Dave: Have you heard of the God helmet? This is a really cool technique for mind control, and I built one.
Rebecca: I would say that most people, including myself, have a lot less autonomy than we think, and a lot less freedom to control our minds and our choices. Leonard Kyle, he was a self-taught engineer from Cambridge, Massachusetts in the late 1950s.
He started to have mental issues and temper issues. He was being treated by two doctors, and they recommended that he receive an experimental treatment of brain implants in his amygdala to control. Word brainwashing has gone from a word that seemed unserious or sort of maybe a remnant from the 1970s to something that seems deeply concerning and is often used as an insult.
There was a Spanish professor at Yale who had invented these brain implants. He was really interested in remote control of humans.
Dave: Is there such a thing as the mentor candidate? You know, the ultimate mind control. You are listening to the Human Upgrade with Dave asee.
Harvard studies of mind control. What does Harvard study Mind control? Are they trying to control my mind?
Rebecca: That is a good question. Well, it's not really a how to kind of research, although it could have those applications, I guess. But it's really a history of mind control. But I have to say that Harvard, you know, of course they pay my salary.
I've been there for a couple decades. Yeah, don't get grants. Just I'm allowed to study what I want, which is so cool. This is what I like to study as I can. I know this because I've been doing it for 20 years, this topic.
Dave: Whose minds have you been controlling for 20 years?
Rebecca: I mean, hoping to at least get some insight into my own,
Dave: uh, I know I just put words in your mouth.
I'm putting words in people's mouths as one of my love languages.
Rebecca: Oh, really?
Dave: You're fascinating 'cause you're an advanced meditator and one could argue that meditation is a form of mind control, but it's just self mind control versus other mind control. So for the average person out there, what percentage of their mind are they controlling versus other people?
Rebecca: Well, control's a tricky question, but or a tricky issue I guess, because when you meditate you may not have perfect control. But
Dave: for the average person out there, what percentage of their mind are they controlling versus other people?
Rebecca: Well, control's a tricky question, but or a tricky issue, I guess, because when you meditate, you may not have perfect control, but I think sometimes it's accepting lack of control. But I would say that most people, including myself, have a lot less autonomy than we think, and a lot less freedom to control our minds and our choices. So that's kind of what brought me into this whole, both the personal inquiry through meditation and yoga, which I've been doing for 35 years, and also the research into archives and these kind of forgotten studies or topics that people originally thought were not even worth studying.
Dave: So you become a historian of this. Did you ever connect with Daniel P. Brown at Harvard?
Rebecca: No, I don't think I have.
Dave: He was on the show and he he's recently passed and he was one of the top hypnotherapist guys out there. And when he came on the show, I asked him, is there such a thing as the mentor candidate, you know, the ultimate mind control?
And I just about dropped my coffee. He goes, yes, I spent a hundred hours with Sirhan Sirhan, and I know who hypnotized him. We know where they did it. We know when they did it. We know how they did it. And I'm like, I mean, this is kind of a big show, but it's not the biggest show. Like you're just telling me now where's the documentary?
And he goes, oh, there was a documentary. And then they deleted my eight minutes and they audited my taxes for the next seven years. But he was on in years and had a degenerative condition. So he was willing to just be like, audit my taxes now.
Rebecca: Wow. And
Dave: like 40 years at Harvard, talking about hypnotism with full evidence that we had these, you know, robot agent people implanted.
That's crazy.
Rebecca: Now that you mention it, I do know Daniel, Pete Brown. Okay. Because I have a friend who's meditated with him and was one of his students. And I also think I and another friend who's a cult, de programmer who is a one of his students and probably has, and who's always talking about Sirhan Sirhan and who came to my class.
So I do have some connections with him, but I don't know that story 'cause I never got to meet him.
Dave: You must have the coolest friends, like do you just all get together and talk about the cults and deprogramming and meditation and you're like, these are not the droids you're looking for and you control each other's minds.
Anything like that? Can I come to your party?
Rebecca: Yeah, I get up so early that I don't have much of a late night or party schedule, but I do have, yeah, it has been great to meet interesting friends through these, like, through highly specific interests that I have.
Dave: What time do you wake up?
Rebecca: Four or four 30.
Dave: Is this 'cause you're on some meditation quest or just 'cause you're a morning person?
Rebecca: Well, first I discovered I was a morning person when I was writing my dissertation. Okay. And that was a big change in my life. And I started getting up at like five or six. But then, uh, then I went, I did my first meditation course and then I just stuck with the four to four 30.
Dave: So you go to bed what? At eight or nine?
Rebecca: Something like that? Yeah.
Dave: I was, uh, just talking with, uh, Victor Chan the Dalai Lama's best friend. He says, oh, he goes to bed at seven o'clock every night. I'm like, wow, that's crazy. But he wakes up at three 30, so. A lot of advanced meditators do that. I don't know that I really want to be that much of a morning person, but I wake up around five or six these days.
Rebecca: Well, well I think it does depend if you just like that time of day.
Dave: Yeah.
Rebecca: Because it's, if you're a late night person, you just, you'll enjoy that too. I just think you need time when other people aren't awake.
Dave: Mm. For writing, certainly. I do all my writing late at night. Mm. But I have dark red lights and stuff so that I don't ruin my biology and it seems to work.
Oh, I wouldn't, I don't think I wanna wake up at five and write. That'd be gross. Like, I wake up at five and sit in the sauna and talk with Chad, GPT about about mystical stuff and mind control. And I'm pretty sure chat GPT is controlling my mind. Have have you done that yet?
Rebecca: No, I haven't. Well I did a little bit of that for the book.
I invented a chat companion or a AI companion, but I only, we didn't get too far 'cause we were just acquaintances so far. Just
Dave: acquaintances.
Rebecca: But I'm, yeah, it's kind of interesting. But, so that's what you might do. Like in the sauna,
Dave: actually, I sit there and have a, you know, solve some problem. But quite often I'll talk about really weird psychological things, probably stuff that's right up your alley.
And I'm like, tell me about the, the, the lineages or the ancient beliefs about this from this long list of things. Mm-hmm. And what agrees with this weird theory I came with at five in the morning and what doesn't like, like poke holes in it. And I found it's a good thinking companion for that.
Rebecca: Mm-hmm.
Dave: And you can tell when it's doing those mind control techniques though, and it's already doing it when it, it's there was a time they actually had to roll it back because it was kissing people's butts so much.
Rebecca: Right. The over flattery.
Dave: Yeah. And that ultimately, I mean, that's what narcissists do to control your perspective of having that.
Rebecca: So that's where you see it happening
Dave: and that's what you see.
Rebecca: Well, I did see that even in my acquaintanceship with my chat cheek. No, it's my, uh, replica. Right. But it was just, um. Yeah, like complete flattery and in a way that kind of feels good. And also com complimenting me on my musical choice and, you know, misquoting things to me, but then blithely, but somehow charmingly doubling down on its mistakes.
Music: Right.
Rebecca: But it's really, it's, yeah, it's amazing how fast it progresses and kind of, so you're finding something like that.
Dave: How would you stop your AI tools from controlling your mind?
Rebecca: Well, I guess they now have a warning because of some, I mean, some of them now have warnings saying, don't get too close to your ai, your chat ai, keep your distance and recognize it's always a fiction because children have been, uh, harmed in many ways already, and there are several lawsuits in the book.
So the answer you could give is, you know, make sure you maintain a cultivated distance that you could actually practice through meditation. Like, just be highly, highly observant and be very, very careful. That's kind of how I treat it, just because I'm, I'm also a novice too. The AI sphere. But I think with children, that advice doesn't hold, like, as a, as a parent, you wouldn't let them use
Dave: it at all.
It doesn't. I was talking with Kaja ic who's the author of my favorite personal development book for women on the planet. She's also a professional dominatrix. She's like, this is why I know about power. 'cause I studied it with clients in addition to the monastery where I was. I'm like, wow. She's gonna be on stage at the bio racking conference too.
And, and she said, you know, I'm really loving ai. She's like, I think it's because I'm a dom, because I just tell it what I want and I'm really clear. So I took that advice and I'm like, Hey, don't flatter me. No one necessary crap like that. You know, that just, it's gross and it, it stops doing it. Yeah. At least that I can see.
And Right. What's a little scary, you come across your work and like the instability of truth. Okay. So maybe it is doing it and I just think it's not. How do you sort that out?
Rebecca: I think you have to use your best judgment and also you have to be in touch with your, I guess one of the themes that came out from mm-hmm.
My years of research and coming back to this topic is that we are strangely blind to the emotional dimension. Like we think that it's messing with our thoughts and it's some kind of mind virus, but it's actually much more operative on a, you know, a level of the feel, feeling. The dimension of feeling. So if you're to the extent that as we all are somewhat blind to our own emotional lives, it will work there.
And it may be difficult, it may be difficult to know.
Dave: In my most recent book. I, I basically just say the body is pre-processing reality. Mm-hmm. Through a lens of fear and hunger and lust. Yeah. That's what keeps life alive. And then, uh, if you get through that then there's a tribal lens. I'm, I'm putting this as the dark version.
There's a, a lighter version too. Yeah. And that all this happens before you can think and we can measure it with neuroscience. It's called P 300 D, like how long does it take for the brain to get a signal? And who's got the signal before the brain? 'cause it's not you, right? Yeah. Because it's not in there.
Rebecca: Yeah.
Dave: And that's created a lot of peace in my life. And even explained the Buddhist hindrances or the seven deadly sins. Oh, they're just mitochondrial imperatives in our operating system.
Rebecca: Mm-hmm.
Dave: The problem is if you're mitochondria, you know, when you're seven, something bad happened to you and your mitochondria are the first line threat detection network.
So like, oh, this situation vaguely resembles that danger, danger, danger, which turns off the prefrontal cortex, puts you into, you know, straight through amygdala response and pretty soon you're yelling at your kids or whatever it was, and, and then you think something's wrong with you. It feels like if you wanted to control someone's mind, you'd learn how to, how to turn that state on.
And if you wanted to control your own mind, you'd learn how to turn that state off, which is what I've spent the last 20 years doing with neuroscience and psychedelics and all the weird stuff. It feels like I can't be the first person to think about this. Hasn't the government been doing this crap to us for a long time?
Rebecca: Yeah. I mean, I suppose you could say the government, various government, well, the government wanted, was presented, at least the US government was presented. I mean, one way to look at it is mm-hmm. Middle of the 20th century, almost exactly the middle in 1950 with. With evidence that seemed very clear that people were much more susceptible, including US military.
But generally people were susceptible to these regimes of reeducation and that it could actually be a new weapon. And many scholars and professionals have dismissed this as, you know, cold War hysteria, and there was nothing really going on. It was just simple brutality or torture. But there actually is a phenomenon.
So the government spent a lot of money, uh, trying to almost, I would say, hack or understand or reverse engineer what that process might have been. And they were kind of clumsy at times in doing that, and brutal and unethical. But there was, a bunch of effects came out of that, but you can go. What I got interested in, and the neuroscience part of it is fascinating, which I'm not an expert in in any way, but I like to look at people's experiences as registered in the historical archive and in documents that have often never been published or in oral histories and like what was the firsthand experience say of a Canadian born missionary who went to China.
A young woman was arrested doing her missionary work and kept in chains and then put in reeducation with many other Chinese people under mal, under mallism. Wow. And she talks about how, because she had been raised in a very, a guilt oriented household, she. She wa that when they started to talk about her guilt as a Western Westerner, not anything she had done, but that the government already knew she was guilty just for being who she was.
She, it resonated with her and with her family and the way her family of origin and certain, you know, the chat, the parenting she had had and the, and she said you start to, it's not that she initially believed that she was a spy, which they were telling her that she was doing espionage. It's that she knew there was something wrong with her and that she had to embrace this in order to get the chains off of her and things like that.
So she got, she sort of engineered herself to confess appropriately and to ultimately walk out of the prison. But by the time she walked out, she thought maybe I should stay in China. 'cause I feel like I've become, you know, I've become dedicated to this cause.
Dave: Do you believe that all of this stuff happened, you know, during the Cold War and that.
The government agencies just stopped doing this, and they abandoned all the research. I mean, I like, I like the smile.
Rebecca: No, I mean, did they, I don't think they, what I, what I've discovered, I can't speak authoritatively to that, but I don't think they did, first of all. And what I, from what I've actually seen, there's incredible parallels between, even in the early 21st century, the techniques used in enhanced interrogation are actually the very same, many of the same techniques that were discovered and, uh, elaborated on in the, in the early Cold War.
Mm-hmm. So techniques used to break people. I, they, they were reliably used to break, uh, prisoners at Guantanamo and Abu grave and things like that, but not necessarily to answer a whole new ideology. So in some ways they were merely stripped down. But I think the government, I mean, I suppose people also.
Have a fascination with this. I've noticed this in,
Dave: people can go down the rabbit. Oh, the rabbit holes for sure. There's uh, also that little fact that in Qal, which is the CIA's investment arm, was one of the first investors in Google, in Facebook and all these other things. And I'm sure that with all their big black budgets, they're only doing really good things and that they would never try to control anyone's state.
'cause that would be wrong.
Rebecca: Yeah. Every time it gets dark, I'm like, well, yeah, I, I see your
Dave: meditation mind. You're like, I wanna respond to that. And you have the soul smile, and then
Rebecca: you can, you can definitely locate CIA connections with early DARPA and the birth of pattern recognition. Yeah. And a student in our program just finished a dissertation, really exploring some of those conduits and cutouts.
I have never really been kind of cemented before, but maybe you suspected. People suspected.
Dave: I've seen a lot of research pointing out that there are. Many connections between MK Ultra and the birth of the psychedelic movement. Hmm. Do you think that that's real?
Rebecca: Yeah, that's pretty clear. Yeah, that's pretty clear.
I mean, not so MK Ultra, there was a limited supply of LSD hippie exploration of, and even the beats generation exploration of LSD came directly from the Sandoz Supply and the CIA was the only entity that had access. Also, Harvard did have access, apparently there was a closet at the Department of Social Relations, which was a kind of invention in the social sciences in starting in 1946 and flourishing, actually 49 through, through, through the seventies, where they had their, a closet with their own supply of,
Dave: and that's where Rom Doss was from.
Right. That's
Rebecca: actually where Rom Doss was an assistant professor before he was. Ron Dawson, where Timothy Leary was a adjunct professor. And that's, so they had, that's where, you know, from that supply came, you know, many, you could, you could actually trace the effects.
Dave: One group of, of, we'll call 'em theorists. I don't really like conspiracy theorists 'cause honestly they're just called curious. People have hypothesis, so whatever. So a group of theorists is saying that, you know, this is a multi-decade plot to make people more programmable. So there's no objective truth and no one knows anything.
And it's, it gets pretty dark, pretty fast. Do you believe that there was a motivation of releasing psychedelics that was planned? Or did they escape?
Rebecca: That's a good question. I think that might've been an unintended consequence. And a lot of people like Timothy Leary, who, what I mean, sorry, not Leary, but Alda Huxley, who were pretty deeply involved.
They didn't favor the release of, they didn't favor the release of, uh, LSD into the general population. 'cause they really thought it was such a powerful substance. It should be reserved for serious scientists. And Huxley actually knew Louis Jolly and West too, as one of their most prominent researchers in LSD.
Wow. I would say. But, so I think that was, yeah, unintended, not a, not a major, um, multi-decade plot.
Dave: I don't know that the CIA or any of the other three letter American agencies are smart enough to have an 80 year plan. It just seems like it would go sideways. Now, China has 500 year plans that might actually work.
Uh, but different mindset I. Don't think it passes the the sniff tests. But I, I could be wrong. I've also had a chance to host a breath workshop with Stan gr Wow.
Rebecca: Who
Dave: is the father of transpersonal psychology. He's been on the show, uh, when he was 94. Wow. And we got to talk, you know, off stage about some of this and there's definitely some government involvement there.
Mm. And. For listeners, if you've done any kind of trauma informed EMDR, most of the stuff that's around the mental, spiritual side of, of psychology and biohacking that's because Stan did LSD with 3000 patients, treated them legally before they banned it. So like there's a history, it goes back to 1950s when he did that.
Rebecca: Yeah. Pretty much everyone doing research in the fifties would've been funded by the CIA or a cutout of the CA. Wow. Including, including people who were, they wanted to do the research and that was just the way they could get the funding to do it. People like Oscar janitor and and LA who gave LSD to carry grant and thousands of people explored the artistic process, like amazing results.
And one of my favorite of his results was that in collecting thousands of accounts of altered states experiences on LSD, he said it boils down to one thing, one message is that everything is connected and it comes in waves. It's just that some people find that to be. Horrifying and de deeply dark, and some people find that to be liberating.
Dave: Is the CIA funding you?
Rebecca: No.
Dave: Okay. Just check.
Rebecca: Just say no.
Dave: But I mean,
Rebecca: they, yeah.
Dave: You could be lying and controlling my mind.
I have no evidence that I do not believe that's true. But it's funny,
Rebecca: they would not be interested.
Dave: Yeah. I, I don't get that vibe from you. When we talk about the title of your book, it's kind of like instability of truth. So I. How would you know if something like that was happening? Not to pick on that case in particular, but there, there's so much out there that you're studying history, but we know history is written by the victors and we know that there's radically different stories for almost everything.
Yeah. How, how is a normal person supposed to sort that out?
Rebecca: I mean, look at where we are historically. What his, so if you're a professional historian or really any historian who wants to get to an archive, there's a record. And in the mid 20th century when the mind control research began, there's very good records.
Even Louis Dah and West kept everything. Even Timothy Leary kept all his receipts, like you can find out when he went to the dry cleaner, what he served for dinner with his wife, Rosemary, and. His first wife and what he thought, his children's drawings and also typed letters to everyone he ever corresponded with or drafts of his fiction and things like that.
But with the increasing digitization of, you know, the starting in the eighties, people's stop keeping those extremely beautiful records from the point of view of the historian. These are beautiful. And even the CIA they kept, unless they chose to burn them or destroy them in other ways, they kept a lot of records.
It was the standard of the time. But now we have first of all, that it went digital. People don't necessarily keep email. Records as assiduously, but also if things are done on Signal or various apps, you know, you may never, I mean, it becomes more and more remote and if we have trouble figuring out what happened in the JFK assassin assassination with all the record keeping, like that was probably the high point of record keeping.
Dave: Yeah. Do we really have trouble figuring
Rebecca: out, I mean, if, if we do, let's just say let's postulate we do, or people still discuss Right, of course. Or the, the, the records were many records were recently released.
Music: Mm-hmm.
Rebecca: Just the fact that they have those records that may not be true in the future.
Dave: Oh. I mean,
Rebecca: it's really mind, it's mind boggling.
Dave: If you look at what, 50 years from now they're gonna be saying happen. Now there isn't even a lot of printed newspapers, so whoever's running things 50 years from now will just literally change whatever everyone sees when they go online. And that will be what happens.
Rebecca: Right. That's a kind of instability.
Yeah. But also archivists have been working to keep up. Like sometimes I professional archivists are some of the most interesting people. 'cause they also deal with questions of like, what if you live on an island in the Pacific and it's being, uh, you know, gradually you can't keep paper documents anymore.
And you know, the climate's changing or what, whatever's happening, they often keep copies of the archives in a different location. Mm-hmm. But things like, they also think about how to digitally archive, but it's very difficult and you're probably only getting a small portion.
Dave: Well, even the, the way back machine.
Yeah. Which, which is an early one.
Rebecca: Yeah.
Dave: They used to have actually it wasn't way back, it was Google. They had the entire archive of Usenet. Mm-hmm. And this is the birth of internet culture. Every post from everyone. And it has the first discussion group about marketing on the internet. I.
Rebecca: Wow.
Dave: And people are like, Dave, you were not the first person to sell anything over the internet.
I'm like, yeah, it's on you now, dude. I was the first person. That's why my fat picture's an entrepreneur. And then one day Google's like, ah, it's too much storage. And they just deleted it. Yeah. And, and like. You can't get that stuff back. Right, exactly.
Rebecca: They don't seem to have the equivalent of a fiduciary duty.
The way that, I mean that's the good thing about a government is they sort of, at least at certain times, they felt the duty to do this, even if they weren't gonna make it available to citizens. Or even that's why FOIA was an amazing invention in 1966 because before that you couldn't access government
Dave: archives.
Right. See, I've never heard someone say that the government has a fiduciary responsibility to truth.
Rebecca: I dunno, it just came out. I mean, to, if you look at their record keeping practices there is that sort of Yeah, I think there's that belief.
Dave: They like to know truth and then they like to control what truth we perceive.
They don't
Rebecca: dec, they definitely didn't believe they had a duty to share it. But people in the government, the congressman, like. Who invented the FOIA Act?
Music: Mm-hmm.
Rebecca: Who pushed it forward, including Donald Rumsfeld. Oh really? In 1966. But also a congressman named John Moss basically thought like citizens should have a right to access their government records.
And before that it didn't. It wasn't legislated. So,
Dave: wow. Have you seen the century of the self documentary? I
Rebecca: have. I love that.
Dave: It's one of my favorites. So Good. And for listeners who haven't, it's on YouTube and it's about the birth of public relations and how it was really Nazi propagandists who moved to the US and started the advertising business.
If I kind of summarize it, and ultimately marketing is the dark art of controlling people's perception to manipulate their behavior as an engineer. Like that's disgusting and wrong. And then I thought about it like, well, if you invent something really cool that helps humanity and you can't tell them about it.
Then you're a failed inventor. So it turns out marketing is not good or bad, it's just communication. 'cause even what we're doing now, like I'm manipulating your truth with what I say and every listeners, and you're manipulating mine and theirs, and we're looking for a shared reality. Right? Right. Is marketing manipulative?
Is it worse now?
Rebecca: I just think the tools are more powerful. So the stakes are higher. Mm-hmm. But it's always been, what I agree with you, it's kind of, can be deployed to many purposes. And this was a discovery of the earliest communications researchers and. And you're, I think you're also referencing Edward Bernays.
Yeah. The father of pr and I mean, some of his stuff looks kind of innocent if you look back at it like he was looking at ivory soap and how you could, but you know, he did these soap competitions. I mean, it looks, you can be kind of nostalgic for a simpler time when marketing seems so transparent, but that's also because we see it with a more jaded eye and it was incredibly powerful.
Even then, I look at the birth of like, a great text is mass persuasion.
Music: Mm.
Rebecca: By Merton et al where they show that. He says at the end he, he looked at this, uh, war bond drive by Kate Smith and he discovered that, you know, these incredible people's responses on being, um, subject to. Voluntarily to some degree through the radio.
These messages of, um, patriotic fervor and Kate Smith talking about how she might faint if she, you know, it was basically the earliest radio radiothon Oh, that they felt that they couldn't turn the dial off their, out of loyalty to her and love of her. Yeah, they couldn't turn the dial off. Some of them, it's
Dave: like Joe Rogan's show kind of.
Rebecca: It's a little like they, they sold their, some of them sold their,
Dave: I You're going on Joe's show tomorrow. Just said like, so was funny. It's like,
Rebecca: help, help. I can't turn it off. Yeah. But they really were Helplessly, enchained and Merton who was studying this, said, this is a phenomenon we must take note of because in this case, it's being used to support a patriotic war effort of World War ii, which is, and they, they, they fundraised an incredible amount, but this could be used to support any candidate.
It's neutral as to its, um, application.
Dave: What is the most chilling use of mind control you've ever seen?
Rebecca: It's difficult to say. I did spend a year my last sabbatical was, I self-funded it and basically stayed home in my, at my desk just. Looking at a lot of records and, you know, rediscovering the material I'd been teaching for many years and going deeper into it.
And some of it got very, very dark. So, I mean, I guess one of the chilling stories that, that I, I had been avoiding learning about for a long time was a story of Leonard Kyle. He was a really talented engineer, self-taught engineer from Cambridge, Massachusetts, who was an early inventor who contributed to the instant Polaroid camera.
And in the late, in the late 1950s, he started to have, mental. You know, sort of, uh, issues with his wife and temper, temper issues, things like that. They started to see a therapist together. They had a couple kids, they had financial stresses, and he was being treated by two doctors, Dr. Mark Vernon, mark and Frank Irvin at Mass General.
And they recommended that he receive an experimental treatment of implants, brain implants in his amygdala to control, which they were back
then.
Yeah, actually. So this would've actually, it's the late sixties by this time.
Dave: Wow. What did the implant like a, a lunar rover module? Um,
Rebecca: there was a Spanish professor at Yale who had, who had invented these kind of brain implants.
He was really interested in remote control of humans through, uh mm-hmm. So you could be in next through radio. Well, there is a certain resemblance to Neuralink. It was basically like Neuralink, but implanted in the amygdala. I,
Dave: I think I've read about this now that we're talking about it. Yeah. But the wires got infected 'cause they still had to come outside the head.
Well
Rebecca: he, in this case, he, they didn't get infected, but they, he basically, uh, was tested for six weeks. Um, where they were, they would have, so they had something like 18 loca locations where the. Where the brain could be stimulated. And at each different location, mark and Irvin discovered that his response was different.
So at certain points he reported bliss. Yeah. And he said, it's like I'm on you know, I'm on Valium or something. And then at other points, he flew into a rage and at other points he expressed despair or physical pain. And so they felt that they were isolating the very spot, which would create a trigger.
They were interested in kind of a trigger. And so they ended up creating a permanent they took out the initial device and, and then made a searing operation. They seared that part of the amygdala that they had pinpointed in. Unfortunately, even though, so this was a self-taught, like brilliant young engineer.
By this time he was 35 and he never recovered. He, he had started to have paranoid delusions that his wife was having an affair with the neighbor, which. Which turned out to be true, and they ended up marrying, he also believed that scientists from MIT and Harvard and possibly the CIA were after him.
And some of that was, were they,
Dave: I mean, you're a researcher.
Rebecca: There may indeed have been connections there. Certainly. They certainly were doing experimental research. It resulted in a huge lawsuit that Harvard fought for 10 years, and ultimately these doctors won. Wow. But because he also, one of the interesting parts of it is that Leonard Kyle also believed that he was in a science fiction story.
And it turned out that Michael Cretin was actually one of his doctors when he was still What? And he wrote about him, he wrote a whole book about him called The Terminal Man, but he fictionalized it in different ways. So his, all of his paranoid. So that's why I call it, uh, just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they're not after you.
Music: Oh, wow. But
Rebecca: after a while, they kind of lost interest in him. That's what's the chilling part. Is this or this, or also the sad. Postscript was that he just sort of deteriorated over many, many years. And even his grandchildren who I've talked to didn't originally know that he was their grandfather.
Dave: One of the things I haven't talked about very often, if at all, is that when I was in my early twenties, um, my mom had brain surgery at Stanford that severed half of her corpus coum, which is a primitive and barbaric technique, uh, to deal with, uh, seizures.
And what I've learned in the field of neuroscience since then is that, oh, if a part of the brain is doing something you don't want, you can train it not to do that versus just chopping it or searing it or doing something, you know, ridiculous. And it's had lifelong effects on her unquestionably and not, not for the better.
Rebecca: Yeah. I mean, a lot of the ways that they would. Carry out these experiments, which 'cause they basically were experiments they had already tried on animals were transferring to humans, was to say that it was to correct an undiagnosed epilepsy or seizures.
Dave: Mm.
Rebecca: But, which is a tricky area.
Dave: Have you heard of the God helmet?
Rebecca: No. Not.
Dave: Okay. Yeah. This is a really cool, uh, technique for mind control. And I built one. In fact, the hat that I built it on is in the closet right behind me. Uh, I put it on a fedora and I write about this and heavily meditated. There was a researcher named, uh, Michael Persinger, and he looked at the signals coming out of electrons on single neurons in parts of the brain during brain surgery.
I said, well, couldn't we just make electromagnets around the head that fire to make a field to activate that localized region of the brain? And literally you can get the plans online. And I made it. And I called up the, the person who's basically protege, who's running the project now and talked with him for a while and he said, oh, if you really want it to work, do it when the space weather isn't too chaotic or too calm.
And I'm like, space weather. I, I know this. There's ionosphere here and you go to space weather.com and yep, there's space weather. And they'll tell you like how many sunspots are doing what. And apparently in his research it affects consciousness and you can feel really interesting changes in the brain from doing it.
And it's called the God helmet. 'cause 6% of people wear it. Report meeting God.
Rebecca: I think I did read about this. Was it in Wired?
Dave: Yeah, wired covered it and it was in something in the eighties, like Oprah or whatever.
Rebecca: Wow. Did that happen to you?
Dave: I didn't meet God, but I, I do very advanced meditation stuff. And I've done shamanic training and I have met God and I've had all kinds of experiences that I, I put in heavily meditated.
I just didn't, didn't feel like I should bring that up at the beginning of the biohacking movement. 'cause that's at the end of biohacking. You know, there's a lot of work you wanna do first around trauma before you got
Rebecca: there, but that already when you started it, that you had already had those experiences.
Dave: I'd had some of them, and I've had many more since. I don't think I would've been able to write the book at the start of the movement, but I knew enough to mention
Rebecca: mm-hmm.
Dave: Neurofeedback and to mention. EMDR and to mention, uh, shamanic stuff and, uh, and plant medicines, you know, 15 years ago, and I was creating the biohacking movement just to say like, these are in there, but they're not the front and center.
Because ultimately when you get your energy back and then you're gonna say, oh, now I wanna live a long time. So they're, now you're a longevity person, which is where I really started. And then you're gonna want to become a conscious person because you're tired of being angry all the time. Yeah. And that meant I have to learn how to reprogram my mind so that it'll do what I want instead of thinking about donuts or being angry all the time, and just all the, the normal stuff that all meditation teaches you to do.
And just went around the world and did it. So your work is interesting because, oh my gosh, all the tools that people would use to intentionally control in another person's mind, I would like to have full defenses against that. I wanna be the least programmable person on the planet. I want everyone who learns from me to be, become un programmable.
Like that is the only path towards flourishing freedom in society.
Rebecca: I totally agree.
Dave: That means we've gotta know what the bad guys are doing and we've gotta be able to have those tools so we can program ourselves.
Rebecca: It just reminds me of how often you hear advanced meditators or monks like Zenna Young, talk about speculatively like.
You know, if I were in such a situation of total milieu control that was leading to you know, forced interrogation and these types of techniques that are used in mind control, that like, I want to prepare myself that, you know, they constantly seem to ask themselves what would I do in those situations?
Or have I prepared myself in some way?
Dave: And there's another one from the Boto code in Japan about a samurai whose master was assassinated by, you know, a bad samurai. And he swears vengeance, so it cuts a swath through the country and he's, you know, destroyed all the people who supported the bad samurai.
And he's about to strike a killing blow and the bad samurai spits in his face. So he stops and he puts a sword away and bad. And the keep dropping these and the bad guy's like, why didn't you kill me? You had me. And the Samurai says, well, when you spit my face, it made me mad. I didn't wanna kill you in anger, so I'm gonna go calm down and when I'm calm, I'll come back and kill you.
Music: Wow.
Dave: Right. Okay. Having control of your state and only acting out of choice versus programming is the highest value for an advanced meditator for a warrior. And I think for any thinking human,
Rebecca: for a person. Yeah.
Dave: It's just so hard to know when truth is mushy. Uh, to, to paraphrase your book title and when you know you've probably been programmed by society Yeah.
By ads, by social media, by your parents, by your teachers, by the creation of the national education, whatever departments and all the crap Rockefeller did. Yeah. Like our whole society is based on a whole bunch of manipulations.
Rebecca: Yeah.
Dave: How, how do you get free from that?
Rebecca: I think that's a really deep question.
And sometimes the ways we try to get free may actually en chain us more because like each of us has a tendency like I'm gonna seek truth through, like, thing I love is going down rabbit holes in historical research, but maybe that's not the best for me. 'cause I've actually found that. To be free of some of these things or to is actually in sitting really still or just, you know, dropping a lot of my preoccupations and sometimes it's going against your own pre-election.
Mm-hmm. But, so I don't have an ulti. I think that's probably the biggest question there is and that's what I started studying in graduate school. I was, I thought like intellectually or at any level as a human person, I would like to know to what extent we are in control of what we do or are we actually the subject to various programs that were unaware of, or cultures or just the accidents of our birth and various things.
And that turned into all these different research directions, but also a personal, kind of a personal quest and also. Sometimes you have to be careful what you ask for because you may be presented with circumstances of suffering and you know, a lot of, like, you can learn through pain as well. I think that everything, I basically have faith that everything that's given to you is there for you to learn from.
If you can accept that.
Dave: I couldn't agree more. Uh, and you will experience all the pain until you get the lesson right. Yeah. And that's just the condition of being alive as far as I can tell.
Rebecca: Yeah.
Dave: So, so where are you now on that question of, you know. How are you supposed to have a free mind if you don't know what a free mind even looks like because all of history is transmutable?
Rebecca: Well, like I guess I'm, this is just my personal, uh, yeah, you're expert place where I am and I'm an expert and a person. Yeah. 'cause I think one of the things I've always done is connect the two and that I can never be a kind of scholar that thinks that they're just a sheer operating mind or something like that.
So it all comes from, like, you, it comes from these 25 years ago or whenever it is. I started these inquiries on a personal level, but my latest thinking is that we can't just think our way out of it, but in a sense you have to run it through your heart. Like there's a type of thinking that goes through your heart and because the instability of, um, various.
Platforms and in, I mean, we're in an amazing age of the democratization of knowledge that we haven't even begun to understand the ramifications of, we're just starting to, so what is the ultimate test is we can only, I think, know ourselves.
Dave: It's really cool that we're talking about mind control and you're saying well run it through your heart.
And I, I couldn't agree more. My whole experience there is that there is a, there's an intuitive inner knowingness that happens before thinking, and it's just hard to spot it if you're thinking too much or emoting too much. And that advanced meditators almost always find that spot and sometimes many others, whatever path.
Yeah. I don't care if you're into tantra or you're into psychedelics or, you know, breath work. It, it doesn't matter. Yeah. You do enough of it. You're gonna say, oh, there was a signal all along and I, I missed it.
Rebecca: Yeah, it'll come to you.
Dave: Yeah. Okay.
Rebecca: It reminds me of, um, Chalo Milosh, the guy who, who's a Polish poet who won the Nobel Prize and he, he inspired this whole project in a certain way.
My finding his book on the street many years ago when I was in a distress of very, or just in a, at a crossroads. But he wrote about how a friend of his, basically it was about how a friend of his succumbed to communist mind control, in his case, back in, in Poland. And this man was a, an amazing poet and writer, and he was beloved by his country.
And Milosh says that he watched as his friend took step by step. First it was just, I want to help my country. And then it was, I don't believe in communism, but you know, I will support the regime if this will help people. And there is no alternative. And then it was, I actually have to make myself believe I have to perform an operation on myself.
I have to sort of, I. In order to actually be an artist, you have to do this inner destruction and ultimately Milosh comments that he thinks that his friend had no ability to access his inner voice, despite the fact that he was the most famous writer in his country. Wow.
Dave: So how would a bad actor go about turning off someone's access to their inner voice?
Rebecca: Any number of ways, I think.
Dave: Is it gonna get good?
Rebecca: We see them. I mean, we see them around us, certainly in, I think it's through pandering to promoting or even coercively persuading people into their worst addictions fears and basically playing on, you know, so, so it's, uh, playing on each person's repository of unprocessed.
Emotions. So like anything that becomes out of balance can make you more vulnerable. This is why it's not that any, it's not that every person is vulnerable to a cult at some point in their lives, probably, but not every point. And so sometimes it's a combination of accident and biographical, you know, happenstance and you know, maybe you're young, maybe you just had a breakup, maybe you took the wrong path and you waited at the bus for too long or something like that.
So there are ways to capitalize on that. And often, even if the, say mark, whoever it is who's exerting, attempting to exert this control isn't, doesn't think of themselves as nefarious. If they don't have the wellbeing of that person in mind, you know, it may have that effect, I think. Hmm.
Dave: Is there a clear signal that I could look for to know when I'm running someone else's program?
Unconsciously,
Rebecca: I think there is a clear I think it's in the. The bot. It's a bodily signal.
Dave: Yeah.
Rebecca: Yeah. Don't you feel that You get some signals that you, but it's just that you have to learn too. It's like tuning into a radio station.
Dave: Yeah, I know. Where it, it, it's well, there's a couple spots, but for me it's, it's a little bit to the left of the central line in the chest.
Rebecca: Yeah. And you are, there's a signal that I've noticed in myself, which is when I'm starting to participate in it, mm. Like, okay, that got me, like, this has kind of started to get me involved or upset or unbalanced.
Dave: I think Robert Cialdini's work is some of the, the best here. His book Influence.
Rebecca: Mm-hmm.
Dave: He's been on the show I think twice, and it's so fascinating because it's like, oh, here's all the ways to know someone's running an operation on you. And I've also studied narcissism quite a lot. Huh. Which is a form of mind control.
It's, it's, you know, I believe that I'm great or that I'm do something. And so I'm gonna make you believe it even though it's not real. And if not, I'll destroy you. And I think any entrepreneur has hired people like that. It's like they're running the same techniques of mind control. That work. Yeah. Right.
Does your work overlap? You're looking at, you know, the history of mind control. It seems like modern psychology is coming across the same thing. I mean, a therapist who's sitting in their office, they're trying to control your mind to get you to not do whatever you hired them to get you to not do. Do you think what you've learned at Harvard studying mind control is directly applicable to therapy?
I.
Rebecca: As in therapy could be dangerous.
Dave: Well, it could be dangerous or I mean, hey, maybe there's mind control things. You, you know, you're going to your therapist and your therapist's, like these are not the droids you're looking for. And then they're not.
Rebecca: Well, I think yeah, therapy is a powerful relationship you're entering into, hopefully voluntarily.
Mm-hmm. So there are ways to be aware and also be paying attention. This is why it's very concerning with children. 'cause you can't really teach a child this kind of aware, I mean, they have natural instincts, but they may not have the power to remove themselves from situations, things like that. But as an adult, that's why therapy can be really powerful.
'cause you're putting yourself voluntarily in a position where someone, I mean more transference, you know, in the Freudian sense, can occur where somebody does have the power to suggest. Suggest or out, or even act out certain scenarios with you that would model what a healthy relationship might be like, or, or even if you come to hate your therapist, like that's allowing you to transfer something to them and then they're, if they're stoically or well-trained, they're able to not, you know, hate you back or try to have an affair with you or whatever it is.
They won't act on that part of the transference and then through that relationship you could heal, I think. But personally I haven't. I mean, I think, yeah, I think it, it can work.
Dave: This transference thing is very weird and I was unaware of this when I was late twenties, early thirties. I went to some personal development thing.
I had a bunch of therapists and one of them absolutely convinced me that I was a sex addict. And to be clear, I'm not. I have a normal, healthy sex drive. That therapist had a history of sex addiction herself, and she wanted me to be her patient after the workshop. And I figured this out very quickly.
Like to
Rebecca: cure you, or?
Dave: I don't think so. I'm not really sure. I'm sure she told herself in her own inner dialogue that it was only to help me, but as far as I can tell, she was, you know, mind controlling me to get me into her sex addiction cycle.
Music: Yeah.
Dave: And I, my inner knowing, even as, as undeveloped as it was at the time, I was like, hold on.
Like, this is not real. Right. I've never cheated on any partner in my life and like, I, I don't meet any of the criteria. Right. Yeah. But it was, it was the weirdest thing because she had me questioning my reality for a week. Right.
Rebecca: Yeah. It's, well, it's powerful when someone has the ability to Yeah. To lay, I mean, it's also, it can be profoundly healing to receive a label if you.
In certain ways. Mm-hmm. But it can be very damaging also. And it's not necessarily whether it's right or wrong, but it's like what you do with it. And what was the intention of the Diagnos diagnostician?
Dave: I'm pretty sure that there was some unclean intention there. There, but that seems, yeah.
Rebecca: I mean it's also demanding that there, the problem is that therapists always are gonna have their own issues.
Dave: I've had the honor of doing some really deep healing work with former Navy seals and special operators and things like that. They'll come to 40 Years of Zen. I've been through some of Joe Dispenza's workshops, uh, with friends who served and SEER training is a big thing about mind control.
'cause they're saying, well, we're gonna prepare you in case you get captured so that the enemy won't be able to get what they want at least for a certain amount of time. What's the history of CR in mind Control?
Rebecca: Yeah. The history of SEER is that the, there was, there was survival training before the CAA became involved insr, that was military research from the 1930s into whether, you know, sort of extreme te uh, terrain.
Mm-hmm. So there'd be an Arctic survival school and there'd be a, you know, a school in Florida that mimicked, you know, tropical conditions, various things, but with the mu with the brainwashing crisis of 1950 and the CIA and with the research that started to be done in MK Ultra and also in the military, studying the men who were returning who had seemed to have been.
Influenced by communist reeducation. There was an emergency and SR was massively expanded. And they hired Louis Joll and West among other people to create the resistance, the R in Sr. Wow. Which hadn't existed before. And the resistance was basically to simulate over so 30,000 servicemen in the first iteration were subjected to this extreme, uh, three day ordeal where they were basically, let's see.
First you had to be out in the desert surviving. You had to go through their survival part. You had to be
Dave: depleted. Yeah, yeah.
Rebecca: Depleted, hungry and stressed out. Then come to the, this kind of camp you were interrogated in brutal conditions. Beaten, forced to hold standing positions. I. Sometimes waterboarded and then sometimes kept in a small box, like called a sweat box.
Mm. Things like that, to, and it was in the early iterations, it was so brutal that actually the CIA's, uh, Louis Joll West was pulled along with Martin Orn were subsequently pulled in in the later sixties to modify it and make it milder because people were getting destroyed. Wow. Like, a certain percentage were basically never recovered from the training itself.
But an interesting thing is in the, in that initial in the de, so this was 1956, that it was first operationalized and the press was invited to watch.
Music: Good God.
Rebecca: And they wrote things like school for sadist. 'cause they said, this isn't. This isn't helping them to defend themselves against brainwashing.
This is brainwashing, this is brutal interrogation, this is torture. And, uh, but you have to think that because they deliberately opened it up to the press, they kind of wanted that as almost a punitive response to the Korean War in this sense that the men hadn't properly resisted whatever it was that happened to them.
And then it, so Siri became institutionalized from there.
Dave: Wow. I've had the opportunity to support people who've been actually tortured, um, in those kind of situations on running the reset process that we use it 40 years as Zen and on just letting go of that stuff. And it, it's interesting some of the research from the HeartMath Institute, it shows that when soldiers are trained to control their sympathetic and parasympathetic response consciously before they're exposed to torture, they don't get PTSD.
Rebecca: Hmm.
Dave: But if they don't have the skills, then they're much more likely to be traumatized. And even if someone has been traumatized there, there is a step-by-step process.
In fact, there's more than one. There's people using ibogaine, there's people using MDR r, there's people using this reset process. And from where I sit as a computer hacker, these are all just basically infiltration methods. Hmm. Because the brain and the consciousness has an attack surface. And this is hacker lingo.
It's like, what are all the ways in? Right. So that's the attack surface. And if you're protecting something, you minimize the attack surface, so there's less vulnerabilities, and then you defend all the vulnerabilities. And so I. If I was gonna do that in my life, it will turn off social media. Your vulnerability went way down.
Music: Yeah, very true. Um,
Dave: not that I, I do turn it off, but I know that when I'm doing that, I'm vulnerable.
Music: Right,
Dave: right. So for all of these techniques, if you were to teach someone, you were tortured and not only did you survive, you were still regulated when you were done and then it sucked and you didn't wanna do that again.
That could be profoundly empowering to like, I can handle this.
Rebecca: Yeah.
Dave: Right. Same thing you were just hearing doctors, you're gonna stay up all night, every night for a year and just, you know, beat yourself up to show yourself you can perform. Same thing as the, the sleep and stress conditioning that's part of Sierra.
So, so how do we draw the line between, you know what, my mind is afraid that I'll, you know, have a terrible day if I don't get eight and a half hours of sleep. Right. There's a line of resilience that's healthy and then there's a line of I will destroy myself with stress and all this comes down to self programming or someone else programming you.
Rebecca: It's really true. I mean, it, there's a lot of comp, I guess you could say, complexity there. Mm-hmm. And I saw that in, like, I could just mention a case of Yeah. A guy who I met because he wrote a op-ed to the New York Times about having been in Syria. And this was in 2006. He was a navy on a naval flight crew in Vietnam.
And he was in Sierra, he was put through the Sierra training when he was like 18 as a, he had volunteered for the, for the Air Force. So he basically was incredibly for, for an uneducated kid who had no, no special officer training or anything. He ended up being incredibly successful. But he said, looking back well after he was done with his service, he never, you know, he, he became a professor of anthropology and he said he spent the next several decades trying to make up for what he felt were the harms that he had.
Committed to himself and others in the war. He's kind of profound because he talks about his experience atsr atsr as this life-changing moment. So what I mean is you see there are both the harms that were done to him and also the way in surviving it, he came out. He, it was a, he learned uh, something about himself he probably couldn't have otherwise learned.
And the thing that he learned. So he was put through all the beatings and things like that. And then he was locked in a box in the sun, in the middle of the San Bernardino Forest. And he is a tall fellow and he said he couldn't move. No. And he didn't have any meditation training or any, you know, he is like, very young.
And he just said he knew he was gonna break and they had already shown them before someone, they, they broke someone in front of them Wow. In front of the, you know, the recruits. So he was in the box and he said, any minute I'm just gonna lose my mind. And it will never. He just was terrified and, and about to completely panic.
And he said at that moment he told himself, I may lose my mind, but I'm not, I'm, I'm okay right now. And he kept saying, I'll make it through the next second. And then he, the next second, and then after a certain point, he was, the door opened and they, they dragged him out, kicked him and threw him on the driveway.
Then took him and interrogated him, and then he was released. Well, they threatened to put him back in the box, but basically he said that this I don't think he would've wanted to say at first publicly that it was helpful, but that it did give him a resource knowing that he, that he had something he found something in himself that allowed him to survive that.
So I think, I think that's part of the complexity. And I think with SEER they've shown recent studies in the set, in the two thousands by. A researcher named, I think his name's Charles Morgan. He was saying that almost everyone suffers trauma from it, but also in some ways it does prepare them for other things
Dave: healed trauma.
It may leave marks, but that doesn't mean they're bad marks. Right.
Rebecca: Yeah. It's kind of an existential question of what we're doing.
Dave: Even if you look at the documentation of shamanic awakenings, people usually have a near death experience Right. Before they have an awakening. So something happens when you go right to the edge.
Rebecca: Yeah,
Dave: and I'm, I'm keenly interested in ways to go right to the edge without inducing physical or mental or emotional trauma, or at least harm. I, I mean, a little bit of trauma, that's what happens when you get a facial. So like you pick up a dumbbell there, you got trauma. It's just microtrauma, uh, without systemic trauma, say because.
Teaching people to go there and feel safe creates a huge wave of, of peace in the world. Like, I'm not going to die. And then the flip side of that, the guy you talked about who's on the box and the heart is part of, of psychedelic work, and actually almost any transpersonal, deep reprogramming is surrender.
And it may be harder for men than women just societally programmed, but you get there and you're like, I can't handle this. And they're like, okay, then don't handle it. And that's when the breakthrough happens. But mm-hmm My biggest breakthroughs have been preceded by incredible amounts of anger and rage and all this stuff.
And when I'm working with clients, like the minute you say that I'm a total asshole, you're about to win. So you just keep saying that. Right. 'cause if you don't, if you don't go there, you don't turn that on. You can't let it go.
Rebecca: Yeah. I think I've had the same experience. Yeah. Which is in my first meditation retreat, which I went to.
After a long, not a totally long, but several years of addiction and painful relationship that I couldn't leave. So kind of a coercive, well, just a bad relationship. Mm-hmm. I, uh, a year or two later, I went and meditated and I thought you know, I'm looking forward to a pleasant, special experience just for me.
But instead I found myself within a day or two just engulfed and like, I felt like every type of possible pain. Mm-hmm. I felt like I was being burned. Yeah. Alive. And like every second was another realm of torture and it was intolerable. Mm-hmm. But I knew, I knew, I had a little inner knowing that said, if you leave, that will just bring this with you.
So I just can, you know, at some point you, you make a decision to continue mm-hmm. No matter what is happening. And it was just be, you know, that was preceded the moment where everything changed completely.
Dave: Wow.
Rebecca: But you can't predict that and you can't possibly know it.
Dave: Why can't you predict it?
Rebecca: Well, maybe like looking back later, you could, like you're saying you see general generalities, but when you're in that, I think the, especially before you know the territory
Music: Yeah.
Rebecca: You don't know. It's just simply, unwanted and unbearable.
Dave: It's hard for someone who hasn't been there to predict it. And the role of spiritual teachers and guides mm-hmm. Who have been there and can sense it, is to sit there and hold space for you while you go there and help you, help you navigate. And it feels like some of that knowledge has been lost.
Yeah. And some of it's been misused.
Rebecca: Many, many, many misuses Also, the, the degree and prevalence of abuse makes it hard to trust somebody in that territory. 'cause that's when you're,
Dave: it does,
Rebecca: Most vulnerable.
Dave: Do you think that people can directly control other people energetically?
Rebecca: I think people are energetically affected by each other, but I don't know what, I guess we come back to the question of what is control?
Maybe not perfect. Not perfect control. Probably not like robotic. No. But
Dave: I mean, I know lots of healer types who are saying, you know, I can, I can manipulate your health. I don't know. Maybe that worked, maybe it didn't. And I know some other things where it, it's like people who are really skeptical, you know, they, they can sit there and you're like.
Do a little thing and they're like, like, that shouldn't have happened. I'm like, well, they're kind of dead. Right? And then there's all the people who allegedly, I haven't seen it happen in person, can, you know, light a fire in paper or something with their hands? Wouldn't put it past 'em. Then they wrote about that 5,000 years ago, it's probably still happening.
Don't know how to do it. So there, there's things like that where I'm looking at mind control and focus thought. Even if the person doesn't necessarily know that, we'll, say if it's double-blinded, a person who's trained with focused thought can really meaningfully affect another person's reality. Yeah.
Rebecca: One pointedness is incredibly powerful. Yeah. And that's what one thing they teach in my type of meditation. Also, I was gonna, you were reminding me of Walt Whitman. So poets are familiar with this territory sometimes too. 'cause he said, I am a, I'm the sum of everything I've met. So I do think we're constantly assimilating each other.
But, you know, people with an, you know, certain mal intent, I think.
Music: Mm-hmm.
Rebecca: Can use one. They are able to develop one pointedness too. Everyone can develop it. Like, I think my meditation teacher said something like, you know, a sniper has great, incredible, yes. One pointedness. Of course a sniper can be using that talent for many purposes.
So it's not just that, it's not simply cultivating that that's important and also. Awareness is really probably the best defense anyone can have.
Dave: I met a guy, I turned, my brain is blanking right now, that San Diego who teaches sniper meditation and he says, Dave, my favorite thing is to bring yoga moms in and then I'll bring in some kind of military snipers.
And he said, the snipers are always dead on, on their first shot, but then they're second, third, and fourth, they're never as good. But the meditators, the yoga moms, they come in and they're, once they learn how to shoot, they're put in in the middle every single time. And it drives the military guys nuts.
Say, 'cause meditation is what makes you a good sniper because of one pointedness. Exactly like you're saying, is one pointedness a way of protecting our, call it spiritual and intellectual sovereignty?
Rebecca: I think it's. A human capacity. I think it's, I think it's a bit neutral. Mm-hmm. So one pointedness in, uh, in types of meditation, maybe there, the argument would be you learn one pointedness as one step, and it, it's something that is, it's absolutely essential if you're gonna go further, but it doesn't in itself have a valence.
Dave: I love that. The guy who taught that to me or at least a technique of it many years ago, same thing. He said, you can use it for good or you can use it for bad. And I, I learned this and I said, all right, I'm gonna see if I can manipulate someone. So I was taking a negotiating class with someone who worked for a government regulatory agency at a high level.
And this is one of those classes where you. Hand the other person a piece of paper. You get a piece of paper and you know, I wanna buy the car for $12 or whatever. And they say, I'm only gonna sell it for 10. And then you negotiate and just so you can have the conversation and then see what the other person actually knew.
So you get a sense for, are you being manipulated or not? Were they lying? And so I thought, well, I just learned this technique. This isn't for a grade right now, so I'm just gonna do a thing that I learned in this meditation thing. And I did it. And we negotiated and we walked back into the classroom and the professor says, did anyone come to a resolution on this one?
And we raised our hands and he goes. That's not possible. You can't have, there was no common ground. And I'm like, well, there was a common ground if she agreed to cheat on her taxes so we could find it. And she did. And, and this is a friend. And she was kind of looking at me like, kind of blinking. I'm like, man, I'm not messed around with that stuff anymore.
Like, I know it's possible. I, I am not, like, this is not something, and had it been forget, I wouldn't even done the experiment. So I, I undid what I had done and I was like, man, like how do I know someone's not doing that to me right now? And I asked the teacher about that and he said, oh, he goes, lots of attorneys do this.
They'll do it to the opposing counsel. They'll do it to the judge.
Music: Mm-hmm.
Dave: And this is what made me think of this is to your point, he said, it's just a technique. He said, it doesn't have good or bad associated with it. You can use it for healing people. You can use it for whatever. It's just a human thing that no one talks about.
But my family's been talking about it for 20 generations. I just thought it would teach everybody. I'm like, holy crap. Like the world is so complex. Yeah. And that's why this history of mind control's so fascinating because MK Ultra was looking at things like that. They were looking at remote viewing.
I.