David Wright: 0:00
In this episode of the Motor City Hypnotist Podcast, I'm always looking to give people resources and things they can reference or listen to or watch that can kind of help them mental health wise, and I watch a lot of TED Talks regarding mental health. So I'm going to give you a short list probably 10 or less of TED Talks that I recommend that address mental health issues that you may find valuable as well. And, as usual, we're giving away free stuff. Hang in there, folks, we'll be right back this sounds like something for the authorities in Detroit.
Announcer: 0:35
Well, joke's on you. I'm living to 102 and then dying at the city of Detroit.
Matt Fox: 0:39
Guys like this can't take over here out of Detroit.
David Wright: 0:42
Spawn in the hellfires of Motown. Take him to detroit stationed in drambuie.
Announcer: 0:55
It's worse than detroit. We did not have, as a unit, the confidence that we felt like we needed to beat detroit. Let's go to Detroit. Now you're talking brother. I don't think so. He plays for Detroit. Now, do they have many farms in Detroit?
Matt Fox: 1:11
Detroit to Michigan. I go to school. I know where Detroit is.
Announcer: 1:15
Get ready for the Motor City hypnotist, david R Wright. Originating from the suburbs of Detroit, michigan, he has hypnotized thousands of people from all over the United States. David Allwright has been featured on news outlets all across the country and is the clinical director of an outpatient mental health and hypnosis clinic located just south of Detroit, where he helps people daily using the power of hypnosis. Welcome the motor city hypnotist, david r wright what is going on, my friends?
David Wright: 2:03
it is david David Wright, the Motor City Hypnotist, and we're here with another episode of the Motor City Hypnotist podcast. Well, hello David. Well, hello Matt Fox. That's the other voice you hear. Are you still full from Thanksgiving? No, not too bad. I didn't quite overdo it. As much as I could have. Well, okay, that's fair, I paced myself.
Matt Fox: 2:23
So you had how many meals in the day? Two, two.
David Wright: 2:26
Yeah, yeah.
Matt Fox: 2:29
The normal one, and then the normal one and a later one, later one. Okay, the leftovers, the leftovers. Yeah, the turkey sandwich, second dinner.
David Wright: 2:33
Second breakfast. I don't think he knows about second breakfast.
Matt Fox: 2:39
Right right, right right.
David Wright: 2:40
Shout out to those who want to put the reference on our Facebook page Yep.
Matt Fox: 2:45
Can you?
David Wright: 2:45
guess it.
Matt Fox: 2:47
No, no, it's the week after stuffing your face with food.
David Wright: 2:51
Absolutely Happy National and we're back to the usual this week, so for another couple of weeks then, we have the holiday again.
Matt Fox: 2:59
So yeah, if you celebrated and you enjoyed it, let us know, yep.
David Wright: 3:03
Yeah, hope you had a great Thanksgiving and hopefully your Christmas as well as this can be coming up. Yeah, so we're here in the palatial podcast, your voice, southfield studios. Yeah, hanging out doing a podcast. Let me tell you, folks, where you can find me. My website is motorcityhypnotistcom. Check that out, especially if you're interested in shows, especially and I want to throw this out early, I know it's december right now, but high schools are already booking for grad nights and in five months away and I've already had a couple conflicts I had a school that that I did for the last couple years call me, but I'm going to be in florida, at the university of florida, the night of their party.
Matt Fox: 3:39
So is this your second time? Through their fifth time, the university of florida, wow. University of Florida, nice.
David Wright: 3:45
Yeah, so my buddy Richard and I typically how it works, is we kind of every other year because he started this. And then my buddy Richard Barker he's the incredible hypnotist and he's often on cruises and traveling. He does a lot of international work, Got it. So it works out that we kind of do it every other year. But I did it last year, so I'm getting two years in a row this year.
Matt Fox: 4:07
Cool.
Announcer: 4:08
So back to the University of.
David Wright: 4:08
Florida. Gators the big dance marathon and their basketball arena filled with thousands of kids.
Announcer: 4:16
Yeah, it's a great, great show.
David Wright: 4:17
That's fun. But the reason I brought that up is because the high school got bumped, because that was booked first, and it's unfortunate. But if you need, if you want to get entertainment for your grad night, grad night or your post-prom, now's the time to do it, because dates are. I'm already filling up, right, I probably already have 10, 10 dates schedule. Wow, that's great. And it's not even the end of the year yet. So so, yeah, check out, uh, you can look on the website and do a quote. You can get a quote in minutes. It's automated. Put in your information, the date and time and the venue and the size of your audience, and you will have a quote within minutes. So check that out. You can find me on social media.
David Wright: 4:56
Facebook and YouTube are both Motor City Hypnotist, and on Snapchat and Instagram, which are both Motor City Hypno. That is H-Y-P-N-O, yes. And as we've done, every episode going back, we're on episode 280 today, wow, 280. But on every episode going way back to number one, we've given away a free hypnosis guide. If you want your free guide, it's a PDF, a couple pages, not in-depth, but it gives you an overview of what hypnosis is, what it's not, clears up some myths and misconceptions. You can grab that for free. Text the word hypnosis to 313-800-8510.
David Wright: 5:34
And, the important thing, wherever you're listening. If you're on Facebook Live, that's awesome. I'm glad to have you with us as we record every Monday evening and you can be a part of the conversation, ask questions, give suggestions, whatever you want to do, but join us on Facebook Live as we record live on Mondays. If you're listening on a platform, wherever that is, whether it's Spotify or iTunes or Stitcher or whatever make sure that you subscribe, link, connect, whatever you have to do to get the show, and then it'll just pop into your feed automatically. You won't have to look for it. And the big thing is, wherever you're listening, leave a review. That is the most helpful thing you can do, and I know I'm guilty of this. I've had a lot of great service in different places and I always think, oh, I'm going to leave them a review and it doesn't happen. Oh, oops, I mean it has happened, but I should do it more is my point.
David Wright: 6:21
So yeah, leave a review. That would be greatly appreciated. All right, it is time. Here we go.
Announcer: 6:35
That's how winning is done.
David Wright: 6:37
Yes, it is so this is a fairly short story, but it's a good one because you know, we always like our stories when they have animals involved with them. Of course we do Correct statement Because we love animals and we love most people, but most, most yeah so here's the story a dog was rescued after it was found floating down an arizona canal on a submerged shopping cart matt, I'm just gonna, I'm gonna show you the picture.
Matt Fox: 7:03
I'm just letting that linger in the air.
David Wright: 7:05
I'm gonna show you the picture, and then I'm gonna read the rest of the story.
Matt Fox: 7:07
Oh my goodness okay, I got it, I got my visual got your visual.
David Wright: 7:11
I'll give you guys a visual if you're watching facebook live yep, there's the visual, there's the visual the laying on the shopping cart which is floating down a canal.
David Wright: 7:19
Okay. Passerbys alerted the humane society after they spotted the pup stuck in the middle of a canal in phoenix. An emergency animal medical technician from the non-profit was dispatched and, together with the help of the city's fire department, they were able to save the chihuahua mix. Okay. Video shows the team using a ladder and a rake to pull the dog out to safety. The senior pooch called Dorothea was assessed in the AHS pet ambulance, where she was found to be dehydrated, hungry and covered in ticks, but otherwise healthy. Wow. The 10-year-old pup was later examined by a veterinarian at the Zinn Animal Foundation, where she was found to only have sustained minor injuries. After the news reports of the pup's trauma, dorothy has since found a new home and is now living with the family in Youngtown.
Matt Fox: 8:15
Arizona, my goodness.
David Wright: 8:16
Yeah. So instead of a but you know these stories and we always talk about this, matt. With these stories, a lot, lot of times it just gives you enough information to start asking questions. I'm like how did he get on a shopping cart in the water? So get ready.
Matt Fox: 8:30
So instead of a bicycle it found a shopping cart. And instead of a tornado, it went rafting. Okay, I got it Okay.
David Wright: 8:40
But it looks like the shopping cart is like covered with something like moss or yeah, or something how long is dorothea on the shopping cart? And if you see the picture of dorothea, she's just laying there. Yeah, she's like oh, whatever, she's just got one one, one part of her her chin is down is laying down, she's just relaxing. So but anyway, it's a cool story. And and again I I really like to say oh, how did the dog get on this thing? I don't know, it just seems bizarre.
Matt Fox: 9:07
You know what Dorothea was going down the river.
David Wright: 9:12
She's in a van down by the river.
Matt Fox: 9:15
And she's going to herself. I'm popular, popular. Look at me, look at me. I just saw Wicked last week, so I got that music stuck in my head, so that is.
David Wright: 9:24
Saw Wicked last week, so I got that music stuck in my head, all right.
Announcer: 9:33
So that is our winner of the week. That's how winning is done.
Matt Fox: 9:39
Yes, it is. So back to it. I still got questions, but we'll get into today's episode.
David Wright: 9:45
And that's the frustration with a lot of these stories is like I I'm not questions, I want answers.
Matt Fox: 9:48
Yeah, I want answers, I demand answers we need to visit some of those uh stories that we've gone over and you need to do a deep dive to get some of these answers I know I really do, or at least bring these folks in.
David Wright: 10:02
We talked about that, and that's's something that I have failed on. I failed you, matt.
Matt Fox: 10:07
You haven't failed anything.
David Wright: 10:09
We'll get to that.
Matt Fox: 10:10
No, no, don't shut me up.
Announcer: 10:13
They have a brain like a chicken.
Matt Fox: 10:14
So episodes 300 through 5 is going to be all.
David Wright: 10:18
Okay, we'll try that, if we can, oh.
Announcer: 10:21
I like this in the background. What the fuck is it with you.
David Wright: 10:25
I'm just spitballing I know I get it I know, and that is something that we will do at some point. Yeah, we have to. So we're talking today. I want to give you resources because a lot of times when we talk about mental health, it's hard to break something down in these half-hour episodes that we do, because there, because there's so much and there's so much detail and conversation and things that go into it.
David Wright: 10:47
So one of the things that I've watched over the years or have kind of caught my eye, are a lot of these TED Talks. So I'm going to give you a list of TED Talks that you need to listen to Now. There are no specific order or amount or anything, but these are the ones I've watched that I thought, oh, this could be valuable for our listeners. So the first one is called there's no Shame in Taking Care of your Mental Health. It's from a gentleman called Sangu Dell he. So when stress got to be too much for this TED Talk fellow, he said he had to confront his own deep prejudice as a man talking about mental health. In a way, there's this unspoken and maybe it's spoken, I don't know, but there's this underlying idea and I don't know where it came from that men shouldn't be emotional, or men shouldn't worry about their mental health. They're tough and they can make it.
Matt Fox: 11:46
And they're, you know, can I, can I differ?
David Wright: 11:49
No, yeah, absolutely Well, yeah, you can, because it is different. That's not how it should be, unfortunately. That's how it. It's. That's how many men feel and that's the problem, right, yeah, feel, and that's the problem, right, yeah, um, so he talks about how he learned to handle anxiety in a society that's that is not comfortable with men expressing emotions, and that was his challenge. And he said being honest about how we feel doesn't make us weak, it makes us human. Okay, take a listen to that one that, especially if you're a man that I think that would resonate with with many of you out there.
David Wright: 12:24
Okay, the next TED talk is called why we Choose Suicide.
David Wright: 12:29
Now, it's pretty heavy and I know you have to be in the right frame of mind to listen to that, but it's very insightful and he kind of broadens our perceptions on what suicide is and the subject of suicide itself, and he also says that he's trying to make people understand not only the point of someone who is thinking about it or who has tried it or has succeeded in that, but how we need to reframe the way we talk about it, that it's not this black mark, it's not this thing that we shouldn't talk about. So I'll give you a couple of examples. I've had clients over the years of my 32 years of practice that have lost either loved ones, friends, family members to suicide, and many times they don't. They feel like they don't want to talk about it because it's too painful and they don't want to. It's almost like they're burdening others by even mentioning it, because if you're just if you're with somebody, even if you know them fairly well, that's not usually something that comes up in conversation.
Announcer: 13:35
Okay, you know what I mean.
David Wright: 13:36
It's just, people feel like we want to keep that a secret. It's kind of a bad thing. We don't. We don't want people to know that. But the whole point is that we want to talk about it. We want to be able to discuss how we're feeling, especially when it gets to that point when you're thinking of suicide or harming yourself. For sure One is from a gentleman called Gabor Mate M-A-T-E. Actually it's Mate, there's a thing on the E.
Announcer: 14:06
I forgot what you call it but whatever.
David Wright: 14:09
So he talks about the power that addiction has over people and he discussed the lengths of addictions and not just drugs. We're talking about addictions in general. One of the things he frames in his TED talk is the addiction to power as well, which is a little bit different from what you'd usually get, and people become addicted for many different reasons lack of love, the desire to cope or escape their situations or the things that they're going through. Okay, um, so the issue is is that when people start using substances, it's, it's not yeah, you could do it for fun, like when when you're growing up and you just start drinking. It's fun, you don't know it, you just you're learning it, you're just, you know, especially when you're younger. But but as you get older, if you're using alcohol or any other type of substance to avoid feeling depressed, anxious, whatever those symptoms are, that becomes a problem. So Matei is a specialist in terminal illnesses, chemical dependency and HIV positive patients, so he's very, very well-rounded. He's also a renowned author of books and a columnist known for his knowledge about attention deficit disorder, stress, chronic illness and parental relations. So definitely a good one to listen to. Yeah, especially if you have somebody you know or if you may be caught with it, or struggling with an addiction, okay, okay.
David Wright: 15:43
The next one is called Mental Health for All, by Involving All, and this is from Vikram Patel. So this is shocking. Nearly 450 million people are affected by mental illness worldwide. Think about that for a minute. 450 million people, that's a lot of people, uh-huh, in wealthy nations such as united states, most most industrialized nations, okay, probably less than half people. Half of the people receive treatment or seek treatment. Half of the 450 million, million Yep.
David Wright: 16:24
Okay. So there's a lot of people who are not getting help, but it's affecting them. In developing countries it's close to 90% non-treatment rate. Again, psychiatrists are in short supply, Professionals are in short supply. These are developing countries. It's not like the United States or Canada or Great Britain or Europe Not that Europe's a country, but those countries.
David Wright: 16:52
So he outlines a very promising approach and he's talking about getting members of the community involved in addiction and mental health interventions Not just addiction but and mental health interventions not just addiction but all mental health things. So really what he's doing, he wants the community to get more involved to help the people who need the help. So it's kind of like peer assistance, if you want to call it that.
Matt Fox: 17:14
So hear me out on this, because the only way that we're going to get the community involved is if the people that are going to help with this they need to want to Absolutely. And the boomer generation is starting to retire, they're starting to do other things or leaving their main, their jobs their retirement age yeah.
Matt Fox: 17:39
Who's going to pick that up? Because my generation is, you know, yours and my generation you know we're getting to the point where we're going to start getting ready to retire. We've had our careers right. So a lot of the folks that are in the industry already of mental health they're where you and I are. They're looking forward to that retirement part. Who's going to take up the who's going to?
David Wright: 18:02
yeah, that's a good question. I will say that in general and this is just. This is anecdotal, because I don't have data to back this- up, it's just from my own experience and I'm just asking questions.
David Wright: 18:20
No, it's, it's, and it's a it's, from what I gather, is that a lot more people that age are talking about mental health. They're more aware of it, they? There was no mention of mental health my entire time through school, elementary, junior, high, high school. It just nothing. Yeah, we knew it was there there, but we didn't. Yeah, I mean, you know I, you know I. I grew up in a divorced family. I, I had, you know, I had family members who were probably substance abusers or addicted. I, you know. But as a kid, you you know, even growing up, you just think, oh, this is just how things go well, you and I.
Matt Fox: 18:57
You and I come from the same background divorce family. You know there are a lot of ebbs and flows and growing up and trying to find your footing and thankfully we've both found our footing in that regard. We need the younger generation to start finding their footing and taking steps.
David Wright: 19:13
Well, and here's the challenge, because I'm going to refer back to the series that we just completed a couple of weeks ago the quarter life century crisis. So those people are in it, and if they're in it, it's hard for them to help other people. Right, that's probably where we're going to see a shortage of community people, to kind of take that on.
Matt Fox: 19:38
I'm a bit concerned with how we are going to see this world change when it comes to mental health, because the younger generation, they're super focused on mental health and they're expecting and some of them might be expecting for someone to step in. No one wants to step up.
David Wright: 19:57
Yeah well, I mean, but that's kind of the thing. You know, you see that a lot, even any job that we've had. You know they're the people who do the minimum.
Announcer: 20:06
Yeah, you're not wrong, they just do the bare minimum to get by.
Matt Fox: 20:08
You are not wrong.
David Wright: 20:09
They're not going to put themselves out, they're not going to put in 100% effort. Yeah, it's like I'm just going to do the minimum and I'm good, so I no, it's a great question and that's something that's fair. It's a fair concern. The next one is from a comedian. Her name is Ruby Wax.
David Wright: 20:29
Never heard of her, but Is it two Xs, no, one X. Okay, so she states diseases of the body garner sympathy except those of the brain. Why is that? Repeat that again, she said she says diseases of the body garner sympathy except those of the brain. Okay, why is that? So she does. And again, she's a comedian, so it is, it's a humorous thing, but but it addresses the issue in a kind of a real way. And she was diagnosed with clinical depression a decade ago and she talks about this in her standup routine and she wants, she's really urging people to put an end to the stigma of mental illness and by by being able to laugh at it and joke about it, at least it brings it into the conversation and awareness of people who are watching.
Matt Fox: 21:20
And in any illness and any disease, you there, you have to be able to laugh, because they say laughter is the best medicine. Right, and it's cliche, but it's right, it is correct, but you have to be able to laugh at it, to understand it and then to see ways that you can get better.
David Wright: 21:38
Well, and I will say in an abstract way, if you're able to laugh at it, you reduce its power. Yeah, you do, yeah.
Matt Fox: 21:45
It's like controlling the dream. It reduces its hold on you Exactly. It's like controlling the dream, absolutely.
David Wright: 21:51
The next one. I like the title on this one being Just Crazy Enough from Joshua Walters.
Matt Fox: 22:00
Your crazy matches, my crazy.
David Wright: 22:02
From Joshua Walters your crazy matches my crazy. So, josh Walters, he's bipolar, he's been diagnosed with bipolar disorder and he said he walks the line between mental illness and mental skillness. Okay, I would say it's a funny talk, but it's also thought-provoking because he brings up a lot of things. And he said what's the right balance between medicating craziness away and riding the manic edge of creativity and drive? Because think about that, think about what I'm saying there, in bipolar disorder there's a depressive and a manic that they cycle between not necessarily full cycles. They can be more depressed or more manic.
David Wright: 22:47
Every bipolar is different, but it's usually on a spectrum somewhere. Um, but his point is well taken, that that you need a little bit of craziness to do something daring in life, or to or to challenge yourself, or to do something that's unexpected, or maybe that you never thought you could do right, that you just try, yeah, so, so I, I like the thing that he says. You know, we want to have a balance between medicating the craziness away and using it for something that's good yeah, jeff dunham, yeah one of our favorite ventriloquists out there.
Matt Fox: 23:23
He just dropped a new holiday special on and on amazon prime and one of his characters, bubba jay.
David Wright: 23:30
He's got deep thoughts with bubba jay right, I used to love deep thoughts by jack handy. Do you remember that? From snl, I do. I love them.
Matt Fox: 23:37
I do remember jack handy. Um, just saw anyways. Um bubba jay has his deep thoughts and he goes. Do you think santa's bipolar?
David Wright: 23:51
that was that's it. That's, that's it. That's awesome. I love that guy.
Matt Fox: 23:55
I absolutely love jeff dunham and what he's done with his characters and how he's just continued to evolve uh, his uh repertoire.
David Wright: 24:02
If you go on, no, it's great so our next ted talker is eleanor longden, with his characters and how he's just continued to evolve his repertoire. If you go on, no, it's great. So our next Ted talker is Eleanor Longdon. So well, I'm just going to read this first couple lines of this snippet.
David Wright: 24:15
Eleanor Longdon was just like every other student heading to college, full of promise and without a care in the world. That was until the voices in her head started talking. Initially innocuous, these internal narrators became increasingly antagonistic and dictatorial, turning her life into a living nightmare. Wow, turning her life into a living nightmare. Wow. Diagnosed with schizophrenia, hospitalized and drugged, longden was discarded by a system that didn't know how to help her. Go on, longden tells the moving tale of her years long journey back to mental health and makes the case that it was through learning to listen to her voices that she was able to survive. Yeah, this is a really good one. I really enjoyed this one. So was a ted talk. Yeah, wow, the voices in my head from eleanor longden will you put the links to the ted.
Matt Fox: 25:04
Yeah, absolutely, in fact all of these links are are in, so I'll make sure that uh yeah, I'll make sure jamie gets a hold of those yeah, yeah, that that what I'm to post on the show I'm very interested in and listening to.
David Wright: 25:16
No, absolutely talk there, yeah, um, who's the next one? The next one? I? I like the titles that are like the title the voices in my head. That's a great title for ted talk, because it's like, oh, that sounds interesting. What was the other great title that we just looked at? Um, be just crazy enough that's another great title yeah, this one the title's not. I don't love the title, but it is a good.
David Wright: 25:45
It's a good read um or good watch or a good watch, rather yes, because you're watching on, typically, youtube. Okay, probably Toward, a new understanding of mental health from Thomas Insel. So again, I'm just going to read this, this, this first line, because it's it's, it's kind of powerful. Today, thanks to better early detection, there are 63% fewer deaths from heart disease than there were 30 years ago.
Matt Fox: 26:14
Oh, that's good yeah Again awareness early detection technology medicine.
David Wright: 26:20
Yeah, Thomas Insel is the um, the director of the national institutes of mental health awareness. You don't go on Yep, Um. And he said I can't we do the same for depression and schizophrenia? The first step is is we do the same for depression and schizophrenia? The first step is finding it and getting it addressed early in life. So here's the thing and this is a general thing Again, there are exceptions to every rule, but most of the time, with severe mental illnesses like schizophrenia, like bipolar disorder, typically the onset is early 20s.
David Wright: 26:55
That that's kind of the. The average works out to the early 20s. Now it could be a little bit earlier, it could be a bit later. I'm not saying it doesn't happen to somebody who's 60 as well, it's just those are outliers, but typically serious mental illness issues come up in in that young 20 range. Um.
David Wright: 27:14
So his thing is trying to develop a new avenue of research to look at these things when people are kids and teenagers, to try to address it beforehand. And his big thing and I love this, because he wants the term mental disorders to go away he said we want to do away with that. What are we going to do? We want to call it brain disorders, which is exactly what it is Okay. Because, again, with the term mental disorder, there's always this stigma attached to it and people feel like they're less of a human being if they have a mental disorder. Less of a human being if they have a mental disorder. Now, if they've just assumed and reframed it or restated it, as I have a brain disorder, I don't know, it's a little more palpable, a little more acceptable.
Matt Fox: 28:03
But I hear the word challenges thrown a lot, thrown around a lot. They have challenges.
David Wright: 28:09
Sure Well, doesn't everyone? Yeah, but to make it even broader.
Matt Fox: 28:14
They're not saying it's his brain, it's a brain disorder.
David Wright: 28:17
But here's the thing I say to clients and and and I've said it quite often over the years, because they get frustrated and they're like well, I'm, I'm, I'm a failure, I can't do anything. Right, I, I don't. And I said listen, you have to give yourself a break. Your brain is broken, right? Your brain doesn't work the way it's supposed to.
Matt Fox: 28:37
I've heard the terminology you know, especially in this new role that I had that I'm now working in, and it was broken down really easily to me when you're switching companies or what have you? Yeah, you got to give yourself some grace, which I thought was a brilliant way to put that. It's going to be challenging and you have to give yourself a break. Give yourself some grace to learn Absolutely.
David Wright: 29:02
And I will say this when I work with clients, they're so most of the time. If they're depressed or anxious, typically that's going to affect their job, it's going to affect their relationships, their family, and they always have this underlying feeling of failure. That's typically what happens with clients and I have to tell them. I'll bring up a great movie reference. Go for it, give me a second, got it? No, it just left my mind as soon as I said it Good Will Hunting. Yeah, yeah, yeah. The scene near the end, okay, when he just says to him it's not your fault, yeah, it's not your fault, it's not your fault, stop it man, it's not your fault, stop it, man. He's like don't fuck with me, not you, yeah, but he's finally getting it. Yeah, because even in that scene actors but these things happen in real life and even the first couple of times robin williams tells his character, tells uh, um, what's his face? Uh, will, matt damon, yeah, matt damon, matt damon go on, sorry another movie.
David Wright: 30:06
Yeah, fuck yeah couldn't help it.
Announcer: 30:14
Great, what kind of radio show?
David Wright: 30:16
is this gaming okay, anyway. So when he says to him the first couple of times, he says it's not your fault, he's like, yeah, I know, but he didn't, he didn't get, it wasn't in there, yeah, and I love that scene because he just keeps. He just keeps saying the same thing. It's like no, you need to get this, you need to believe this and and I will say to most of my clients, it's not your, it's not your fault, it's not your fault. Your brain doesn't work the way it was intended to. And again, going back, 450 million people in the world suffering from a mental disorder and only half of them seek out treatment In less than half of non-developed countries. So you can see that a lot of people's brains are broken and it's not, it's not, it's not of any fault of yours, it's a physiology, it's biology, it's the way. It's the way your brain processes things. So just a little teaser, because we're, we're, we're going to, we're going to close out this this episode, but next episode we're talking about changing brain function. That will help you feel better. Next episode, we're going to talk about the benefits of ketamine. Now, we just covered this maybe six or eight months ago, but I'm revisiting this for a specific reason and we'll talk about it in the next episode. Why? But I'll tell you why this, this is a an effective tool for changing the brain chemistry, if you're changing thinking, if utilized correct, absolutely. That. That's always the catch with everything. Yes, if done correctly, got it. Yep, all righty folks.
David Wright: 31:50
Uh, before we leave, oh, here we go. Somebody needs a home, needs a home. Who is it? Who is it? It's Knight Rider, knight Rider. Knight Rider is a lab mix. He's 75 pounds, a pretty big dog. He is dog friendly, cat friendly, is unknown Kids older than 10. His activity, excuse me, his activity level is high, but Knight Rider needs a home. To the camera, to the camera, it's a black lab.
David Wright: 32:19
It's a lab mix Look at that face.
Matt Fox: 32:20
That is a lab mix. Definitely it's got the nose of the I'm sorry the ears of the lab, the eyes. The snout is not quite lavish. It looks a little bit of a yeah, look at that face.
David Wright: 32:33
So Knight Rider needs a home. Detroitdogrescuecom. Adopt. He's right there, he's waiting for someone. I'm on my way, michael. He's Lab Mix, so if you want a bigger dog, this is perfect for you. Oh nice, come on, kit, let's go there, we go. Knight Rider Love it. I don't know what that.
Matt Fox: 32:56
It didn't make a sound.
David Wright: 32:57
It did, but I can't yeah it will go back and forth, but my brain is like a Cylon. Whoa, whoa. I know man, I probably showed you this. I was in, I was in kit.
Matt Fox: 33:03
No, yes, okay, well, digress later.
David Wright: 33:08
Okay, I'll tell you the story.
Announcer: 33:09
Well, next episode okay, remind me okay all right, all right, all righty folks.
David Wright: 33:16
Night rider needs a home. Thank you, he's waiting. All righty folks, thanks for checking in. Those of you on facebook live, stick around. We're doing another episode. Those of you listening to audio or whatever platform you're on, skip ahead to the next episode, or it will be there on the next tuesday or thursday. In the meantime, change your thinking, change your life, laugh hard, run fast, be kind, we'll see you next time.