Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, Hey, Gary, it's Eric from Locals Only. How are you.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
Oh, I'm doing great role.
Speaker 1 (00:07):
Yeah, Hey, I'm right coming down your driveway. I'll be
in a white Mercedes. I'll see you outside. Hey, Welcome
to Locals Only. I'm Eric Hale And if you don't
know me, I'm the guy that founded Local magazine fourteen
years ago in my garage. It's been my job for
all those years to tell you the coolest places to
eat in all of Sudthern, California. Fun things to do,
(00:29):
so you have date nights that aren't boring, and we've
talked to some really interesting people. Now we have a
podcast and we're lucky enough to call this Mercedes Benz
EQE all electric sedan courtesy of Fletcher Jones Motor Cars
in Newport Beach. Our mobile podcasts do do. So sit back,
buckle up and enjoy the conversation. Welcome to Local Zoning
(00:53):
Today on Locals Only. We're in the Santa Monica Mountains
just above Malible and I'm going to be picking up
Gary from Human Garage. They've built a massive following online
showing people how they can take care of their own
body with fashion movement in a slight twist. Today, I've
spent the last three hours in a one on one
(01:14):
session with Gary having my Fashion Realign, and today, as
we drive through the beautiful Santa Monica Mountains, we'll be
talking about that session and his plans to grow his
community to one hundred million. So sit back, buckle up,
and enjoy locals only.
Speaker 2 (01:39):
This is awesome, all right?
Speaker 1 (01:40):
So this is yeah, this is our mobile podcast.
Speaker 2 (01:43):
Is Fletcher Jones.
Speaker 1 (01:45):
This is Fletcher Jones in Newport Beach and.
Speaker 2 (01:47):
Bought a few cars from them. Have you that's good?
Speaker 1 (01:50):
Well, yeah, they gave us this car to be our
mobile podcast, dude, which is nice because we can come
to the guests.
Speaker 2 (01:55):
That's really awesome.
Speaker 1 (01:56):
Yeah, we're driving through the beautiful Santa Monica Mountains really
perched just above Nalabu Pch maybe like eight miles down
this canyon. So we're gonna be taking it nice and
slow today. I'll try to turn the camera around a
few times. But today I'm with Gary Lyneham and Gary
is with Human Garage, and we're going to find out
(02:19):
let's I mean, sometimes we get into what you do personally,
but I think what you're doing for people is really interesting.
So tell us maybe what you're trying to do for
people with human garage.
Speaker 3 (02:30):
I think I think this is actually a good place
to start. Is the thought of doing something personally as
opposed to doing something for work. Right, we as a
as a team, we don't have a work life balance.
Speaker 2 (02:41):
We just have a life.
Speaker 3 (02:43):
And we were on a mission to help people clear
up the cup clutter and understand that their bodies inspire
people to learn how to heal their own bodies. And
I know a lot of people say that are out
there trying to do that, but this is something that
with minutes somebody can do and feel confident that they
(03:03):
can relieve themselves from pain and suffering in their body
and then take it to the next step, which is performance.
So we live, breathe, work this stuff. We live as
a community.
Speaker 1 (03:15):
Maybe explain that a little bit more. I think that's interesting.
So can sometimes when people say commune, it just takes
you right back to the sixties and a certain way
of living. And you know, and there's a lot of
documentation about that, but a commune is the root word
of community, right, So tell me about the wee because
(03:35):
you reference the wheel a lot.
Speaker 3 (03:37):
Yeah, I think it's important to reference it because this
movement isn't really built around me. I had an idea
on how to heal the human body, and my idea
was I could do it myself and I could share
it with you. And so this movement is a bunch,
but a bunch of people that are actually sharing this
with other people, and we have it has everything from
clinical doctors from all the modalities, to professional athletes, to
(03:58):
business people, mom's dad, students.
Speaker 2 (04:01):
And the WI is really anybody.
Speaker 3 (04:05):
We all of our programs are free, so you can
go online learn.
Speaker 1 (04:09):
Wait, let's let's slow that down, because we're in an
age where every as body is trying to sell you
a course, everybody is trying to sell you a membership,
and everybody is trying to sell you something. So to
slow that down, because I think that's a really important
fact that you might just have gotten used to saying.
What you're providing for people, and what we're going to
talk about today is completely free of.
Speaker 2 (04:28):
Charge, one hundred percent free and all up to practitioner.
Speaker 1 (04:32):
And so even the people you're teaching to teach other people,
there's no cost, Like you don't have to go to
a yoga seminar for seven weeks to get your certification
and it costs X amount of thousands of dollars.
Speaker 3 (04:42):
Yeah, okay, because at the core of it, it's people
learn how to to be efficient at this.
Speaker 2 (04:49):
You have to learn how to help yourself.
Speaker 3 (04:51):
Okay, and if I help myself, I automatically know how
to help you.
Speaker 2 (04:55):
So let's go back to doctor who It's like each.
Speaker 1 (04:57):
One teach one. So if you can teach somebody to
do what they teach another person or more people, right correct?
Speaker 2 (05:02):
Okay, yeah, you know. The premise is this is that.
Speaker 3 (05:07):
This is something that impacted me so profoundly after thirty
five years of being in pain, twenty years being in pain,
spending millions of dollars going to doctors and practitioners in biolacking,
and then ten years becoming a practitioner with fifty two
of the best physicians and practitioners in the world, collaborating
on an experience trying to understand the body in a
(05:28):
new way.
Speaker 1 (05:28):
This was in Venice Beach, California.
Speaker 3 (05:30):
Right erect and we were just looking to understand the
body in a new way because from an overall perspective,
people are not doing well in society today. There's not
one measure of human life that's better today than it
was fifty years ago. We're dying sooner. We have every
disease and pathology where we had one or ten of them,
(05:52):
we had like a small percentage of the audience had
cancers like fifty seventy years ago.
Speaker 2 (05:58):
Today it's like one and for women have breast cancer.
Speaker 3 (06:01):
Okay, So every measure of mental, emotional, physical, societal health
is demonstratably at its worst. And in order for people
to receive help, it has to be something that everybody
can access without any barriers.
Speaker 2 (06:18):
And we're turning this up.
Speaker 3 (06:20):
But this is all to reach people, and then when
we reach them, we want to inspire them to try
something to help themselves.
Speaker 1 (06:26):
This is more than you're trying to affect your local community.
Like it wasn't venesepeech. You saw an opportunity using social media,
the digital age and the fact that there's no cost
to prohibit its growth. You really want to see the
whole world take advantage of this in every kind of community.
Is there language barriers? I know you're mentioned all these
(06:47):
different places. Financially there might not be barriers, but you
know there's a thousand different languages in the world spoken.
So how do you get through that?
Speaker 3 (06:54):
Well, we're already in twenty languages and basics, but you've
been working with AI technology now to convert it because
there is an energetic component that goes to a video
that you know that when you're shooting. There's just some
that are magic, right, right, And so when we did
our fifteen minute stress reset, which I encourage.
Speaker 1 (07:10):
Ever ready to go check out and that they can
do that on your app, on the Human Garage app.
Speaker 3 (07:15):
Right, you're on the website or website, or they can
go to YouTube.
Speaker 2 (07:18):
Okay, then go to social media.
Speaker 1 (07:19):
Just look look up human Garage and the fifteen minute reset,
fifteen minute stress reset. Okay, perfect. So let's let's get
into it a little bit. We've talked very I think
we're talking in big generalities and big so let's drill
down a little bit. Human garage I mean we I
think it speaks for itself. It's something to fix something, right,
fix the human body. But what specifically are we fixing,
(07:41):
What's what's the what are we working on?
Speaker 3 (07:44):
Well, first and foremost, we're working on the entire body
as a whole, okay, and being a practitioner of multidisciplines,
I can tell you that we each discipline works on
the body to a certain degree and then leaves out something.
Speaker 1 (07:58):
So we're talking chiropractice, we're talking massage, we're.
Speaker 3 (08:01):
Talking Chinese medicine, all different things. So they all have
a benefit and a value. Otherwise it wouldn't be successful.
But they all have something that's lacking. Otherwise people wouldn't
need anything else.
Speaker 2 (08:15):
Okay, So so in.
Speaker 3 (08:17):
That space where every there's there's things that work in
the world, and they all are great, and there's all
these and there's a point at which they stop working.
And you can tell this because we have some of
the top clinicians from every discipline who now come to
us and we help them understand the body from our.
Speaker 2 (08:33):
Point of view.
Speaker 3 (08:34):
Now we're working around fashia, and fashia is the container
that we live in and people have heard of it.
But even the description of a fascia, you know, I
was telling you earlier when we were doing the treatment.
Speaker 2 (08:45):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (08:45):
Today, Yeah, and full disclaimer everyone, this is a little
bit different episode. I think we should mention that we
have a follow up video coming to this podcast, or
I just think everybody will enjoy where Gary actually puts
me through a full session, both session that I can
do and a session that he assisted on, and pretty incredible.
So tune in after this because I'm actually the face
(09:08):
that you see and maybe the little bit extra height
that I got. This is post treatment.
Speaker 2 (09:13):
One hour, but you gain this solid inch that hour.
Speaker 1 (09:16):
Hey, I'm all for it, So tune in after this episode.
I think it's really important to note that normally I'm
just picking up my guests and we're driving around at
this time. We've had some interaction before, so you did
explain to me about the fascists, so maybe go on
from there. My qualities for interrupting.
Speaker 2 (09:32):
Yeah, that's okay.
Speaker 3 (09:32):
I mean, we have a lot of science around the body,
but that science is usually telling you what's inside.
Speaker 2 (09:37):
The body and how it works.
Speaker 3 (09:38):
Your muscle, skeletal system, your ethatic system, your hormonal systems,
all of these functions of the body. And then we
have the emotional side psychiatry, and we're looking at all
these different angles of the body. But one thing that
they traditionally have lacked is the container that we're in,
which is fashion.
Speaker 1 (09:57):
Okay, and so maybe explain that a little bit more.
Maybe not everybody is up to speed on that we
did learn in school, skeletal, muscular, you learn all those things.
What exactly is fascia like some sort of like.
Speaker 2 (10:09):
It's the intelligence of the body.
Speaker 3 (10:11):
It is us, okay, and we can't have You can
cut everything out of the body, every organ, every nerve,
every gland, you can cut out, you can cut the
brain out, everything, but you can't extract fashia.
Speaker 1 (10:21):
Because it's just connected throughout your head.
Speaker 2 (10:23):
It is. You're actually born into fashia.
Speaker 3 (10:25):
When you're born, there's a there's literally a ball of plasma,
and then there's a there's a two clusters that grow
inside that ball of plasma. One becomes a brain and
one becomes a small intestine, and nobody can tell you
which is which can fill about six weeks and then
the muscle skeletal system starts to grow. Now that ball
of plasma is fascia. So your bones, your muscles, your tissues,
(10:45):
your brain, everything is made in fashia from.
Speaker 1 (10:49):
What encapitulates it. It holds everything together. It's you're made
of their suit, your suit. More than your suit, you're
made of it. Your muscles are made of fashia. Your
muscles are made of fat.
Speaker 2 (11:00):
They have to be because you're like this thing where.
Speaker 1 (11:02):
Everything's a card from that one movie where they're like,
is everything of fashion? So technically, yes, sorry, this is
why I have to slow down, just because I want
to make sure that the people listening understand your your understanding.
Speaker 3 (11:15):
If you're if your muscles are grown in the in
the construct of fascia, yeah, then and your bones are
grown in there, then they are made from it.
Speaker 1 (11:24):
Everything's made out of fashion.
Speaker 3 (11:25):
Yeah, And so what if fascia I means simply basically,
if you look at the body, it's seventy percent water,
or it's supposed to be. They're now teaching sixty percent,
which is a problem, which is part of the reason
why we're talking. We're dehydration, which is causing all the
disease process, and we're twenty five percent silica, which is sand.
Speaker 1 (11:46):
Okay. And then and the first time I've ever heard that,
I did.
Speaker 2 (11:48):
And then we have all.
Speaker 3 (11:49):
These bacterias and viruses and parasites that.
Speaker 2 (11:52):
Make lots of bugs, right, yeah, lots of bugs.
Speaker 3 (11:54):
I mean technically only ten percent of ourselves are human
cells of them are bacterial.
Speaker 1 (12:01):
Really, yeah, I guess, well, yeah, I could see how
that would make sense. And just by the way, as
I keep making these wow faces, I just realized that
the last time I had any type of science was
probably thirty five years ago.
Speaker 3 (12:13):
So well, I might have known this at some point,
but it's escape guaranteed you didn't know this. And because
we didn't know this, and this is these are things
that we're learning in science right now. They think about
your body as the way it performs in the environment.
So things like testosterone, estrogen, ester dial this things drop power.
So emotions are what drive a lot of this, and
(12:34):
they those emotions. That's why when you have an emotional event,
you feel tired and hungry. So so it's rethinking about
how the body like we went on a fast as
a team.
Speaker 2 (12:45):
We fasted for forty four days.
Speaker 3 (12:47):
Because we wanted to prove and two weeks without water
that that food wasn't a fuel.
Speaker 1 (12:51):
You beat Jesus by four days.
Speaker 3 (12:54):
Apparently apparently apparently we wanted to do four more days.
Speaker 2 (12:59):
But it was an interesting experiment because what what I
what I did.
Speaker 3 (13:03):
Was I spent thirty years trying to figure this out,
and then ten years in clinical practice right and then
stepping outside the pandemic gave me the time to run
all these experiments on me. Okay, and so that's what
we did. I didn't have anybody to see you.
Speaker 1 (13:15):
So what one of the experiments was, like this fasting
for forty four days? Why did you find that the well?
Speaker 2 (13:19):
First of all, as a benefits two to three hours
a day.
Speaker 1 (13:23):
That's why you needed less sleep?
Speaker 2 (13:24):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (13:24):
I didn't.
Speaker 2 (13:25):
I didn't.
Speaker 1 (13:25):
Was that because you were hungry and you're going to
the fridge?
Speaker 3 (13:30):
Now going to the fridge is interesting because we went
to the fridge every day habit. Yeah, right, it was
just it was bizarre experience, but it taught us a
lot of things about how the body works, and how
power works, and how our systems work.
Speaker 1 (13:43):
First of all, was it a water fast or did
you leave water into it? Well?
Speaker 2 (13:46):
No, we had water, but we went two weeks without water.
Speaker 1 (13:48):
Two weeks yeah, without so no food and no water
for two weeks.
Speaker 2 (13:52):
Correct.
Speaker 1 (13:53):
Wow, And you weren't emaciated, you didn't.
Speaker 2 (13:55):
Feel No, I'll show you pictures. At the end of it,
I was fat.
Speaker 1 (13:59):
Wow. Where are the evolution of new movements coming out?
Do we have all the movements now? Or is this
thing going to continue to evolve and we we're going
to see two point oh, three point zero, et cetera.
Speaker 3 (14:10):
This is a good, great question because everybody's body is
different based upon circumstances. So there is no movement practice
or therapy in the world that works for everybody. Right,
So this is a movement philosophy, and once you learn it,
then you can apply it to anything. The reason I
know how to help everybody through every situation is because
I go, how would I do that on my body?
Speaker 1 (14:31):
Right? This is how I pictured it? Right, Maybe this
is the genesis. A lot of times I have a
pain in my hip, right, and I know you know
enough to know traditionally it's probably not coming from right there.
I kind of feel something else that's off, and I
lay there and I torque and I twist and I
push with my fingers and I do this and I
do that, and then one day I go, hey, that worked, right?
(14:52):
So is that the genesis that is everything?
Speaker 2 (14:54):
Right?
Speaker 1 (14:55):
Is that the genesis of how you got there was
you just kept sticking your fingers in different places to
your real life, Like whoa that actually helped? Right?
Speaker 2 (15:02):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (15:02):
Yeah, Basically I've stuck my fingers everywhere, and so.
Speaker 2 (15:07):
A lot of it.
Speaker 3 (15:08):
When we were experimenting with literally we're saying literally because
we had this thing that worked, this philosophy of moving
the body and the fashion that worked, but then we
had to put it into simple terms that people could reproduce.
Speaker 2 (15:19):
Okay, those are the maneuvers.
Speaker 3 (15:20):
So there's ten maneuvers, and it's a language that helps
the body express itself emotionally.
Speaker 2 (15:25):
Technically is what it is.
Speaker 3 (15:27):
And then and then as you express yourself through these
ten essential maneuvers, you can create variations that are unique
and specific to yourself. So it's like teaching somebody to dance.
You teach them to dance in the boxes or painting
the squares, and then after a while they learned to
move out of outside of them.
Speaker 1 (15:46):
So something I would like to address, and we did
this in our session, so if you didn't hear earlier,
we also filmed a bonus episode. You can see a
lot of the maneuvers and things that I'm doing. And
you'll have to forgive me for this. Some of the
things that you mention and to me, or what I
might characterize on daily life, as people would say a.
Speaker 2 (16:04):
Little woo woo, infirstat.
Speaker 1 (16:07):
Up the hell we're my sign to in some of
the things. As we went through some of these movements,
there were statements of release, statements of allowing myself forgiveness,
maybe things that you might say in a yoga practice,
maybe things you might say in a meditation. But it
felt a little woo. Now I didn't I didn't take
anything negatively from it, and I'm not closed minded. But
(16:29):
does that limit the reach of something that might be
good for them physically when you bring in the spiritual.
Speaker 3 (16:36):
Well, I look, everybody, you can do the physical practice
and not say a word and it works.
Speaker 2 (16:40):
Okay, But.
Speaker 1 (16:43):
Was it practice to find that these things helped?
Speaker 3 (16:46):
Yeah, they do, and there's measurable, demonstratable and anybody who
helps somebody can see it.
Speaker 2 (16:51):
Yeah, it's not a question.
Speaker 1 (16:53):
Okay.
Speaker 3 (16:54):
Now, think about things that you say to yourself every day.
I'm not good enough, that I'm not worthy of that.
Speaker 2 (17:01):
I'm negative self talk.
Speaker 1 (17:03):
It's mostly negative.
Speaker 3 (17:04):
So all we're doing is asking woo woo. Part is
say something positive and programming to yourself. Because the way
that the human flute adaptive biological computing system works is
it uses inputs to learn and adapt to the environment,
and it does it through averages. So it's I keep
saying to myself, I'm not good enough and I can't
do it. Yeah, And so basically what we're doing is
(17:25):
the body is in a highly adaptive state, like when
you're in a fashion maneuver, and that that state is
actually a fetal position.
Speaker 2 (17:32):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (17:32):
I did feel very vulnerable in that position. So at
your most vulnerable, you're saying you then.
Speaker 3 (17:38):
Use a word which is at the core of your
programming language as a human being. So basically my background
is cryptology programming systems. So I think of the body
as a computer, and it has inputs and outputs. It
has a display screen, it has Wi Fi and Bluetooth
are ways of bringing information, ways of displaying it processing.
(18:00):
It has a processor like your brain, has hard drive
like your fascia, and so it has language, and the
language that we use programs us but we only you know,
suppose they use it for like Olympic athletes or success programming.
But right, but if it works for that, it works
for everything.
Speaker 1 (18:17):
Yeah. So I see that because like if you're lifting
weights and you're like, I could do this, I'm gonna
go lift this weights. I'm the best weightlifter. You go
over there, and for some reason there is extra energy
and power. But it does. It's you know what I think.
Sometimes it's easier for us to put anything that makes
us feel vulnerable into a woo wu category because then
(18:38):
we can dismiss it ease.
Speaker 2 (18:39):
Right, Here's the thing human beings.
Speaker 3 (18:41):
When the pain of staying the same is greater than
the pain of changing, they will change. And you can
do the fashion maneuvers and you cannot use any programming
language and it's going to work for you fantastic, and
you'll get to a point which people do.
Speaker 2 (18:57):
Then they go, I.
Speaker 3 (18:57):
Want more, right, And when you want or they go,
why am I not getting more? Why don't I get
what they got over there? And so you can start
look at we're agnostic to discipline, religion, language, nationality, sex,
or agnostic to any of them. You can be all
of them and you can take this at the pieces
(19:18):
that you want. This is about moving your body, and
if we moved our bodies in nature like we used to,
we wouldn't need any of this.
Speaker 1 (19:27):
If people like what they're hearing, if they'd like to
feel better, if they'd like to do some basic movements
to improve their health, where should they start. What's the
first thing they should do.
Speaker 3 (19:37):
I think it's important that people have a very low
entry point where there's no commitment. So you can go
to our website and you can try a fifteen minute
stress reset, or you can try an upper reset or
a lower reset. The upper resets for basically anything in
the upper body up to brain function, and the lower
reset is there anything lower body and digestion, with each
(19:58):
of them having a full body approach, which you did
this today, and then a specialization they can do that,
or the fifteen minute stress reset, which.
Speaker 2 (20:06):
Is the lowest entry point, and.
Speaker 3 (20:09):
Then try that and do that once a day for
three days or seven days.
Speaker 2 (20:15):
Set yourself a timeframe.
Speaker 1 (20:17):
So just do it every morning or every evening fifteen
minutes or so, yeah, for seven days.
Speaker 3 (20:22):
Yeah, And then measure yourself before and after, like take
photographs like we did with you. Take a photograph before,
take a photograph after, and then measure yourself like literally
write down what bothers you in your life, what your
thoughts are to try this exercise, to do this, and
(20:43):
any aches and pains you have, write them down because
if they change, you may not even realize they change
until afterwards. Okay, and take a picture of yourself, take
a picture of your face, take a picture of the
way that you stand on the side, and then do
it for seven days and then measure yourself. I mean,
that's the best way to do it. If you don't
want to go through all that, just turn it on
and do it for fifteen minutes a day for seven days,
(21:06):
and just you were going to feel differently as a
result of doing that.
Speaker 1 (21:10):
Well, I can validate that. I can say that it
is movements that I don't think I've ever done specifically.
I do know that I felt a level of energy
and calm and definitely heat, and I felt that in
our session today.
Speaker 2 (21:25):
And everybody in the room felt at your heat and
turned off for being overheated.
Speaker 1 (21:31):
But you know, I just had this instant like flushing
of my whole body. And I wasn't doing jumping jacks,
I wasn't doing pushups, I hadn't been for a run,
but there was just my skin color was flush. I
was sweating, and I'm not a sweater. I literally never sweat,
So it was an unusual phenomenon the amount of heat
that I was generating almost from the even the moves
(21:53):
that I could do on my own. But then even
more so, obviously when you were doing more well.
Speaker 3 (21:58):
Actually the heat came from you doing totally twisted, which
was you're doing on your own.
Speaker 2 (22:02):
I just literally just give.
Speaker 3 (22:03):
Me a little little twist in a little twist and
basically assisting you. What that does is it takes something
that would take you three to six months, and it
does it in fifteen minutes.
Speaker 1 (22:13):
So first step go to the website. You can do
anything from a fifteen minute quick session. See how you feel,
see how you like it too. You can do it
three days or seven days, and all those are free.
Speaker 2 (22:24):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (22:25):
And then if you're like, hey, I like how this
makes me feel that you can engage with the community
on that app. I'm sure, and then you could maybe
even find somebody to help you take it to other levels.
There's a community there because all these people we're watching,
there's a lot of people talking.
Speaker 3 (22:39):
Yeah, there's a there's a one day, three day, seven day,
and a twenty eight day reset. Now those are the
basic tools, and then if you want to learn more
you start into Life Style Artists program. There's level one
and these are all about you, your environment and how
it works, okay, and then level two is how can
you actually most people that go level two by still
artists are saying they're practitioners or their coaches. They're saying,
(23:02):
how do I help this or how do I use
this in my world? And from there what we ask is,
because we give give up all this for free, is
our ask for you is to take care of yourself
and share it with somebody else.
Speaker 2 (23:16):
That's our only ask.
Speaker 3 (23:17):
We help people who want to take the maneuvers and
implement them into whatever you want it. We have orthopedic
surgeons they are implementing it pre and post surgery. We
have trauma coaches doing it. We have naturopathic doctors.
Speaker 2 (23:29):
We have.
Speaker 3 (23:31):
Trainers and athletes and functional medicine doctors using it, and
we if you want to create a system with it,
do it, let us know and will help you.
Speaker 1 (23:40):
So I think this is something that people might be
interested in, right because everybody always goes what's the angle?
Speaker 2 (23:46):
Right?
Speaker 1 (23:46):
What's in it for you? Because people are going to say,
you know, are you are you trying to be the
next Jim and Tammy Fay and have jets and fly
around the world. What's what's the value in it for you?
What are you trying to call?
Speaker 3 (23:58):
We we have no money, I don't have a bank account.
None of us have bank accounts except for Jason right
now because of the business accounts. But that we're passing
that on. We're moving to a foundation. This is our life,
this is the life that we live, and we believe
that the world's transitioning and we believe that we're moving
back into community and this is the way that humans
(24:19):
used to live and work.
Speaker 1 (24:20):
And I think that's great that you say that, because
a lot of people might want to hide that. That's fantastic.
Speaker 2 (24:25):
Okay, if you.
Speaker 3 (24:25):
Want to know about my old Austere is public and
everything that we've ever every conversation we've ever had since
twenty twenty has been recorded, and as you go through
our program, we give access to everything, including arguments and
business discussions, including financial discussions. We're making it all public
because we're taking away this veil of privacy, which is
where things hide. And when you take away where things hide,
(24:49):
then healing actually happens. Because at the core of every
disease is something I don't want somebody to know. Yeah
that I'm ashamed of it, right, and this is the
fundamental control point that disease has had over the world.
And if we remove privacy at the at the at
the center of it then and we shine a light
(25:11):
on it. Then things that I don't want people to know,
like I have cancer, or I have AIDS, or I
have herpes. These are things that have been kept quiet.
And even in our clinical practice, we did not use diagnosis,
and we made the we have open floor and if
you didn't.
Speaker 2 (25:25):
Like it, go somewhere else.
Speaker 3 (25:27):
Right, And as we remove disease and the shame and
the guilt of feeling a certain way in our body,
the body tends to heal and that's how we live
our life.
Speaker 1 (25:43):
Thank everyone for listening. Thank you to Gary Linham for
being with us today. A great conversation. If you want
to learn more about it, you can go to Human Garage.
They have an app, they have a website. You can
check that out there. I want to thank everyone on
the straw Hut Media team, including executive producer Ryan Tillotson
and our editor and producer Parker Jay Hicks, And as
always a big thank you the Fletcher Jones Motor Cars
(26:06):
in Newport Beach for providing this beautiful Mercedes Benz EQE
to be our rolling podcast studio. Join us next time
on locales only where you can buckle up and go
for a ride in our mobile podcast studio with some
of the coolest people in Southern California.