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Speaker 0 (0s): Hello, my friends, ladies, gentlemen, my brothers and sisters, my nieces and my nephews and my aunts and uncles. Thank you for taking a moment to hang out for a minute. Salvation. It's a pretty big concept. Isn't it? It's something that if you just take a few minutes to think about it can be totally mind blowing. It can be mind numbing. It can be something that you could think about for hours on end.
There's a lot of different ways to describe it. There's a lot of different ways to think about it. The older you get, I believe the more time you spend trying to define this crazy concept we call Salvation. What do you think about when I say the word salvation? When you close your eyes, do you see streaks of light? Is that your salvation? How about music? Do you find Salvation and music? Maybe you find salvation in the kind words whispered by your lover.
Maybe you find Salvation in the eyes of your children. Maybe you find it in a moment of quietness. If one finds it somewhere different, Salvation speaks to all of us. And there's plenty of definitions. I'm working on a new book and I'm thinking about this particular concept and how it fits in. How, how is it that people will identify with Salvation?
What can I say to you to make you think of salvation? So I've got a little passage right here. I want to share with you. I'm kind of working out some materials. Let me see what you think. Salvation only after you have had an intimate, passionate relationship with death. Can you awaken to your own ideas? The realization that everything is your creation. I've seen it Salvation.
I've seen it a few times. It's fleeting, just a passing glance. Once was when I was young at salvation mountain. For those of you that don't know in California, there's a place called salvation mountain. It seems like the furthest thing from Salvation. It's way out in the desert, close to Arizona in a place called slab city. One of the last free places on earth.
Think of scorching desert with nothing, not even CAC. This really just pure dirt. A man in the sixties moved out there. He had a vision. He had a dream and it's when you look
Speaker 1 (2m 59s): Salvation mountain, if you Google salvation mountain, you'll see this area that looks like nothing in this big mound of dirt that doesn't really look like a mountain. However, it's a pretty unbelievable story about a man that moved out of the desert and started building a mountain. It reminds me of the literature in, I believe it's Mohammed.
That has a quote that says, if the mountain won't come to Muhammad, then Mohammed must go to the mountain. This guy built a mountain with all kinds of paint and debris. He turned, he made a mountain. It's pretty fascinating to look at and think about it. I recommend everybody check it out. It's called salvation mountain. And it's pretty amazing. The more that I think about it.
So back to where I was here on my idea of Salvation, I've seen it a few times. Salvation it's fleeting, just a passing glance is all I saw once when I was young at salvation mountain in slab city, while walking through the tunnels of the second mountain, not the one that collapsed once I saw it somewhere between the ideas of Viktor Frankl and Marshall McLuhan. I tried to leave a bookmark.
I tried to create a memory that I could always return to somewhere, which when Viktor Frankl and Marshall McLuhan, the idea of finding the meaningful message and the medium. But when I returned to my bookshelf, when I returned to the place that I left the bookmark in my mind, it had been snatched away by a thief in the night.
I found nothing but monotonous dribble left in the spot where I left it from time to time, I can see it even pull up next to it, engage with it on high dose, the siliciden. But when I look, when I really look for it, it always alludes me. It is in times of quiet, contemplation that I can see it out of the corner of my eye.
Like one of those little floaters, the more you try to focus on it, the more it runs away from you. It's true with a lot things in life. Isn't it. Death makes angels of us all and gives us wings where we once had shoulders sharp as Raven clause. So in my book, I'm talking quite a bit about Neuroplasticity in the mind of a child.
And I am trying to explain both functional and structural Neuroplasticity. I don't know what you're thinking. Okay. Well, why don't you just explain it then is to use your words to do it well, I'm trying to do it in a different way and the book I want to show what could possibly be happening inside my head in real time.
Right? I want to explain the thought process of structural and functional Neuroplasticity. I know what you're thinking. Like how the fuck you going to do that? Well, thanks. First off. It's a great question. Thanks for asking. I'm going to give you a little shot here of what, what it is here. Okay. So I've gone down quite a bit in the story.
Okay. That will take too long. So the process of structural plasticity of I should fix that. The process of in Neuroplasticity, the process of structural plasticity may have begun by the engine of traumatic necessity to process relevant information in alternative locations.
However, the new highway, the new connection of neural networks, retraction regeneration, and remodeling of synopses, spines, and axons was made possible by the Renton relentless pursuit of meaning. If it makes sense to you guys, should I try to read it again? Okay. Let me read that again. Does this make any sense? I think it does, but I need to work it out on my head. The process of structural plasticity may have begun by the engine of traumatic necessity to process relevant information in alternative locations.
You know what I mean by that? So what I'm trying to really get across is that in the process of functional Neuroplasticity, so I need to change it. That's not functional. Plasticity is when you process information in a part of the brain that you normally, so let's say I try and process. I try and process equations in, in the visual cortex.
You know, do you think you can do that? Do you think, do you listening to this right now? Do you believe that you can choose to interpret information in different parts of your brain then where it immediately goes to like you're all wired up, right? Like you got Broca's area for speed. You got the visual cortex, you have this thing called the DFO, the default mode network. It just sends everything where it's supposed to go is then wired up a certain way. I believe that you can change that process.
I think that through quiet contemplation and a sort of forced synesthesia that you can begin to process stuff in one part of the brain. You normally don't, it's a lot like, you know, if you're right handed, it's a lot like writing with your left hand and up you're, left-handed, it's a lot like writing with your right hand. You know, it's very up to sit in the beginning. However, if you continue to do it, you can begin to get better at it.
And I think it's the same thing for processing information in your brain. I think you can send it to different spots. I know you're thinking like, no you can't George, why not? You just have to, you have to understand the world different. You have to choose to see it different. Let me give you an example. What's The square root of yell...