and he was really tired and he
42:25
was really thirsty and he was really hungry Ry and he said please please could you give me something to drink
42:30
could you give me something to eat and that's what happened they said
42:37
nothing he said please I'm I'm really hungry I'm really thirsty please can I
42:43
have something to drink something to eat after a little while a few of them
42:51
just laughed he said please give me something
42:56
to eat please give me something to drink if you don't I'm going to open my uncle's box of
43:03
light They carried on laughing and he did it he opened his uncle's box of light and out of that box came out all
43:12
the stars in the sky and they flew up and took their place high up there and
43:17
then out came the moon the beautiful shiny Moon and it flew up into the sky and then out came the sun and the sun
43:24
was so bright The Strangers were so terrified that they jumped and some of
43:29
them dived down into the sea and they became the fish and another group jumped up into
43:36
the sky and they became the
43:42
birds and the third group was so terrified that they stuck absolutely
43:48
still where they were and they became
43:55
humans I like it Round of Applause that was beautiful I was in thr with that that
44:01
was great thank you you're totally right telling stories is is as ancient as it
44:08
comes and it's a wonderful thing to to be able to do with people yeah I think we easily talk about
44:15
stuff so for example we talk about Community I mean nowadays like 20 30
44:22
years ago Hy anybody talked about it but we talk about Community the more we talk about about it the less it actually
44:28
exists the same could be said of leadership God knows how many leadership courses there are now when do we need
44:35
leaders right now how much leadership do we have almost none right we can either
44:41
do something or we can talk about it now when I tell a story Community happens we meet I can
44:50
tell that you were watching I could tell what you were feeling a little bit even though we're separated by Zoom there was
44:55
a certain energy energ that happened there you were joining me in that story
45:01
that's what stories can do for us there's a shedload of philosophy behind that if you want but the important thing
45:08
is pay attention notice what can happen notice that you can feel different you
45:14
can really be with somebody when you tell a story and you don't have to be brilliant at it you just have to do it
45:20
from your heart that'll make a big difference absolutely just listening to
45:26
something like that I mean I I've got a year and a half old son so I I read read
45:31
stories all day long um but using a completely different part of your brain that creative imagination is such a
45:37
wonderful place to be and it's a it's a warm tingly feeling sensation place and it's a good place it's a good place to
45:44
be I've yeah absolutely and you know what here's another top tip Simon tell him stories reading stories is good but
45:51
telling is super special um it's it's
45:57
again it's complicated we'll have to talk about that another time I have a a little boy he's only 3 months old when I
46:02
tell him a story he can't even speak yet he looks at me he's so enthralled you
46:07
know many years ago a friend of mine brought her children to see me they were 6 eight and 10 right and I told them a
46:14
story I saw them all eight years later right so that makes them 14 16 and 18 so
46:23
I walked into the house they said tell us the story of the monkey and the crocodile love it that's great yeah stories
46:31
stories are huge and they they they certainly take us back and they use wonderful Pathways in our brain that can
46:37
know really really change the way that we're we're thinking feeling and behaving yeah that's a really good piece
46:44
of device actually is telling stories and whether that's um about yourselves or something fictional or something
46:50
something like that that's that's uh that's wonderful I might I might steal that one I might have to I might have to find it and and read it few more times
46:57
but I like it thanks for sharing that with us um do steal it all stories are
47:02
stolen you know of course they all been hand recycled fiction I love it um just
47:10
before we kind of like wrap this up I'd love to get your we're going to talk about your um Rec most recent blog
47:17
because I really enjoyed that but before I ask you about that how big a part does
47:22
our choice of information play into our perceptions of kind of like what's going on in the
47:28
well uh obviously kind of big yeah I mean one of the do you know what the
47:36
German word is for a television program something no it's
47:42
called fser okay FS it means far away Seer looking far away okay okay and
47:50
basically nowadays that's the normal way that we get information not really the TV but the internet but we get
47:56
information from a long way away from a very distant place
48:01
okay so it's slightly distorting like we're
48:08
all a long way away from where we actually live it's a whole lot more helpful to
48:15
pay real close attention to what is all around you right now like really around
48:22
your you physically the people you are with yeah so that's one thing it's not
48:28
just that whether you pick a leftwing or a right-wing media Source or whatever but all of that media tends to be a long
48:34
way away from your life um you know Facebook is a long way
48:39
away from your life because it's got people all over the blinking world you know popping stuff up and it's all it's
48:46
all like confectionary you know one little sweet that's nice you know but eat half the confet shop and it makes
48:52
you sick so social media is is is very very like that you just have to be be
48:59
careful not to take too much of it and ideally none at all it rots your teeth or maybe that's the sugar I can't
49:06
remember I uh I love that so far away idea and you're absolutely right any
49:11
kind of new source whether that's TV or off the internet or off a blog or whatever it's it is it's it's far away
49:17
from us and if you were to you know if if I mean I don't I don't watch TV really I watch a show a show or two but
49:24
I don't watch the news or anything like that and if I didn't see people like you know walk in my world in my reality like
49:31
in my day today that's with me right now that's connected to me and I walk around in my community like I if I didn't see
49:38
masks I wouldn't know anything else was going on in the world you know and that's really interesting because that's
49:43
that's a lot more real to me than watching some sort of TV news anchor
49:50
telling me a bunch of stuff about what's happening like all over the world you know so that that's a really interesting point that you bring up thanks for that
49:56
cuz that's that's made me think a little a little bit differently about all of
50:02
these incredible new sources that's just they just absolutely everywhere we kind of polluted with them to be honest and
50:08
um yeah if you if you can take the time to filter that out a little bit and you know go out into your world and and see
50:15
things for kind of what they are with your own two eyes I think that paints a much different picture that's that
50:21
splashed at us constantly yeah so here in Vietnam when
50:27
somebody dies they have a wake at the house so they and always you'll find
50:34
they take a little bit of the street they put up a kind of um not really a marquee a tiny gazebo thing and put some
50:40
tables out and people come around to pay their respects to the family and to to
50:45
to give their respect to the person who's died so it's kind of ordinary to see that uh that's what always happens
50:53
right so just this morning I came back and and the Little Alley I normally
50:58
motorbike down was half closed off because there was another funeral um you know people
51:04
die and we see that that's normal very few people actually died of
51:10
covid in Vietnam but people still die so unfortunately we because we don't see
51:15
what's happening on our own world and we do see this kind of weirdo dramatic picture painted by the people who want
51:22
eyeballs um uh on on media we we kind of forg get that death is part of life so
51:29
that makes it way more scary when people start talking about it a whole lot more but actually death is part of life you
51:35
know um I'll tell you a little story which I which I rather liked I when my
51:42
aunt died who I loved greatly I went to there was a beautiful service in the church and then there was
51:48
a a wake at her house and then late at night I was driving home and uh this was in London and very
51:56
close to my house somebody ran out in the middle of the road and waved at me trying to stop the car now your average
52:02
response to that in London would be to swerve and drive on right because everyone's nuts luckily I didn't I
52:08
stopped right and this guy he he was from there's a place where they were
52:14
putting refugees and he could hardly speak English but he he said to me help help and I could see there was his wife
52:21
she was pregnant and in fact she was about to give birth so he needed to get
52:26
to the hospital so I said get in we get they both got in the car and we drove I don't know half a mile down the road I
52:32
took them to the hospital and I thought well there you are one out one in that's
52:40
life yeah that's great I think uh there's some wonderful traditional uh
52:46
cultures that have a much different uh relationship with death than we do kind of in the west I think that yeah like
52:53
death and dying is especially here in Canada in America in the UK you know we
52:59
we put our old people in blocks of flats with other old people and we distance ourselves from them because we you know
53:06
we we don't really want to think about death too much and we bury people in the ground and we do have funerals and
53:13
things like that but we have these other traditional cultures that you know have these kind of like much bigger events that are much in my opinion like a I
53:20
want to say like a better tribute to the life of somebody rather than just like focusing on the death of somebody and we
53:26
have a very interesting relationship with life but also like very strangely
53:31
with death like a lot of people are super afraid of it and super scared of it and yeah it's it's definitely a part of the response to response to
53:39
covid um I'd love to get into so your most recent blog was titled the Ferguson
53:45
correspondence and specifically I really enjoyed how it concluded um I'll put a link to it in
53:52
the um show notes so people can get to it and read it and I'm and I'm sure there'll be others up there by the time this goes
53:58
out but you put forward that what we kind of need now is humility by our
54:04
scientists by our politicians and even from the Skeptics they they need to be
54:09
practicing empathy I really love that do you think the scientific Community our
54:15
governments and our Skeptics are capable of this at this
54:23
point um well I think people are cap AP of it I think um again it's one of
54:30
those illusory generalizations to talk about the scientific Community I could
54:35
talk about the human Community but it here we are we're in the human Community but there's an awful
54:41
lot of diversity and disagreement in this human community and uh the same is
54:47
true amongst scientists uh and for that matter governmental uh people or Skeptics um so
54:57
are people capable of humility well we all are um the kind of key is to is to try
55:05
and be humble before you're humiliated so because it's coming for
55:10
you sooner or later you are definitely going to be proved wrong so you kind of need to be prepared for that really it
55:17
would be a better thing to be prepared for that um there are people who like to
55:22
deny it and they do cause a lot of trouble it has to be said um let me f i
55:27
you know I just was thinking about this just a moment ago and I thought well hey
55:33
let's take a scientist you know how about a famous Nobel prizewinning scientist like Richard
55:40
fainman and he's he was here's a quote he's got lots of lovely things to say one of them was if you thought that
55:47
science was certain well that's just an error on your
55:52
part now he was a pretty good scientist um another way he he talked about the scientific method he says we are trying
55:59
to prove ourselves wrong as quickly as possible because only in that way can we
56:05
find progress and just one more from fainman I'm smart enough to
56:12
know that I'm dumb uh so there are some you know it's
56:20
a little bit unfair to talk about the scientific community and and sort of lump everyone together one of the
56:27
difficulties of modernity and it's a really tough call for scientists and academics is that
56:34
science is kind of massively misrepresented it's it's understood as this wonderful search for the truth you
56:42
know um but actually it's a career nowadays by the end of the 20th century
56:48
science was primarily a career at the beginning of the 19th century science was a vocation it was a weird crazy
56:56
bizarre thing that a few really eccentric people indulged in right it
57:01
wasn't taught in schools it was just these people who were obsessed with understanding the world and they were up
57:06
to it and they were they did wild and wonderful things normally on their own now science is
57:14
industrial it's an enormous activity and if you're a scientist and let's say you have a
57:20
couple of kids and a mortgage and you have an inconvenient idea
57:26
it's kind of problematic I mean I mean not just covid
57:31
take climate change let's say you found out something oh well maybe you know there's something else going on not just carbon
57:37
dioxide whoa that's going to be a a really difficult thing to pursue it might threaten your career your funding
57:44
right your funding is mostly episodic right you have to do something that people want to
57:49
fund so there are massive pressures on science and there are massive pressures
57:54
elsewhere don't get me wrong they not the only people suffering from this but it's it's very very hard to think deeply
58:05
and clearly and understand things when you're as it were in the middle of a big river which is Flowing quite strongly in
58:12
a certain direction it's hard to Paddle Your Own Canoe these
58:17
days yeah I like that that's um that's a very interesting take on it especially
58:23
within the scientific Community because quite clearly we all have the ability to be empathetic and and uh and express
58:30
humility but sometimes our circumstances don't don't allow it
58:37
simple as that I suppose they make it difficult it's very very difficult there are certainly people out there who you
58:42
know literally put their neck necks out put their lives on the line to you know maybe have a different point of view but
58:48
you know through if you just look throughout history and throughout science it's those individuals that you know that create and make kind of the
58:54
biggest splash yeah absolutely wonderful well we're g to
59:01
finish up there Hugh thank you so much for taking the time with us I'd love to get you back on because I think there's
59:07
a bunch of things that we could talk about but I think that we I think we jumped to a few really interesting
59:13
points we had some solutions that people can kind of jump into now how can people
59:18
get a hold of you well I have a website uh uh if you stick it in the program notes that'll be
59:24
great it's it's Hugh wilborne hu G wlb
59:31
rn.com and uh you can click on the blog and find out what I'm writing um you
59:36
know I kind of got diverted a bit by this Co thing I'm not that excited by it I'm more interested in helping people uh
59:43
become more confident of themselves including their Shadow and find better ways to
59:50
educate ourselves I think that but let's do that I'd love to come back and talk to you about that because there's a whole world of re understanding
59:59
education which uh we could really do with these days and I think it's it's also really exciting and good fun
1:00:06
wonderful well we look forward to getting you back on to talk a little bit more into that but thank you so much
1:00:11
again for more information on anything we've spoken about in this episode please make sure you check out the show
1:00:17
notes don't forget to subscribe if you haven't uh thank you so much for listening this is true Hope cast the
1:00:22
official podcast of true hope Canada we will see you next week