This clip is from the Huberman Lab episode "Rick Rubin: How to Access Your Creativity." The full episode can be found on TH-cam here: th-cam.com/video/ycOBZZeVeAc/w-d-xo.html
While funny this is honestly a good point 😂 like, now I’m doing it wrong if I take their advice and I’m doing it wrong if I don’t take their advice??? What’s the right answer hahaha so ironic.
Most of the more severe illnesses happen to people because an upsetting event occurs in their lives taking them by surprise, unexpectedly, impacting first in the brain, then in the corresponding organ which that part of the brain controls. The end of WWI had absolutely everything to do with the Flu and lung TB outbreak that occurred killing millions. In nature, the biological conflict linked with a territorial fear (just what it means-a fear in your territory, your home, your community, etc.) is a widening of the bronchia (tissue loss). Your body attempts to widen your bronchia in order to allow more air into your lungs to give you more strength and energy to fight to keep your territory safe. Stay with me.......The biological conflict linked with a death fright impacts the lungs. The lungs attempt to grow larger in order to allow more air in because breath equals life, as we all know. No breath equals death. While you are in the fear or death fright conflict, you notice no symptoms of “disease”, except you have cold hands, cold feet, you can’t sleep, you awaken at 3 AM every night, you have little appetite. During the war, millions of people were in fear of the bombing of their homes and cities where the war was most active. Fearing for their lives, their loved ones in the war, their ability to survive. The food in the stores was sparse due to shortages. This lasted for 4 long years! The longer the conflict, the worse the healing phase. Within 2 weeks of the German Chancellor announcing the end of WWI, these millions of people ALL went into the healing phase all at the same time. It is during the healing phase that you experience symptoms of illness! What is the healing phase of the bronchia widening? Severe bronchitis, pneumonia. The body attempts to refill this lost tissue and you experience inflammation, fever, coughing, body aches, fatigue, etc. What is the healing phase of the extra lung tissue that grew? Decomposing of the tissue by TB bacteria and fungi. The symptoms of this healing phase are: severe coughing up of blood and tissue, fever, inflammation, severe mucous, body aches, fatigue. During this decomposing of the extra tissue (tumor), the body expels a lot of protein, and without replenishment, severe protein loss can result in death. Antibiotics did not exist yet. If TB bacteria does not exist in a person or they have been vaccinated against TB (big mistake), then the tumor will simply encapsulate and become dormant and not harm you. Who died during the Spanish Flu? Mainly the poor who could not afford to buy meat and proper nourishment, and the people who were directly impacted by the bombings and destruction of their homes. Millions of people suffered fear and death frights during the fighting of WWI, and millions of people all went into healing at the end of it. Not everyone was affected because not everyone suffered the same way. It’s not a “flu”, it’s not something you “catch”. It’s biological, meaningful, and unavoidable. One hundred years later, a Fear Campaign begins, using the media to spread it......
my dad did a phd in chemistry in the 70s, and after a year or two of getting nowhere on his experiments, outright ignoring the advice of his supervisor led to success. i treasured that north star for my own phd.
Most of the more severe illnesses happen to people because an upsetting event occurs in their lives taking them by surprise, unexpectedly, impacting first in the brain, then in the corresponding organ which that part of the brain controls. The end of WWI had absolutely everything to do with the Flu and lung TB outbreak that occurred killing millions. In nature, the biological conflict linked with a territorial fear (just what it means-a fear in your territory, your home, your community, etc.) is a widening of the bronchia (tissue loss). Your body attempts to widen your bronchia in order to allow more air into your lungs to give you more strength and energy to fight to keep your territory safe. Stay with me.......The biological conflict linked with a death fright impacts the lungs. The lungs attempt to grow larger in order to allow more air in because breath equals life, as we all know. No breath equals death. While you are in the fear or death fright conflict, you notice no symptoms of “disease”, except you have cold hands, cold feet, you can’t sleep, you awaken at 3 AM every night, you have little appetite. During the war, millions of people were in fear of the bombing of their homes and cities where the war was most active. Fearing for their lives, their loved ones in the war, their ability to survive. The food in the stores was sparse due to shortages. This lasted for 4 long years! The longer the conflict, the worse the healing phase. Within 2 weeks of the German Chancellor announcing the end of WWI, these millions of people ALL went into the healing phase all at the same time. It is during the healing phase that you experience symptoms of illness! What is the healing phase of the bronchia widening? Severe bronchitis, pneumonia. The body attempts to refill this lost tissue and you experience inflammation, fever, coughing, body aches, fatigue, etc. What is the healing phase of the extra lung tissue that grew? Decomposing of the tissue by TB bacteria and fungi. The symptoms of this healing phase are: severe coughing up of blood and tissue, fever, inflammation, severe mucous, body aches, fatigue. During this decomposing of the extra tissue (tumor), the body expels a lot of protein, and without replenishment, severe protein loss can result in death. Antibiotics did not exist yet. If TB bacteria does not exist in a person or they have been vaccinated against TB (big mistake), then the tumor will simply encapsulate and become dormant and not harm you. Who died during the Spanish Flu? Mainly the poor who could not afford to buy meat and proper nourishment, and the people who were directly impacted by the bombings and destruction of their homes. Millions of people suffered fear and death frights during the fighting of WWI, and millions of people all went into healing at the end of it. Not everyone was affected because not everyone suffered the same way. It’s not a “flu”, it’s not something you “catch”. It’s biological, meaningful, and unavoidable. One hundred years later, a Fear Campaign begins, using the media to spread it......
@@AgendaInMind it’s also when a major threat threat stops, our mechanism of fight or flight (sympathetic nervous system) finally switches off after too long of an engagement, and the parasympathetic nervous system (relaxation) tries to engage… The sudden drop in stress chemicals like cortisol and adrenaline can cause the now very exhausted organism to sort of collapse, allowing opportunistic illnesses take over any weak point of the person’s system. It’s a “healing” response but is also dangerous. We all experience this effect in a small way after a long, intense project at work, ie. we see that stress chemicals can keep us going for months and then the very week we stop we crash and get sick. So many modern professions are set up this way…
Advice should always be welcomed and considered, but you don't have to always take it or assume it will work the same for you. Critical thinking is really what's key here and in all aspects of life. Consider the advice, if parts of it make sense or you can see yourself doing them then take it, or take parts of it. There is always something to learn from others - good useful stuff, or learning from others mistakes, which is very powerful and can save you a lot of grief in life.
Wholly agree. To always take the advice we are given will lead us down many roads that don’t work for us. My Dad is a great example of this in my life. We think VERY differently on many things. He may see me struggling and his idea of what the best next steps are are often not appropriate for me. I used to think he was always right and would feel like something was wrong with me when his approach made me feel inauthentic. But living alone long enough has allowed me to start becoming my own person and discerning when to act on his advice and when it’s appropriate to simply listen and thank him for caring. Lastly, I know that Rick isn’t saying “to hell with all advice.” He is an open person and a discerning person based on what he says here. I dig it.
Had a friend, key word had, would ask advice and then be quick to blame me when it didn't work out. He was like that with everyone. Also figured out you can still love someone and not like them.
@@hccarder Yup knew someone like that too. Very immature childish thing an incredibly insecure person would do to avoid any ounce of accountability even if its just admitting it was on them. I am always constantly shocked how much people are unable or unwilling to admit fault EVER. All it does is hurt yourself in the end by avoiding accountability.
I saw Rick on the jre and he said that he could not even do 1 push up, then after dedicating himself to good health he got all they way up to doing 100 consecutive push ups. This inspired me to do a similar thing, thinking if he can do it, so can I!
I think Jocko WIllick said something similar too, like the right advice has to fit the right person. And I remember Bret Weinstein said recently, it's a completely absurd idea that just because you don't know the mechanisms of why something works, doesn't mean that it doesn't work.
When learning Poker in one of the lockdowns I read something that stuck with me and fits with the theme of this video: When you make a play in poker, regardless if you win or lose you can decide if that play was "good" or "bad" by estimating the expected value of that play. Some plays that are "bad" win you money a certain percentage of times you'll play. Over the long run you'll lose money making that play, though it can work out once in a while. It's important to understand that you can play badly and win or play well and lose and that you can't evaluate whether a play was good or bad purely from the outcome.
I've played professional poker for over a decade and I think this is the one concept that players that don't make it don't understand. Purely looking at a poker hand in a vacuum and trying to learn from the result vs thinking in ranges and calculating the result of your range versus the range you estimate your opponent has based on stats or a profile you put them in based on observations, that's the difference. So interesting that you learned this early on. It's a helpful lesson for life too. You can be satisfied with decisions even though they turn out bad, as long as you've thought them through well.
this makes so much sense, self help never actually helped me. Well maybe it helped me with experimentation but ultimately i had to just try a bunch of different things, which I could have done anyway without taking someones advice. I have a new way of thinking recently which is learning to try things out for myself and to ask myself, "is this right for me" "what did I like" "did this help me" blah blah. No one else can answer those questions yet we continue to seek answers from others. It's bizarre
A great approach to your life. I think we keep going back to Google and SM for the answers cause we just wanna have it figured out and move on. I seem to be developing a second philosophy on life-one that is nothing new. But incorporating it into my own life in the tougher moments is not the same as knowing it exists. It’s the idea that life is a human experience and all the trials and errors are part of what gives it its substance. It’s value. This is not equal to the dominant modern philosophy of the West - that life is to be conquered and acquired and then, at some arbitrary point, life is all good and then eventually you die. I think that recurring desire to get the info from someone and move on is a symptom of the second philosophy. I won’t claim one is more righteous. And they can exist together, I think. I’m just noticing the former emerging in my self-concept of life and I kinda like it. Makes the tougher stuff easier at least.
@@thesweetprince I like that approach you have too, the trials and tribulations do add to our overarching life story. I never did like the "they lived happily ever after" at the end of movies.
Solid advice not to take advice. Take away - assesing the situation is key in determining what tool to use for given problem/situation/life circumstance.
Actually it is a little easier to give advice because we can be less emotional about it: you see the other person's problem from outside their bubble. If you know the person enough, and they share their experience and events, an advice CAN be actually very good. And it doesn't need to be the BEST advice, it just needs to improve the person's state a little bit. Just make things better. Of course, the person can accept and follow the advice or not. Advice is not an order.
This isn't actually true. You are bringing your own emotion/projection from your own experiences. Humans cannot be objective. There are almost no objective truths in this world.
Discernment! It can be really helpful to hear people’s advice and perspective, but we- the ones taking the advice should be very aware we are unique to ourselves. And to only take pieces that resonate with our own situation.
Wow! This is one of my favourite Dr. Huberman talks ever. Rick Rubin is so relaxed and I love how it's hard to tell who is interviewing who. It is also great that there are no mandatory sub-titles.
In the midst of trying to help myself from my life of sufferring, trying to find things that work for me, and the best way to achieve them, is my own personal hell that I cannot escape.
I would like to share that about six months ago I suffered from herniated disc while at work. For the last 5 months I have been in terrible nerve and muscle pain. I started going to the chiropractor at the beginning of this month and he started doing dry needling and cup therapy along with his regular routine. In a week I was feeling better and now that I am reaching the end of the month I almost feel completely back to my normal self. I was really on the fence about the dry needling and alternative therapies because of the lack of science that I thought there was. However if it wasn't for this chiropractor and what he did, I wouldn't be in this good of shape.
Success bias is an entire industry. CEOs, celebrities, any person who has achieved the top 1% of anything has incredible luck and perfect conditions that cannot be replicated the same way. Yet we take advice all the time from these people and we raise them onto pedestals. It’s one of the worst things about our western culture
I'm cracking up at this because it's so damn true. I have said this very thing to VPs that I reported to and their ego's and narcissism prevented them from seeing the difference because if it worked for them (and they've achieved success) well then naturally they are right and everyone else is wrong. It's comical; narcists have the hardest time understanding this.
@@TheBswan - Perhaps reread what I wrote because that's not what I said and I agree with you, not everyone who disagrees is a narcissist. Let me expand on what I mean; they have a hard time seeing that there are other possible solutions that differ from their opinions as is discussed in the video. That there are multiple approaches to things many times but it's usually their narcissism, imho, that prevents them from seeing options beyond what's worked for them because narcists usually continually think their way is the only right way.
For example, humberman’s physiological sigh doesn’t do shit for me no matter how much I try and make it work. But no “iT HaS To WoRk, it’s ScIeNce”. Meanwhile getting adequate sunlight very much impacts me. It’s all about doing what works for YOU
Sunlight, adequate water, nutrient dense food, decent sleep and intense fascial release. I'm done overcomplicating health. I've buried myself in research and the simple things work best. Nothing works better for emotional release than freeing up stored muscular and fascial tension.
@@Dave.mcclinton you need to find a good myofascial therapist. The best I've ever seen is Glenn Hall in Las Vegas (Create Health Nevada). It is worth a trip to see him. Or see if you can find a Biosync practitioner.
The primary mistake doesn't lie in the willingness to listen to advice, but rather the error is one of 'over-attribution' as to the density of its quality. Assuming a protocol that supersedes one previously held as sacrosanct shouldn't halt the search for future enhancements. The acupuncture reference is particularly applicable because it is just now being investigated with sufficient scientific rigor to overcome years of philosophical conflict between Eastern & Western medical methodologies. The data point accumulation of one individual to the next was one of the most cogent points (I feel) in this presentation. The key lies in the individual's as well as the aggregate opinions willingness to accommodate what may appear initially as asymmetric to a given tenet and is prematurely discounted. This video is a refreshing foray into the importance of retaining one's objectivity toward the ultimate goal, or its quest toward optimal investigative analytic purity. As Oliver said in the eponymous movie - " More please ! "
I used to make good gains in the gym when I was a highschooler. I decided since I became older I can do research to design a better lifting regime. There is a lot of evidence supporting stimulating the same muscle more frequently with the same overall volume being better for muscle growth. I did that for 6 months with disappointing results. I went back to the way I used to train in highschool (more strength focused, maximum intensity 1 time a week) and I'm seeing progress every time I go into the gym.
Please could you do an episode on color perception and color psychology. i am a new person every time i finish one of your podcast. I can't thank you enough.
Love most of what was said here. You guys are terrific. The only issue I have is with your promotion of Acupuncture. I've been through many treatments and they have never done a thing for me. Ever. I have so many other things that work much better and actually show progress and I feel relief with those. Never with Acupuncture.
Isn't this the guy people are paying to get his advise? His advice has literally shaped the sound of music as we know it today. I guess we have to rehash common knowledge for the next generations: be open to advice, but not fully embrace it.
I take advice as another point of view on a problem, instead of as a suggestion or a solution. It’s like getting to see a problem from someone else’s eyes.
great message 2:49 : if we do somehow crack the code with what is right for us. be happy we have it, and then still know: I wonder if that is the only way. maybe there is an even BETTER way, that we're not considereing... not to get comfortable with thinking we know how it works (!). just because we get the outcome we want.
~Astrology backs this up!~By looking at a person's personal astrology chart, compared to another person's, it is easy to see why different things work differently for each of them~
Advice is not often well put whenever examples are not well detailed considering environment, context, life events of each individual. The advice is not the problem itself, because people tend to follow examples not advices, what matters is how to use it. If you are interested in advices you better be commited to the person's life example, trying to understand the context, the environment, the habits of that person that made the advice become powerful, the same advice that you can use wisely in your own context if you know how to use your mind without too many filters and face things how they really are. And always paying attention to discriminate art from business, whatever can become a business, when it comes to advices, you better meditate about it with precaution.
I think that approach is good if you are relatively smart & wise (and also relatively experienced). You have to understand that both persons in this video have IQ of >120 and spent most of their life in learning under rigorous regimes of academia (at least Dr. Huberman; I don't know the other person). As such, they have mental systems to deal with new & unfamiliar information. If you are young, without those mental systems and perhaps not too bright this rejection of current systems can be detrimental. Think of people who follow sham "holistic" doctors or shamans and get into a lot of trouble because of it. Think of people stopping western treatments and doing only "holistic" ones. I believe that we have a lot to learn from other cultures - I myself treated my terrible acne problem with Chinese Medicine; because western medicine offered me only months upon months of Vitamin A overdosing or months of antibiotics. Nevertheless, because of our ignorance there is a lot of sham "specialists" and you gotta keep your wits about yourself. This is not a medical advice; just some words of caution.
"They told us we couldn't learn as adults, turns out they lied. A very small cabal of people." gosh I wonder who these two gentlemen could be discussing in this brief clip
I've heard musicians on TH-cam that openly admit they STILL don't know what Rick Rubin did on their album or why they paid him. That's pretty much being "fooled" into paying someone for their opinion...or maybe it was his reputation. This guy is part of the establishment, not part of the counterculture.
This is what I learned from playing chess.? So many ideas so you need to pick ideas that really suits you well.Don’t follow another person idea but you need to look in to it for knowledge.
The next thing, in ten years or whatever you(Andrew) said about kids growing up now and being the editor or whatever in the future- crystals. It will be crystal therapy.
A distraught man goes to his Rabbi for advice and tells him of his dilemma . "Rabbi please help me , what should i do ?" Rabbi- " Take my advice , do what you want "
I often think about what else is suppressed and hidden knowledge. I’m not a health expert and although I’m reading up on things I’m relying on other people’s research and interpretations bc I don’t have my own lab. We’re always going to be reliant on other’s experiences and our own past ones. How does one find the correct solution to a complex problem after trying multiple different methods if everything I know hasn’t worked and the advice of multiple experts haven’t either?
Most of the more severe illnesses happen to people because an upsetting event occurs in their lives taking them by surprise, unexpectedly, impacting first in the brain, then in the corresponding organ which that part of the brain controls. The end of WWI had absolutely everything to do with the Flu and lung TB outbreak that occurred killing millions. In nature, the biological conflict linked with a territorial fear (just what it means-a fear in your territory, your home, your community, etc.) is a widening of the bronchia (tissue loss). Your body attempts to widen your bronchia in order to allow more air into your lungs to give you more strength and energy to fight to keep your territory safe. Stay with me.......The biological conflict linked with a death fright impacts the lungs. The lungs attempt to grow larger in order to allow more air in because breath equals life, as we all know. No breath equals death. While you are in the fear or death fright conflict, you notice no symptoms of “disease”, except you have cold hands, cold feet, you can’t sleep, you awaken at 3 AM every night, you have little appetite. During the war, millions of people were in fear of the bombing of their homes and cities where the war was most active. Fearing for their lives, their loved ones in the war, their ability to survive. The food in the stores was sparse due to shortages. This lasted for 4 long years! The longer the conflict, the worse the healing phase. Within 2 weeks of the German Chancellor announcing the end of WWI, these millions of people ALL went into the healing phase all at the same time. It is during the healing phase that you experience symptoms of illness! What is the healing phase of the bronchia widening? Severe bronchitis, pneumonia. The body attempts to refill this lost tissue and you experience inflammation, fever, coughing, body aches, fatigue, etc. What is the healing phase of the extra lung tissue that grew? Decomposing of the tissue by TB bacteria and fungi. The symptoms of this healing phase are: severe coughing up of blood and tissue, fever, inflammation, severe mucous, body aches, fatigue. During this decomposing of the extra tissue (tumor), the body expels a lot of protein, and without replenishment, severe protein loss can result in death. Antibiotics did not exist yet. If TB bacteria does not exist in a person or they have been vaccinated against TB (big mistake), then the tumor will simply encapsulate and become dormant and not harm you. Who died during the Spanish Flu? Mainly the poor who could not afford to buy meat and proper nourishment, and the people who were directly impacted by the bombings and destruction of their homes. Millions of people suffered fear and death frights during the fighting of WWI, and millions of people all went into healing at the end of it. Not everyone was affected because not everyone suffered the same way. It’s not a “flu”, it’s not something you “catch”. It’s biological, meaningful, and unavoidable. One hundred years later, a Fear Campaign begins, using the media to spread it......
@@AgendaInMind I couldn’t agree more with what you shared. It was a series of traumas before, during, after I initially got very debilitatingly sick in 2008. I’ve recognized that and have tried so many modalities since to heal but my situation has gotten worse. Being ill for this long is traumatizing enough. Losing everything is another. I really don’t know what to do? I don’t know how to figure it out either bc I can’t hear my gut or intuition. I just don’t know and thinking harder doesn’t help me figure out what I don’t know.
You should always be wary about the new "science" that comes out regarding health. Its such a huge money maker and is constantly influenced by big corporations and the FDA. Remember there is more money in constant healing than prevention.
you mentioned 10 years from now, well perhaps not cures but avoiding toxins that we kinda knew were bad but couldnt because of the sociology from a different point, like what i think is the fracking time delayed nightmare, or plastics and finally saying when or what is the limit of a compound that doesnt break down like any other type of organic material and then looking at better organic replacements not just for straws. i filled my recycling with plastics the other day, milks and cokes with a few others, now the cokes could easily be on a tap like a restaurant meaning no plastics at home for that, i thought what about a milk jug perhaps glass you take into the store and they have a fill person that makes sure its done correctly and sanitary, why not for condiments, i guess ive seen a place that was clean in 91 on a camping trip and by 2001 not clean and maybe the engineering background has forced me to extrapolate but really interpolate the number of places that is happening at just by standing in the grocery line looking at the plastics, you get small glimpses like the rio games and the toxic water and the all-out rush to clean it which should be going on but the ball didnt get smaller it just gets bigger at a slower rate until its too big, the obvious manipulations of the wealthy to want pristine to look at but not care the sludge created at a different place to achieve this for just them, like a delusional needless sacrifice. i never really knew anything about rubin but really am impressed and can get why he is liked yet also a leader that while avoiding confrontation is able to still have it with people that i imagine need it
This happens on the golf course way too much. haha. Somebody wants to help out, thanks. But don't get mad that that your advise ain't always gonna help. I always say, it must be just one of those days. lol But really, I'm the one in a rut, I can get myself out. Ain't no thang.
I only take advice from the person who is in profession or business that i am looking or need something from that field or business for an example I will take ticket booking advice from my travel agent friend
This is so true , I would bing my bongity dingalong 3 times a week but when I went to Pakistan I got a massive parasite that almost killed me. Just because I’m a shaman does not mean ur next door neighbor is one too. Great video 👍😖
This clip is from the Huberman Lab episode "Rick Rubin: How to Access Your Creativity." The full episode can be found on TH-cam here: th-cam.com/video/ycOBZZeVeAc/w-d-xo.html
This is solid advice to not take advice advice.
hahahahah
@@dertythegrower no way he's been going at it that long. a committed man I see
While funny this is honestly a good point 😂 like, now I’m doing it wrong if I take their advice and I’m doing it wrong if I don’t take their advice??? What’s the right answer hahaha so ironic.
Beat me to it, lol..
111 thumbs up. 🫶🙏🌞
Agreed 100%. Which means, getting advice from TH-cam influencers or motivators should be taking with a grain of salt.
True they will tell you to just study 5 hours when i can't even sit down for 15 minutes
More like a rock’s worth of salt
@@Domgii I study 12 hrs a day and could study all that info in 4 hrs if done properly
yeah that's really good advice!
Most of the more severe illnesses happen to people because an upsetting event occurs in their lives taking them by surprise, unexpectedly, impacting first in the brain, then in the corresponding organ which that part of the brain controls. The end of WWI had absolutely everything to do with the Flu and lung TB outbreak that occurred killing millions. In nature, the biological conflict linked with a territorial fear (just what it means-a fear in your territory, your home, your community, etc.) is a widening of the bronchia (tissue loss). Your body attempts to widen your bronchia in order to allow more air into your lungs to give you more strength and energy to fight to keep your territory safe. Stay with me.......The biological conflict linked with a death fright impacts the lungs. The lungs attempt to grow larger in order to allow more air in because breath equals life, as we all know. No breath equals death.
While you are in the fear or death fright conflict, you notice no symptoms of “disease”, except you have cold hands, cold feet, you can’t sleep, you awaken at 3 AM every night, you have little appetite. During the war, millions of people were in fear of the bombing of their homes and cities where the war was most active. Fearing for their lives, their loved ones in the war, their ability to survive. The food in the stores was sparse due to shortages. This lasted for 4 long years! The longer the conflict, the worse the healing phase. Within 2 weeks of the German Chancellor announcing the end of WWI, these millions of people ALL went into the healing phase all at the same time. It is during the healing phase that you experience symptoms of illness! What is the healing phase of the bronchia widening? Severe bronchitis, pneumonia. The body attempts to refill this lost tissue and you experience inflammation, fever, coughing, body aches, fatigue, etc. What is the healing phase of the extra lung tissue that grew? Decomposing of the tissue by TB bacteria and fungi. The symptoms of this healing phase are: severe coughing up of blood and tissue, fever, inflammation, severe mucous, body aches, fatigue. During this decomposing of the extra tissue (tumor), the body expels a lot of protein, and without replenishment, severe protein loss can result in death. Antibiotics did not exist yet. If TB bacteria does not exist in a person or they have been vaccinated against TB (big mistake), then the tumor will simply encapsulate and become dormant and not harm you. Who died during the Spanish Flu? Mainly the poor who could not afford to buy meat and proper nourishment, and the people who were directly impacted by the bombings and destruction of their homes.
Millions of people suffered fear and death frights during the fighting of WWI, and millions of people all went into healing at the end of it. Not everyone was affected because not everyone suffered the same way.
It’s not a “flu”, it’s not something you “catch”. It’s biological, meaningful, and unavoidable. One hundred years later, a Fear Campaign begins, using the media to spread it......
Rick Rubin! "All fields are run by small groups of people who are invested in keeping things the way they are." OMG! This is so true.
Look up that handle 👆⬆️ his got psych products and mushroms🍄.
“.. because they’re In charge.” Explains a lot !
Simple human behavior
Jew explains jews
I screenshotted this comment.
my dad did a phd in chemistry in the 70s, and after a year or two of getting nowhere on his experiments, outright ignoring the advice of his supervisor led to success. i treasured that north star for my own phd.
Most of the more severe illnesses happen to people because an upsetting event occurs in their lives taking them by surprise, unexpectedly, impacting first in the brain, then in the corresponding organ which that part of the brain controls. The end of WWI had absolutely everything to do with the Flu and lung TB outbreak that occurred killing millions. In nature, the biological conflict linked with a territorial fear (just what it means-a fear in your territory, your home, your community, etc.) is a widening of the bronchia (tissue loss). Your body attempts to widen your bronchia in order to allow more air into your lungs to give you more strength and energy to fight to keep your territory safe. Stay with me.......The biological conflict linked with a death fright impacts the lungs. The lungs attempt to grow larger in order to allow more air in because breath equals life, as we all know. No breath equals death.
While you are in the fear or death fright conflict, you notice no symptoms of “disease”, except you have cold hands, cold feet, you can’t sleep, you awaken at 3 AM every night, you have little appetite. During the war, millions of people were in fear of the bombing of their homes and cities where the war was most active. Fearing for their lives, their loved ones in the war, their ability to survive. The food in the stores was sparse due to shortages. This lasted for 4 long years! The longer the conflict, the worse the healing phase. Within 2 weeks of the German Chancellor announcing the end of WWI, these millions of people ALL went into the healing phase all at the same time. It is during the healing phase that you experience symptoms of illness! What is the healing phase of the bronchia widening? Severe bronchitis, pneumonia. The body attempts to refill this lost tissue and you experience inflammation, fever, coughing, body aches, fatigue, etc. What is the healing phase of the extra lung tissue that grew? Decomposing of the tissue by TB bacteria and fungi. The symptoms of this healing phase are: severe coughing up of blood and tissue, fever, inflammation, severe mucous, body aches, fatigue. During this decomposing of the extra tissue (tumor), the body expels a lot of protein, and without replenishment, severe protein loss can result in death. Antibiotics did not exist yet. If TB bacteria does not exist in a person or they have been vaccinated against TB (big mistake), then the tumor will simply encapsulate and become dormant and not harm you. Who died during the Spanish Flu? Mainly the poor who could not afford to buy meat and proper nourishment, and the people who were directly impacted by the bombings and destruction of their homes.
Millions of people suffered fear and death frights during the fighting of WWI, and millions of people all went into healing at the end of it. Not everyone was affected because not everyone suffered the same way.
It’s not a “flu”, it’s not something you “catch”. It’s biological, meaningful, and unavoidable. One hundred years later, a Fear Campaign begins, using the media to spread it......
@@AgendaInMind it’s also when a major threat threat stops, our mechanism of fight or flight (sympathetic nervous system) finally switches off after too long of an engagement, and the parasympathetic nervous system (relaxation) tries to engage…
The sudden drop in stress chemicals like cortisol and adrenaline can cause the now very exhausted organism to sort of collapse, allowing opportunistic illnesses take over any weak point of the person’s system. It’s a “healing” response but is also dangerous.
We all experience this effect in a small way after a long, intense project at work, ie. we see that stress chemicals can keep us going for months and then the very week we stop we crash and get sick. So many modern professions are set up this way…
@@Wurldz i mean he accidentally posted under the wrong comment, but read it. It’s pretty interesting
Advice should always be welcomed and considered, but you don't have to always take it or assume it will work the same for you. Critical thinking is really what's key here and in all aspects of life. Consider the advice, if parts of it make sense or you can see yourself doing them then take it, or take parts of it. There is always something to learn from others - good useful stuff, or learning from others mistakes, which is very powerful and can save you a lot of grief in life.
Look up that handle 👆⬆️ his got psych products and mushroms🍄..
Exactly.
Wholly agree. To always take the advice we are given will lead us down many roads that don’t work for us. My Dad is a great example of this in my life. We think VERY differently on many things. He may see me struggling and his idea of what the best next steps are are often not appropriate for me. I used to think he was always right and would feel like something was wrong with me when his approach made me feel inauthentic. But living alone long enough has allowed me to start becoming my own person and discerning when to act on his advice and when it’s appropriate to simply listen and thank him for caring.
Lastly, I know that Rick isn’t saying “to hell with all advice.” He is an open person and a discerning person based on what he says here. I dig it.
Had a friend, key word had, would ask advice and then be quick to blame me when it didn't work out. He was like that with everyone. Also figured out you can still love someone and not like them.
@@hccarder Yup knew someone like that too. Very immature childish thing an incredibly insecure person would do to avoid any ounce of accountability even if its just admitting it was on them.
I am always constantly shocked how much people are unable or unwilling to admit fault EVER. All it does is hurt yourself in the end by avoiding accountability.
I saw Rick on the jre and he said that he could not even do 1 push up, then after dedicating himself to good health he got all they way up to doing 100 consecutive push ups. This inspired me to do a similar thing, thinking if he can do it, so can I!
Huberman is literally the man on the internet to give solid advice.
I think Jocko WIllick said something similar too, like the right advice has to fit the right person. And I remember Bret Weinstein said recently, it's a completely absurd idea that just because you don't know the mechanisms of why something works, doesn't mean that it doesn't work.
Look up that handle 👆⬆️ his got psych products and mushroms🍄
When learning Poker in one of the lockdowns I read something that stuck with me and fits with the theme of this video: When you make a play in poker, regardless if you win or lose you can decide if that play was "good" or "bad" by estimating the expected value of that play. Some plays that are "bad" win you money a certain percentage of times you'll play. Over the long run you'll lose money making that play, though it can work out once in a while. It's important to understand that you can play badly and win or play well and lose and that you can't evaluate whether a play was good or bad purely from the outcome.
I've played professional poker for over a decade and I think this is the one concept that players that don't make it don't understand. Purely looking at a poker hand in a vacuum and trying to learn from the result vs thinking in ranges and calculating the result of your range versus the range you estimate your opponent has based on stats or a profile you put them in based on observations, that's the difference. So interesting that you learned this early on. It's a helpful lesson for life too. You can be satisfied with decisions even though they turn out bad, as long as you've thought them through well.
this makes so much sense, self help never actually helped me. Well maybe it helped me with experimentation but ultimately i had to just try a bunch of different things, which I could have done anyway without taking someones advice.
I have a new way of thinking recently which is learning to try things out for myself and to ask myself, "is this right for me" "what did I like" "did this help me" blah blah. No one else can answer those questions yet we continue to seek answers from others. It's bizarre
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A great approach to your life. I think we keep going back to Google and SM for the answers cause we just wanna have it figured out and move on.
I seem to be developing a second philosophy on life-one that is nothing new. But incorporating it into my own life in the tougher moments is not the same as knowing it exists. It’s the idea that life is a human experience and all the trials and errors are part of what gives it its substance. It’s value.
This is not equal to the dominant modern philosophy of the West - that life is to be conquered and acquired and then, at some arbitrary point, life is all good and then eventually you die.
I think that recurring desire to get the info from someone and move on is a symptom of the second philosophy. I won’t claim one is more righteous. And they can exist together, I think. I’m just noticing the former emerging in my self-concept of life and I kinda like it. Makes the tougher stuff easier at least.
@@thesweetprince I like that approach you have too, the trials and tribulations do add to our overarching life story.
I never did like the "they lived happily ever after" at the end of movies.
That's some good advice. I'll disregard.
There’s a great quote I heard from Richard Cooper:
“Never take advice or criticism from someone you wouldn’t trade places with” ☝️😎
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Solid advice not to take advice. Take away - assesing the situation is key in determining what tool to use for given problem/situation/life circumstance.
Look up that handle 👆⬆️ his got psych products and mushroms🍄.
We, as a species, are firmly convinced of our assumptions once a positive correlation can be found.
Confirmation bias is a tough nut to crack.
Actually it is a little easier to give advice because we can be less emotional about it: you see the other person's problem from outside their bubble. If you know the person enough, and they share their experience and events, an advice CAN be actually very good. And it doesn't need to be the BEST advice, it just needs to improve the person's state a little bit. Just make things better. Of course, the person can accept and follow the advice or not. Advice is not an order.
This isn't actually true. You are bringing your own emotion/projection from your own experiences. Humans cannot be objective. There are almost no objective truths in this world.
Hence why there is more than one judge on the supreme court :D
Santa is just Rick Rubin in the offseason.
Discernment! It can be really helpful to hear people’s advice and perspective, but we- the ones taking the advice should be very aware we are unique to ourselves. And to only take pieces that resonate with our own situation.
I live overseas and tbh, don't know who the guest is, but got to admin - this man seems very kind. I like his attitude.
Wow! This is one of my favourite Dr. Huberman talks ever. Rick Rubin is so relaxed and I love how it's hard to tell who is interviewing who. It is also great that there are no mandatory sub-titles.
that's because Dr.Huberman (at least in this bit) does not really seem to respond to the answers of Rick Rubin. instead he links it to his own story.
Rick is an incredibly interesting guy. & you can learn a lot from interesting people!!
is he? dont trust the beard.
In the midst of trying to help myself from my life of sufferring, trying to find things that work for me, and the best way to achieve them, is my own personal hell that I cannot escape.
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I would say advice is helpful If you just assimilate it to your own experiences and take what is useful and resonates
Look up that handle 👆⬆️ his got psych products and mushroms🍄..
This is such a good book. I've listened to it on audible like 4 times. It's so full of wisdom.
what is the name of the book? I didn't see it in the description
what's the book?
@@realpineappleguy The Creative Act by Rick Rubin
@@lofi_Insomnia_ The Creative Act by Rick Rubin
I would like to share that about six months ago I suffered from herniated disc while at work. For the last 5 months I have been in terrible nerve and muscle pain. I started going to the chiropractor at the beginning of this month and he started doing dry needling and cup therapy along with his regular routine. In a week I was feeling better and now that I am reaching the end of the month I almost feel completely back to my normal self. I was really on the fence about the dry needling and alternative therapies because of the lack of science that I thought there was. However if it wasn't for this chiropractor and what he did, I wouldn't be in this good of shape.
Success bias is an entire industry. CEOs, celebrities, any person who has achieved the top 1% of anything has incredible luck and perfect conditions that cannot be replicated the same way. Yet we take advice all the time from these people and we raise them onto pedestals. It’s one of the worst things about our western culture
^This
Would you rather aim at someone unsuccessful?
If you follow the path authentic to you, you find gems unlike any other.
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People who take advice from authority, experts, scientific papers.. over their own experience.. is a real shame
Never thought I'd see Rick Rubin on the podcast. This is great!
Look up that handle 👆⬆️ his got psych products and mushroms🍄.
I think I could watch Huberman Lab you tube videos all day and all night. Waaaaaay better than Netflix (except maybe some of those documentaries)
Taking advice never released from the obligation to make ones own mind.
Look up that handle 👆⬆️ his got psych products and mushroms🍄..
I'm cracking up at this because it's so damn true. I have said this very thing to VPs that I reported to and their ego's and narcissism prevented them from seeing the difference because if it worked for them (and they've achieved success) well then naturally they are right and everyone else is wrong. It's comical; narcists have the hardest time understanding this.
Not everyone that disagrees with you is a narcissist
@@TheBswan - Perhaps reread what I wrote because that's not what I said and I agree with you, not everyone who disagrees is a narcissist. Let me expand on what I mean; they have a hard time seeing that there are other possible solutions that differ from their opinions as is discussed in the video. That there are multiple approaches to things many times but it's usually their narcissism, imho, that prevents them from seeing options beyond what's worked for them because narcists usually continually think their way is the only right way.
@@TheBswan it feels like that if you're a narcissist yourself
He talks with VPs and immediately goes to the TH-cam comment section
To share his made up scenario
@@michaelbishop9157 Whatever you say, god forbid we just respectfully comment on the video. 🙄
For example, humberman’s physiological sigh doesn’t do shit for me no matter how much I try and make it work. But no “iT HaS To WoRk, it’s ScIeNce”. Meanwhile getting adequate sunlight very much impacts me. It’s all about doing what works for YOU
Sunlight, adequate water, nutrient dense food, decent sleep and intense fascial release. I'm done overcomplicating health. I've buried myself in research and the simple things work best.
Nothing works better for emotional release than freeing up stored muscular and fascial tension.
@@travisn346 maybe for you
@@travisn346 would do you do to release that
@@Dave.mcclinton you need to find a good myofascial therapist. The best I've ever seen is Glenn Hall in Las Vegas (Create Health Nevada). It is worth a trip to see him. Or see if you can find a Biosync practitioner.
@@michaelbishop9157 trial and error. We're always learning, right?
What's crazy now that will be true in the future is our concept of free will and how much we're supposed to blame someone for a mistake
Sapolsky?
Curious to see what would happen on a wide scale if people saw how little control they have.
The primary mistake doesn't lie in the willingness to listen to advice, but rather the error is one of 'over-attribution' as to the density of its quality. Assuming a protocol that supersedes one previously held as sacrosanct shouldn't halt the search for future enhancements. The acupuncture reference is particularly applicable because it is just now being investigated with sufficient scientific rigor to overcome years of philosophical conflict between Eastern & Western medical methodologies. The data point accumulation of one individual to the next was one of the most cogent points (I feel) in this presentation. The key lies in the individual's as well as the aggregate opinions willingness to accommodate what may appear initially as asymmetric to a given tenet and is prematurely discounted. This video is a refreshing foray into the importance of retaining one's objectivity toward the ultimate goal, or its quest toward optimal investigative analytic purity.
As Oliver said in the eponymous movie - " More please ! "
I used to make good gains in the gym when I was a highschooler. I decided since I became older I can do research to design a better lifting regime. There is a lot of evidence supporting stimulating the same muscle more frequently with the same overall volume being better for muscle growth.
I did that for 6 months with disappointing results. I went back to the way I used to train in highschool (more strength focused, maximum intensity 1 time a week) and I'm seeing progress every time I go into the gym.
Look up that handle 👆⬆️ his got psych products and mushroms🍄
All advice is tailored to a personality type.
But personality doesn’t scale.
Please could you do an episode on color perception and color psychology. i am a new person every time i finish one of your podcast. I can't thank you enough.
Look up that handle 👆⬆️ his got psych products and mushroms🍄..
Love most of what was said here. You guys are terrific. The only issue I have is with your promotion of Acupuncture. I've been through many treatments and they have never done a thing for me. Ever. I have so many other things that work much better and actually show progress and I feel relief with those. Never with Acupuncture.
I hate when I share my work with others and they give unsolicited advice as if they were the ones spending for weeks over the work themselves.
Omg me too.
@@dominicklicciardi The struggle is real! :D
Isn't this the guy people are paying to get his advise? His advice has literally shaped the sound of music as we know it today. I guess we have to rehash common knowledge for the next generations: be open to advice, but not fully embrace it.
This type of content needs a < 30 or < 60 second button
Click 4 times rapidly forward or back for 30 second skips.
I take advice as another point of view on a problem, instead of as a suggestion or a solution. It’s like getting to see a problem from someone else’s eyes.
tuning forks right on your ear in the soft tissue pocket, feels amazing, especially after concussion
4:36 that's the best summary of the world's situation I've ever heard!!
There's a saying here in Brazil which stated that "if advice was good, it wouldn't be free".
Rick is a truly an open mind.
Gladly figured this exact same thing on my own coz never heard from any body and it kills me how simple was this to figure out
great message 2:49 : if we do somehow crack the code with what is right for us. be happy we have it, and then still know: I wonder if that is the only way.
maybe there is an even BETTER way, that we're not considereing...
not to get comfortable with thinking we know how it works (!). just because we get the outcome we want.
Good point about needing to take a look outside the paradigm for new perspectives to further drive the field forward. thanks for sharing
Look up that handle 👆⬆️ his got psych products and mushroms🍄.
I like his advice of not following advice. Good advice! 👍
You are so funny, talented and original
@@bisonbeard2121 Thank you!
~Astrology backs this up!~By looking at a person's personal astrology chart, compared to another person's, it is easy to see why different things work differently for each of them~
Look up that handle 👆⬆️ his got psych products and mushroms🍄.
Take the advice. Consider it. Use what works for you. Discard the rest
With advice I always noticed people like to give advice as a way to control your life.
"I don't hold any of it tightly" - humble statement, to be open to being wrong and to other ideas.
Look up that handle 👆⬆️ his got psych products and mushroms🍄.
My summary:
-whatever works is good.
-Whatever advice/method worked for one person might not work for another person
(Rewatch)
Look up that handle 👆⬆️ his got psych products and mushroms🍄.
Advice is not often well put whenever examples are not well detailed considering environment, context, life events of each individual.
The advice is not the problem itself, because people tend to follow examples not advices, what matters is how to use it.
If you are interested in advices you better be commited to the person's life example,
trying to understand the context, the environment, the habits of that person that made the advice become powerful,
the same advice that you can use wisely in your own context
if you know how to use your mind without too many filters and face things how they really are.
And always paying attention to discriminate art from business, whatever can become a business,
when it comes to advices, you better meditate about it with precaution.
Bukowski talked about Hemingway becoming a slave to his own style. He said he started copying himself.
Look up that handle 👆⬆️ his got psych products and mushroms🍄.
There are already treatments utilizing audio, for example Stephen Porges‘ Safe and Sound Protocol which regulates the nervous system.
My way of working is that I filter everything so that I choose the way it could work for me
Look up that handle 👆⬆️ his got psych products and mushroms🍄.
Love how he advised his friend to go to the acupuncturist :)
I think that approach is good if you are relatively smart & wise (and also relatively experienced). You have to understand that both persons in this video have IQ of >120 and spent most of their life in learning under rigorous regimes of academia (at least Dr. Huberman; I don't know the other person).
As such, they have mental systems to deal with new & unfamiliar information.
If you are young, without those mental systems and perhaps not too bright this rejection of current systems can be detrimental. Think of people who follow sham "holistic" doctors or shamans and get into a lot of trouble because of it. Think of people stopping western treatments and doing only "holistic" ones.
I believe that we have a lot to learn from other cultures - I myself treated my terrible acne problem with Chinese Medicine; because western medicine offered me only months upon months of Vitamin A overdosing or months of antibiotics. Nevertheless, because of our ignorance there is a lot of sham "specialists" and you gotta keep your wits about yourself.
This is not a medical advice; just some words of caution.
Look up that handle 👆⬆️ his got psych products and mushroms🍄.
Each one of us is in a chariot ridding behind a different set of horses. Only the person holding the reigns can learn how to steady those reigns.
agh, dying to get rick's book!
"They told us we couldn't learn as adults, turns out they lied. A very small cabal of people."
gosh I wonder who these two gentlemen could be discussing in this brief clip
"The worst vice is advice." - John Milton
Look up that handle 👆⬆️ his got psych products and mushroms🍄.
A wise man said that a wise man is a man who can take his own advice
I've heard musicians on TH-cam that openly admit they STILL don't know what Rick Rubin did on their album or why they paid him. That's pretty much being "fooled" into paying someone for their opinion...or maybe it was his reputation.
This guy is part of the establishment, not part of the counterculture.
Look up that handle 👆⬆️ his got psych products and mushroms🍄
"Being attached to the past..." Oh Man what to do as a historian!
Look up that handle 👆⬆️ his got psych products and mushroms🍄.
Rick Rubin is Gandalf
This convo is gold
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This is what I learned from playing chess.? So many ideas so you need to pick ideas that really suits you well.Don’t follow another person idea but you need to look in to it for knowledge.
The next thing, in ten years or whatever you(Andrew) said about kids growing up now and being the editor or whatever in the future- crystals. It will be crystal therapy.
🙏
Thank
you gents.
A distraught man goes to his Rabbi for advice and tells him of his dilemma .
"Rabbi please help me , what should i do ?"
Rabbi- " Take my advice , do what you want "
Such an interesting conversation
Where I live in the UK it seems only a minority strive to increase energy and productivity. That is the only thing I wish we would adopt from the USA
I often think about what else is suppressed and hidden knowledge. I’m not a health expert and although I’m reading up on things I’m relying on other people’s research and interpretations bc I don’t have my own lab. We’re always going to be reliant on other’s experiences and our own past ones. How does one find the correct solution to a complex problem after trying multiple different methods if everything I know hasn’t worked and the advice of multiple experts haven’t either?
Most of the more severe illnesses happen to people because an upsetting event occurs in their lives taking them by surprise, unexpectedly, impacting first in the brain, then in the corresponding organ which that part of the brain controls. The end of WWI had absolutely everything to do with the Flu and lung TB outbreak that occurred killing millions. In nature, the biological conflict linked with a territorial fear (just what it means-a fear in your territory, your home, your community, etc.) is a widening of the bronchia (tissue loss). Your body attempts to widen your bronchia in order to allow more air into your lungs to give you more strength and energy to fight to keep your territory safe. Stay with me.......The biological conflict linked with a death fright impacts the lungs. The lungs attempt to grow larger in order to allow more air in because breath equals life, as we all know. No breath equals death.
While you are in the fear or death fright conflict, you notice no symptoms of “disease”, except you have cold hands, cold feet, you can’t sleep, you awaken at 3 AM every night, you have little appetite. During the war, millions of people were in fear of the bombing of their homes and cities where the war was most active. Fearing for their lives, their loved ones in the war, their ability to survive. The food in the stores was sparse due to shortages. This lasted for 4 long years! The longer the conflict, the worse the healing phase. Within 2 weeks of the German Chancellor announcing the end of WWI, these millions of people ALL went into the healing phase all at the same time. It is during the healing phase that you experience symptoms of illness! What is the healing phase of the bronchia widening? Severe bronchitis, pneumonia. The body attempts to refill this lost tissue and you experience inflammation, fever, coughing, body aches, fatigue, etc. What is the healing phase of the extra lung tissue that grew? Decomposing of the tissue by TB bacteria and fungi. The symptoms of this healing phase are: severe coughing up of blood and tissue, fever, inflammation, severe mucous, body aches, fatigue. During this decomposing of the extra tissue (tumor), the body expels a lot of protein, and without replenishment, severe protein loss can result in death. Antibiotics did not exist yet. If TB bacteria does not exist in a person or they have been vaccinated against TB (big mistake), then the tumor will simply encapsulate and become dormant and not harm you. Who died during the Spanish Flu? Mainly the poor who could not afford to buy meat and proper nourishment, and the people who were directly impacted by the bombings and destruction of their homes.
Millions of people suffered fear and death frights during the fighting of WWI, and millions of people all went into healing at the end of it. Not everyone was affected because not everyone suffered the same way.
It’s not a “flu”, it’s not something you “catch”. It’s biological, meaningful, and unavoidable. One hundred years later, a Fear Campaign begins, using the media to spread it......
@@AgendaInMind I couldn’t agree more with what you shared. It was a series of traumas before, during, after I initially got very debilitatingly sick in 2008. I’ve recognized that and have tried so many modalities since to heal but my situation has gotten worse. Being ill for this long is traumatizing enough. Losing everything is another. I really don’t know what to do? I don’t know how to figure it out either bc I can’t hear my gut or intuition. I just don’t know and thinking harder doesn’t help me figure out what I don’t know.
@@AgendaInMind Thank you for sharing your knowledge and time replying. I just enjoyed rereading it again 4 months later. Hope all is well with you.
@@SeattleMartin sometimes the solution is acceptance but sometimes there is a solution but the person just hasn’t realized it yet
You should always be wary about the new "science" that comes out regarding health. Its such a huge money maker and is constantly influenced by big corporations and the FDA. Remember there is more money in constant healing than prevention.
you mentioned 10 years from now, well perhaps not cures but avoiding toxins that we kinda knew were bad but couldnt because of the sociology from a different point, like what i think is the fracking time delayed nightmare, or plastics and finally saying when or what is the limit of a compound that doesnt break down like any other type of organic material and then looking at better organic replacements not just for straws. i filled my recycling with plastics the other day, milks and cokes with a few others, now the cokes could easily be on a tap like a restaurant meaning no plastics at home for that, i thought what about a milk jug perhaps glass you take into the store and they have a fill person that makes sure its done correctly and sanitary, why not for condiments, i guess ive seen a place that was clean in 91 on a camping trip and by 2001 not clean and maybe the engineering background has forced me to extrapolate but really interpolate the number of places that is happening at just by standing in the grocery line looking at the plastics, you get small glimpses like the rio games and the toxic water and the all-out rush to clean it which should be going on but the ball didnt get smaller it just gets bigger at a slower rate until its too big, the obvious manipulations of the wealthy to want pristine to look at but not care the sludge created at a different place to achieve this for just them, like a delusional needless sacrifice. i never really knew anything about rubin but really am impressed and can get why he is liked yet also a leader that while avoiding confrontation is able to still have it with people that i imagine need it
Said this exact same thing to myself this morning
look at Rick Rubin.... and witness a true Guru...
Advice is learning from others mistakes.
Any idea who did Rick Rubin's heart surgery? Asking for someone with a similar experience to his story about dead lifting.
Trust your instincts. Do the unexpected. Find the others.
I don'(t think that's the take away from this video, lol.
I can take the advice to not take the advice but then I wouldn't take the advice to not take the advice.
Look up that handle 👆⬆️ his got psych products and mushroms🍄.
Advice is worth what you pay for it, sometimes less.
Too many people are getting fed advice nowadays. These algorithms are putting people in a box where they are getting fed crap all day long
In honor of Rick Rubin I present to you all a tune that may have something to do with this very subject:
Big Audio Dynamite - Medicine Show
what book is that?
This happens on the golf course way too much. haha. Somebody wants to help out, thanks. But don't get mad that that your advise ain't always gonna help. I always say, it must be just one of those days. lol But really, I'm the one in a rut, I can get myself out. Ain't no thang.
I only take advice from the person who is in profession or business that i am looking or need something from that field or business for an example
I will take ticket booking advice from my travel agent friend
Best advice ever 🙂
Great discussion.
It's all in how the advice is given..Nothing more annoying than someone else telling you what you "need" to do...
Look up that handle 👆⬆️ his got psych products and mushroms🍄.
💁🏾♂️"More than one way to skin a cat" a study of perspectives 🤷🏾♂️🤝🏾🙋🏾♂️
This is so true , I would bing my bongity dingalong 3 times a week but when I went to Pakistan I got a massive parasite that almost killed me. Just because I’m a shaman does not mean ur next door neighbor is one too. Great video 👍😖
I have no future and no present! All I have is the GODDAMED PAST! and it's making me want to die!
I feel y’a, and… you can eventually leave the past in the past. Not all of it. And it’s not easy.
Politics do not only exist in politics.
The irony. This is a legit advice piece haha