Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:09):
Good morning everyone. This is Michelle Hughes from Ageless and Timeless. Today,
I have a guest that I met about a year
or so ago at the Radfest festival, and his name
is Brian Brazinski and he's the founder and inventor of
a company products called Intelligent Threads. So welcome Brian. Nice
(00:31):
to meet you again.
Speaker 2 (00:33):
Good to see you.
Speaker 1 (00:34):
Okay, So tell us Brian, when we met you know,
I was with you and Ron, you're one of your
former colleagues, and you all gave me a demonstration. So
I want my viewers to understand a little bit about
what Intelligent Threads is. But first I want them to
know who you are. So tell us your about your journey.
(00:57):
How did you get from there? From there? Here? Just
give us a history.
Speaker 2 (01:03):
Absolutely growing up, I became a janitor in high school. Yeah,
and uh, I just my buddies an't on the janitory service,
and it was a great job we could do after school.
And but but I vacuumed. That was one of my jobs.
So I had an industrial shrink vacuum that I vacuumed.
(01:26):
It felt like half a football till the night. Maybe
it wasn't that much, uh. In perfect triangles right and
it was real heavy vacuum. So my sophomore year when
I started, I had a pretty good posture, and my
junior year I tightened up so much on my right
side because I never used my left hand. And then
by my senior year, the pictures I have I'm like this,
and my performance in basketball. I was a big basketball player.
(01:49):
It dropped. I was better my sophomore year statistically and
moving around than I was my senior year. And I
hurt myself real bad with my ankle. I went to rehab,
did all that stuf, and a month later I went
to the doctor and he said, well, it's gonna be
another month for your swelling stars to go down. And
I thought, what the world? And I thought, well, that's
(02:10):
the end. That's the end of my career, you know,
not that I I mean in high school, but I
wanted to go play college ball. My dad played college ball.
I want to go play. And my mom goes, let's
go see this guy. And there was a man in Waco.
I'm from Waco, Texas.
Speaker 1 (02:23):
And.
Speaker 2 (02:25):
He walks in. I walk in the room and I
have an air cast on my ankle and he looks
at me and he goes your knees out of place,
and I thought, now, I'm probably about seventeen eighteen years old,
and I thought, this is this guy's an idiot. I
got a big cast on my ankle and he's talking
about my knee, and sure enough, he does some stuff
(02:45):
and my knee freeze up, and all of a sudden,
I can feel the blood flow go back to my ankle,
and I thought, hmm, by the next day, my swelling's gone.
By three days later, I'm in the gym like nothing
ever happened. In fact, he got my body back to
its neutral position and I'm performing like I did my
sophomore year.
Speaker 1 (03:04):
Wow.
Speaker 2 (03:06):
And what it is? As I tightened up on that
side of the body, I twisted my ankle. Wow. When
I went back and looked at the video, for sure
I laying on somebody's foot. No, it was a flat
gym floor. I came straight down and just rolled my ankle. Well,
that should never happen. But I was so bound up,
now more prone to injury. And I was just blown
(03:26):
away by that, and I was like, how did he
do that? And so I just started immediately studying learning,
and then I started working with him, and that was
twenty five years ago, and from that what I do
in my office. I'm in my office right now. When
I do day to day, we work with people structurally
hands on with their body. But I realized from that,
(03:46):
if I can get the muscles that hold the structure
out of place to let go, then the body will
stay straight or go back straight, and then they have
to come back and see me. So it took me
fifteen years, but I finally figured out how to get
all the engaged muscles to let go. And it's as
simple as putting on a shirt.
Speaker 1 (04:06):
And well, how do you let those muscles go?
Speaker 2 (04:08):
Absolutely, so we did. I developed a particle. We call
it tensionally particle, you could say frequency.
Speaker 1 (04:15):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (04:15):
We use a method called molecular affixation, and so we
open up the molecule, put the put the particle in there,
close it and so when you put it on, it
sends the signals to the body. It actually has to
be about an inch away from the body for it
to work, and it signals to the muscles will let go.
So what happens is when the muscles get tight, the
brain's talent us to do that. And what happens is
(04:38):
it pulls the shoulders down, say on the right side, Well,
you're next going If that happens, your neck hurts. I
know I was there at one point. So your body
will compensate. So now the shoulders level, but now the
hip hurts, and then that might last five minutes or
five years, and then you compensate again. And now let's
say the knee hurts, and so now you go, oh
(04:59):
my god, my knee hurt, and we go look at
the knee, because that's what the pain is that but
it has nothing to do with the knee. It's a
byproduct of the overall compensation. And so I figured, well,
you know what, if we can get the overall muscles
to let go, then that stops all those compensations. And
sure enough it does. And so that's why when you
put it on, you'll see people like this and all
of a sudden they start straightening up and all those
(05:19):
engaged muscles let go and they just feel so much better.
And then there and then we've developed some moves and
stretches to do with it as well, and so now
you can move even more bones into the right position
just by wearing a T shirt and doing a few movements.
Speaker 1 (05:32):
So this is the basically the product Intelligent Threads, which
is your company that you found in, has in it
the science or the technology to help those muscles to relax. Yep, okay,
tell it. I don't understand how that can work. That
just seems too good to be true.
Speaker 2 (05:54):
He said that really good. I'm taking notes. So think
about your body. Your body is made out of dirt, water, electricity.
So if you put a ting to it on and
you turn it on, your muscles start engaging and disengaging. Right.
If you get a heart attack and you die, they'll
take a defibrillator and hit you. What are they hitting
(06:16):
me with? They're hitting you with electricity. They're not hitting
you with the force. They're literally hitting you with electricity
to try to rejump your hearts. Your body runs on
electrical grid, and so we figure out how to send
a signal to that grid or to the muscles to
make those let go. Because if you can make them
all let go, then it stops the conversational chain, and
by doing that, you'll actually stay straight or yeah, I
(06:39):
should say you have a greater tendency to stay straight
because there's still scar tissue and there's still dumb stuff
that can happen. You still have toxicity that can interfere
with that kind of signaling. But if you take all
those out of the if you take all those away,
it will keep your body straight for sure.
Speaker 1 (06:56):
So is there are there names of actual ingredients. Let's
say let's save this for a product that you know
you're going to eat or ingest. So you want to
know what you are you looking at a supplement. You
want to know what what's in Its actually different? Okay,
So tell us more about the ins and outs of
(07:17):
what's in the product that in the in the shirt.
Let's say, are you wearing one right now?
Speaker 2 (07:23):
Oh? Yeah?
Speaker 1 (07:24):
Yeah? Do you wear it every day?
Speaker 2 (07:26):
Okay?
Speaker 1 (07:28):
Okay, so you don't.
Speaker 2 (07:29):
You don't have to wear it every day once your
body stabilizes, but if you were a dose of it.
Like my bed sheets, I have bed sheets that have
our technology in it, so every night I'm good to go.
But when I'm working, my job's pretty physical, so I
like to have something on so I don't injure myself
or hurt myself. Yeah, what's in it? It's essentially a
bunch of different frequencies that we figured out and combination
(07:52):
creates a signaling process. So it's literally just a bunch
of frequencies, but we just figured out, you know, the
right ones that cause the muscles to let go. It's
a a vast amount of them actually, So when.
Speaker 1 (08:02):
You say a frequency, can you define that a little
bit more for us?
Speaker 2 (08:07):
Absolutely? So when the you have the neutron the proton,
when they when they go around and that makes the atom,
there's a wiggle to it, and that wiggle is the
signature aspect of what it is. So like water, the
wiggleways really fast. Well, that wigglewait is the frequency of
the of the atom or the proton or neutron. Now
(08:29):
like concrete or wood, it's really that wiggleway's really slow,
so it's more dense. And so that was really interesting.
And if you look at it, an atom is a
prize of mostly nothing. So in comparison, if you had
an atom the size of a football field, the middle
would be like a grain of rice on the fifty
(08:50):
yard lines and the proton neutrons would be going around
the track them outside of the football field. So if
you took all the open space out of your body
and shrunk it down, you would be like this big.
And so once you understand that you're made out of
like a a neutron cloud, and really you're not even
touching each other. You're just bouncing off your neutrons are
bouncing off each other because if you actually uh crossed over,
(09:13):
you would become each other. Right, So there's a really
we're just more frequency based. And once you kind of
go down that path, you realize, you know, everything's frequency based.
There's not one thing on the planet that's not frequency based.
It's just a it's just a different way of thinking.
But that's where a lot of people are starting to
go to. I mean a lot of people I talk
(09:33):
to now they'll start talking about different frequencies, the frequency
and water, the frequency in this and that. But really
it's just an energetic expression. But you can label it
as frequency.
Speaker 1 (09:44):
Yeah, I mean they always say we are all energetic beings, right,
so you know, you know when they talk about chemistry
between people, Yeah, you know, why is it that you
have some chemistry with one person and another person there's
there's no there's nothing. So is that all related to
what we're talking about with respect to the frequency of
(10:07):
actually the whole human being? And there what they are
emitting as they interact with others.
Speaker 2 (10:14):
Yeah, I mean absolutely. Scientists have found a bioelectrical field
that they can measure, so they can measure everything coming
off of you and what you project and everything. So
that's there's a measurable, measurable field that comes off There's
tons of paper on it. Every plant, every tree has
a biological field that comes off of it. So yeah,
it's pretty neat. Once you get into the science of it,
you're like, wow, it's not like they're proving it out now,
(10:37):
so it's pretty neat.
Speaker 1 (10:38):
European Wellness, founded by the iconic and widely published professor
doctor Michael Chan, is the world leader in stem cell
and peptide therapy, with twenty six medical and aesthetics SPA
locations primarily in Europe and Asia. Their website www dot
europeanwllness dot com details the wide range of well Oness products.
(11:00):
It can be ordered using the age's code for a
ten percent discount. They will also offer our viewers discounts
on medical and cosmetic services and products that they choose
to visit the clinics. I have firsthand experience using their
wide range of science based stem cell and peptide products
and are now a loyal customer. Go to their website www.
(11:24):
European Wellness dot com for more information about this exciting company.
And that's where aura comes from, right like some people,
let's go through that because I this is fascinating honestly, Brian.
Speaker 2 (11:38):
Yeah, yeah, for sure.
Speaker 1 (11:39):
So how does this affect your aura or how is
the frequency connected to the actual aura of the individual being?
And then how does that connect with the intelligent threads
products that they would select.
Speaker 2 (11:54):
Yeah, so your body has sensors all over that that
are content sending it signals to the nervous system that
what's going on. So like if you touch something, you
smell something, you like your O factor and different things.
But to every part of your body has different sensors
that in it. It's a nerve and there's another nerve
that wrapped around it looks like a hair. I try
(12:16):
not to use two technical words because people I see
people look at me like, what did you say? But
if I can describe it in a way they understand that,
then get there. And so like with the aura classic
Chinese messing, they'll say that depending on who you are,
how sick you are, your fame thought process. If you're
(12:37):
a good guy. If you're a bad guy, that will
change your ore. That can change how much it is,
how much you project out your conscious level and all that. So,
and they have different machines now that can pick up
on all that. It's pretty fascinating. We relately we've been
using a subtle energy machine, the heart rate Verian machine
EKG and stuff like that. We've been testing the body
(12:58):
and so we're finding different aspects of the body change.
I simply put it on INTELSA intems of threads is
a particle that we embed into fabric, and so when
you put it on, that's what interacts with it. I
don't know if I made that completely.
Speaker 1 (13:11):
Yeah, that's where you go nets. But that's okay. I
like you're describing. So you're building, you're building the house.
Speaker 2 (13:18):
Building the only way to do it.
Speaker 1 (13:23):
Right, Okay, So how okay? This all sounds so simple,
but obviously it's very complex. Yeah, very common you went through.
So take us back again to this your journey and
in high school and now you're finding out that you
are interconnected, that you're you know, there's there's no reason
(13:44):
why I mean to you as someone that's just starting out,
if it doesn't seem like it should be the case
that your need would cause your shoulder to be uh affected.
But it is all interconnected because you are all energy, right,
So how did you go from there to where you
are with what you've developed? I mean, how did you
(14:05):
get to understanding that you needed to develop actual wearables
or usables that would affect those those those protocols that
you were confronting in terms of your energy.
Speaker 2 (14:24):
Yeah, I remember. I remember the first year I started
working and training with the guy real heavily. I thought
to myself, if I can get the engaged muscles to
let go. But what I mean by engaged muscles? And
I can't find a good literature on this. So let's
say this is the placement of the bone in your body,
and this is the muscle attaches to it. When that
(14:45):
muscle gets tight, it can hold or pull your structure about. See,
I engage this muscle, So this my bone is now
in a different position, right, And the only way that's
going to go up as by release this muscle. I
mean the people will go with duh, But don't overthink it.
I mean literally, you see somebody like that, there's something
holding it, right, And so I thought if I can
(15:06):
get those who let go, I don't won't have to
have people come back near as much, and sure enough
they don't. I had a case this guy on his
knee was just bad. Then they came up here in
his ribcage and I found something that was just locked
down and released it. And I asked him, I said,
what happened? And he goes, I don't know. Well, it
(15:26):
turned out then who was younger. He was in the street,
caught a football playing, you know, playing football in the street,
and ran into a car. It was a parked car.
If he didn't hit in my car, he hit a car.
But he's pretty sure he cracked his rib right there.
But he wasn't sure, wasn't gonna tell his dad because
he get in trouble, so he just dealt with it. Well,
that just kept the whole right side locked down, and
(15:47):
so sure enough he blew his knee out. If that
never happened in his ribcage here, or something happened on
his right side, he would have never blown his knee out. Now,
if he would have got hit with a sledgehammer in
his ne Okay, I'll bets are off. That's that's exactly
did it. But he was warming up on a track
doing high leg lifts and he tripped on somebody, so
(16:09):
he thought because when he fell down, he found a
foot right here, and he goes, whose foot is this?
And he looked down and he goes, oh, it's my foot.
And he tore every ligament in his knee besides his
ptel attendon, and they had to rush from the hospital
and take care of him. You know, the guy's like
twenty years old. There's no way, there's no way that
should ever happen. And less over the last ten plus years,
(16:31):
he's been holding that side out of balance and now
all of a sudden it caused a tremendous load on
the knee and just one little high leglift broke it
all up. And so when I saw that, I go, Okay,
So if we can get the body into a right
position or right balance, there's just so much less issues
that are going to happen. And I didn't even understand
(16:53):
when your body's in a nice state and what I
call original position, or like the the way that your
body is supposed to be, the way that you're born,
most people, uh, the pair of sympathetic sets in your
body can heal the stress load drops. There's so many
different facets that come from that. Like, Uh, there's there's
(17:14):
some amazing supplements on the market that are good, and
I take selflements. They're good, no doubt. But like, let's
get the body straight and then take the selplements and
the sets are gonna have an easier time to work
because they're now they're not fighting through a bunch of trauma.
I'll say, let me say it like this, I had
somebody come in, or let me say it like this.
Everybody that comes in my clinic, when I push on them,
(17:36):
they have muscles that are tight. The pay down on
the table and I push on them. They're sore and
they're tight. They're laying down on the table. Why is
that still tight. There's no reason for that to be tight.
They're laying flat on the table unless they're compensated for something.
And when we're done, there's no more tight muscles left
in their body. And now they have the greatest chance
(17:58):
to stay straight. And then how we can give them
a product to take home to keep them straight and
if they do get out, we have some moves and
stretches to put themselves back in place.
Speaker 1 (18:07):
Uh, huh. So to me, so you're using some vibrating
machines to help to get the muscles to relax, Like
the are you just doing it all manually? And did
you have to go to chiropractic school or how did
you get to know how to do all this?
Speaker 2 (18:24):
Yeah, so we don't use anything. I do. I've had
to use machines in the past. I still use a
couple here and there, but I just literally take our
intelligences clothing and lay it on them and then that
releases all those engaged muscles. Now here, let me I'll
answer the second question in the second but let me
go in a little more detail here, because this, to me,
this is fascinating.
Speaker 1 (18:44):
Is this is really this is really important, Brian. And
what you're talking.
Speaker 2 (18:47):
About structure is so key. So when that muscle gets tight,
it pulls the bone out of place, right, yeah, right,
the opposite muscle, there's an effect. Yeah, Now that muscle
gets pooled site. Yeah, Now think about this. It's not engaged,
it's pulled. Yeah, this muscle hurts. This muscle doesn't hurt.
(19:12):
This is the problem. This is the pain. Now if
I rub this muscle, what's the chances of being releasing
that muscle. None, because it's thinking of it like a
rubber band being stretched out. The rubber band is not
going to take the tensity away unless you cut it. Now,
if we if you ripped it, or you cut it. Sure,
(19:33):
But the only way to get that rubber band to
release is the move it back together. So the only
way to get that muscle to let go is to
move the bone back and then it lets go.
Speaker 1 (19:43):
And how do you how do you do that? How
do you without breaking a bone? How do you get
the bone?
Speaker 2 (19:49):
No? Absolutely well, you got to get the other muscle
to let go. Sometimes the bones will automatically go back
in the right position because the ligam is a tendancer
trying to hold it in the right position. So but
if I take this pool muscle right here, right and
I rub it real hard, what happens is rub it
simmy heat old sound that. What happens is I fatigue
(20:09):
the nerve. When I fatigue the nerve, man, it feels
better about an hour, maybe a couple of days, and
then it hurts again. Man, I need to go get
a So you got a positive result, you go, Okay,
let's see how we can do it harder. And deeper.
Let's get in there with our elbow. And there's nothing
wrong with that. When it comes to breaking up scar cheese,
you're releasing engaged muscles. But so many times we're spending
(20:30):
time releasing or working on muscles are being pulled tight. Well,
the only way to release those that get the bones
back in place. And the cool part is is once
the muscles let go, the pool muscles, the muscles doing
the pooling let go. Then then now the body will
start correcting itself on its own, and we have some
movements to put even more bones in the right position.
(20:51):
Like I could give you a ton of different examples,
but when you see it in person, you'll be like, wow,
that makes sense. Hopefully what I'm saying. Hopefully what I'm
saying it makes sense to me.
Speaker 1 (21:01):
Well, of course it's going to make sense to you
because you're living it. But to somebody that's on, you know,
uneducated about all of this, it's it's like Greek. Okay,
they've learning language, but yet logically what you're saying makes
sense because the body is all interconnected or everything is HCT.
So that's why they talk about the Meridians. And if
(21:23):
you in Chinese medicine, you know, chi the energy that
goes from the the head to the tow right, and
all the different meridians that affect that. So but okay,
so give us some examples of people that the types
of people that would come to you. Are you working with,
like the NFL teams or any of the major sports
(21:48):
teams that because this happens all the time in athletics,
right and obviously, so give us some examples of people
that you've actually worked with. If you don't, if you
can't say names, okay, but.
Speaker 2 (22:03):
Yeah, So I've worked on people from every sport in
the FL, NBA, and Major League Baseball. One of our
one of our clients we started working on I think
around twenty five tis six, was Tracy McGrady. He he
was he like led the NBA scoring, he was you know,
he's a really big deal. And then we've worked on
(22:24):
there's there's there's tons and tons of athletes. I could
drop names. T O t O was, Oh my god,
I love theo. Uh Taylor Bones uh he uh. He
played in the NFL for I think fifteen years or so,
and we were there most of the time with him
and he just now a couple of weeks ago became
a I think he's he's fifty fifty one, fifty two.
(22:45):
He just became a professional pickleball player. I called him
up and said, hey, man, if you need some market os,
yeah I probably will.
Speaker 1 (22:52):
Well, you know, whatever somebody talks about pickleball, I think, okay, well,
now they've graduated from being into the Golden Year, because
it seems like, I mean, I realize a lot of
young people are you know, under fifty are playing pickleball now,
But it just seemed like, you know, for me, I
was always a tennis player, and to go to pickleball
was like, oh no, no, no, it means I'm getting old.
(23:14):
I can't do that. I have to stay with tennis
and know that I'm you know, it's a full thing.
So when somebody speaking of tennis, when someone gets tennis elbow,
which all tennis players seem to get, is that something
that this would apply to? Okay, yeah, explain that just
as one example, how how would you fix a tennis elbow?
Speaker 2 (23:35):
Absolutely, I'll backtrack just a little bit and then tie
it right into it. Majority of people that come into me,
though they've already been everywhere else, they've seen everybody and
nobody can help them because it's a structural imbalance. And
so what we're gonna do is we're gonna address the
entire body. So people that have tennis elbows, sometimes it's
as simple as changing the angle the racket as they serve.
(23:58):
You can fix it that way. But overall, if there's
a pull, say through the shoulders and neck the upper thoracic,
it's gonna pull on the elbow wrong, and so that's
going to cause tension within the forearm. Uh, and then
pull through the elbow essentially. So there again, I get
in that structure right, it's going to stop the pool
(24:19):
there and then you'll get better. Like I'll say this,
a lot of people think, oh, Brian's shirts a pain reliever.
It does help pain, but in its core, it's not.
I don't want to mask pain. I want to fix
it at a root cause level. If you have if
you have an infection in your tooth and you put
my shirt on, it's gonna help a little because it
(24:41):
will help blood flow and everything relax, but you still
everybody still has to fight against that infection. If you
have a structure and balance that's causing pain, yeah, it's
going to help that, and it might not. It might
be a day or two before it helps it because
it might take a time for your boy to recalibrate.
Speaker 1 (24:55):
Right, So in the manufacturing process of the all the
you know, the shirts and all the other products, which
we'll go through the products that you offer, because I
was really kind of shocked at the show and I
saw all that you could do. I mean, you could
wear the shirts, you could sleep on the sheets, you
could You sent me a pillowcase that I think it's
(25:17):
made of bamboo, the one that I got, And yeah,
I mean I don't I don't have any real injuries
or anything except I broke an ankle, but that that pillowcase,
I don't know if that's gonna it was just just
as a side note. Would that pillowcase affect my broken ankle?
Speaker 2 (25:34):
Oh yeah?
Speaker 1 (25:35):
Oh okay, all right, Well I broke it. I broke
it long before I started using your pillowcase, so it
was already pretty well healed. But still that was an injury.
But but you know, injuries can reoccur.
Speaker 2 (25:47):
Too, so absolutely yes.
Speaker 1 (25:50):
But tell us about the manufacturing process. So let's start,
like it's the very first step. What what happens. Tell
us how it how it evolves into a product.
Speaker 2 (26:01):
Yeah, so we we source materials from all over, we
put them, we put them together, and so right now
we're we've actually found a couple of key companies to
work with now and then we have I had to
build out of a machine and so we essentially take
the fabric and put it through the machine. And by
doing that we can actually do the mechlar fixation into
the fabric. And the nice part is the way that
(26:23):
we're bonded into the fabric. It doesn't wash out. At
least we can say after ten years it still it
still works like day one. So that's that's the nice part.
Once you get something, don't keep I mean, you can
buy whatever you want to buy, but one shirt, one
pillow case, it works really good for a long time.
Speaker 1 (26:40):
Well, so, so how do you inject the molecular uh
into the into the actual product?
Speaker 2 (26:49):
I have I have a machine that does it. So
I had a build out of a machine and essentially we
run the clothing through that. It just it's a process
that it goes through. It takes some time, but it
it literally uh projects the particles right into the fabric
at the molecular subelector.
Speaker 1 (27:07):
Level and so the raw materials the molecular tell us
about that.
Speaker 2 (27:15):
So I had to I had to build another machine
to actually even create the particle. And that's that's what
took me fifteen years to figure out. And then I
just basically got a lot of different I finally figured
out the combinations of frequencies that it takes to uh
get the muscles to let go. And then we've been
playing with that ever since. And now we're going I'm
(27:37):
back in the lab, you know, trying to figure out
the next product.
Speaker 1 (27:39):
So and what what do you think that next product
would be?
Speaker 2 (27:44):
Well, I don't I don't know. We I started, I, uh,
there's a lot actually, because if I can do this
with the muscles, what else can we do? So I
started playing around with like a focus cap and I
had a PGA golfer where uh because it will help
us focus. Because think about it, if you can focus
when you play, how good would that be? And he
(28:05):
said Brian about the ninth hole, he got so tired
he couldn't take it and he had to take the
hat off, and the rest of the game he could
hardly focus. But at first he said that first seven
eight holes he was dialed in, So I was thinking, okay,
you probably shouldn't be focused for like three hours straight
like that, especially like being able to focus, you know,
because really you focus when you shoot the ball and
(28:27):
the rest of the time you're not dialed in. You know,
that like extreme focus. But he's walking around extreme focus.
I've been looking at different things like weight loss and
anything that can help the body inflammation, stuff like that,
and we're starting to see some grounds made with it.
But we'll see how it turns out.
Speaker 1 (28:47):
Do you have to patent all this technology or how
do you protect yourself from competitors?
Speaker 2 (28:53):
Yeah? Good question, so we keep we keep it a
trade secret. I went to three different patent terms and
they all told me don't patent and I said why not?
They said, well, if you when you pat somebody, you
patent something, you have to tell exactly how you do it.
If you if they can't replicate it from the patent,
the patent's void. And I was like really, They're like yeah,
(29:14):
They're like, so can you keep it a trade secrets?
Like yeah, so far no one's even remotely figured it out.
And they said okay. They said, well if you patted it,
you're going to tell exactly how you do it. You're
gonna blow up the Nike or China or somebody will
come in and be like, okay, we're gonna take this,
and then you can't fight against China. And then they
owned the clothing market and they could just basically undercut
(29:35):
you in every way. And I thought, huh. And they said, yeah,
you're gonna put it all the work in, tell everybody
how it works, and they'll just scoop in and undercut
you in a major way. And I said, okay, he goes,
he goes, as long as long as you feel like
there's no way people can figure it out. And so far,
I've talked to some pretty high end top scientists and
NaSTA people in different things, and they have no clue
what we're putting together or how we're doing it. So
(29:57):
what I'm basically doing is I'm keeping everything under wraps.
I have, you know, the machines out in different places.
We just keep them protected and don't worry about it.
Speaker 1 (30:09):
You know, this this almost seems like voodoo. It's just
so I'm sorry, you know, I'm not trying to Yeah, no,
for sure, it just doesn't seem like it could be possible,
but yet, but it's working and you have testimonials, how
do you get the credibility gap? How do you explain?
Speaker 2 (30:30):
I'm sorry, exactly, no, exactly, that's a great question. So
the funny part was, at first I didn't believe myself,
Like I had the product and I started testing. I
was like, did that really happen? And I did a
ton of studies and tests myself, and now I know
that in advalidity anything because I'm testing my own product.
But yeah, so I tested it for a while before
(30:52):
I released it into the general public, and then I
finally believed in my own product, the Nose. And I
don't blame anybody for thinking that way because think about it,
like when electricity first came out, what do you compare
that too? There's nothing really compared to And I imagine
the first time somebody got shocked, like Edison's over there
or Tesla's over there, shocking people like, what the heck
(31:14):
is this? This is crazy? You mean I can flip
a switch and a light bull turns on. That's voodoo?
How does that work?
Speaker 1 (31:19):
Now?
Speaker 2 (31:20):
We don't even think about it. It's just normal, it's natural,
like I think about like a microwave. Think about that.
For years you're heating up in the oven over a fire,
and then all of a sudden you put in a
box and that it doesn't even heat up inside, Like
you can put your hand right in there and it's good.
So like, how does that work? That's crazy. And so
it's just a newer technology. It's something that's coming on
(31:40):
the pipeline. But it's something that's gonna help a ton
of people. I mean, if we can get rid of
a structural imbalances or the majority of it in people,
I mean, it's just gonna it's gonna help a lot
of people. And that's my heart is to help people.
So I don't I don't blame people at all. People
all the time and they go, that's impossible. I go,
it was until it's figured out. And I really believe
(32:01):
there's not a whole lot of things that are impossible.
We just haven't figured it out yet. So I just
pushed the boundaries of my belief and I figured out
something that's just as far as I know, previously wasn't there.
Speaker 1 (32:11):
So so okay, it all sounds, you know, so amazing
and really miraculous, like if this could really work for people,
and you obviously have a lot of people that are,
including yourself, that it has worked for, but that doesn't
That is not addressing going from A to B to
start and create an entrepreneurial company, you know, And I
(32:36):
think you're you're so modest and humble that you're not really,
you know, addressing some of the challenges because you know,
let's face it, ninety nine well three, what do they say?
Only two percent of the companies that get created ever
are successful. So ninety eight percent fatality rate for startup companies.
(32:58):
And yet you're still here and you're still thriving.
Speaker 2 (33:01):
And you're ten years later.
Speaker 1 (33:02):
Yeah, how many years is it?
Speaker 2 (33:05):
Then? I've had the technology for ten years?
Speaker 1 (33:07):
Man? Yeah, okay, so let's take this and dissect it. Okay,
how are you? How do you feel that you've become
one of the two percenters versus the ninety eight percent
that failed?
Speaker 2 (33:20):
Man, I feel like I'm still trying to I feel
like I'm still trying to make it. I don't know,
I don't know when I'll make it, you know what
I'm saying exactly, But I think because I don't care,
it's not about me it's not about my desire. It's
about helping other people. Like if I gain nothing from
but I don't care if I help a ton of people.
That's where it's at. So I think I don't care
(33:42):
how long it takes. It's not about me. It's about
helping other people. And then every day I got to
see the effects of it and how it helps people.
And now we're getting all these testimonies in from all
these different people. Oh oh, the other day we were
at I was at my friend clinic. He he just
put in a new kobucha drink in the front of
(34:05):
the front of the Yeah, so we went over there
to drink some and he goes show There's two girls
working behind the counter. She goes, show them your product.
I said, oh, absolutely, because the demo when you push
on is really good right as you as you experienced,
And so the one girl she wasn't that bad. She goes, yeah,
I think I can feel the difference. And you know,
(34:26):
quite frankly, if you're completely straight and you have no
stress in your body, the shirts, I can do a
lot for you. I just never met that person.
Speaker 1 (34:33):
I don't think there's anybody that doesn't, particularly as of
getting into the you know, adult years, because they've had
all these years now like you did, to get into
your or to do something to tweak the bodies. The
body is a miracle, but it isn't so miraculous that
it doesn't get in some way damaged, you know.
Speaker 2 (34:53):
Because absolutely we tend to do.
Speaker 1 (34:55):
Activities that create that trauma.
Speaker 2 (34:58):
So yeah, so to the other sorry, yeah, yeah, the
other girl, she says, he said, oh, I injured my shoulder.
I can't raise it up. I said, okay, we said good,
So I do the push test and I push on
her and I put the shirt over her shoulders or
technology on her, and I pushed on her again. She says,
oh my gosh, the pain's gone. And I said, yeah,
(35:20):
it doesn't hurt anymore. She said, well, how about my shoulder.
I said, we'll try to raise it and she raises
it straight up and she looks at it and she
starts bawling. I mean, why now, usually somebody hurts her
shoulder and they can move it again. It's cool, it's miraculous,
but it's not like I saw mer and like, why
are you crying so much? Like like she goes, no,
(35:42):
you don't understand. I injured it when I was born.
I've never been able to pull or pull my shoulder
up in my life. I've been in pt and rehab
and we've been stretching it and trying to get it up,
but it won't go there. She's like, this is the
first time I can do that. I was like, well, here,
let me give you a high five. The first person
(36:05):
ever gave a high five. So I was you know,
some stories like that just drives you because maybe eventually
she she could have, but it was literally like I
couldn't do it. All of a sudden she could do it.
Speaker 1 (36:16):
Well, it's amazing that she would have gone from birth
to wherever she was in her life cycle to uh
not have anyone be able to create mobility. Even with
all the technology that's available today like the pe m
F machine or you know.
Speaker 2 (36:34):
Which are all good, there's a time and place for
all of them. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (36:39):
So okay, So now I want you to go through
the how do you create a company's side of this?
How did you how did you get did you go
get funding? How did you do this? Let's let's get deeper,
do a deeper dive.
Speaker 2 (36:54):
Absolutely, So, first thing is I tested it. I tested
it for a while, just to make sure it was
on the up and up. And what I did double
bunch studies myself. I'd have people laid down, I would
do the push test, we put the shirt on. We
wouldn't even tell what we're doing, you know, and they
would be like, hey, wait a minute, that doesn't hurt anymore.
(37:16):
How does that work? And they have no clue, and
I'm like, okay, So I built my belief system in
it and proved it out to myself. No, you can't
talk me out of it. The next thing I did
is I thought, Okay, I need to make a black
shirt and that's all I want to make. And I'm
gonna start a website and then it'll catch on and
I'll just sit back and it'll work.
Speaker 1 (37:39):
How old were you at this point?
Speaker 2 (37:42):
That was about nine eight, nine years.
Speaker 1 (37:44):
Ago, okay, so that would have made you.
Speaker 2 (37:48):
Thirty six thirty seven.
Speaker 1 (37:50):
Okay, so you were you were old enough to know better.
And yeah, well, I.
Speaker 2 (37:55):
Work with people's bodies. I don't run companies. You know
what I'm saying. I don't know how to do business.
Speaker 1 (38:00):
And this is why I'm asking the question, Brian, because
you know your background. You did never had this experience
before and yet here we are and it's just so
it's so amazing to hear your story.
Speaker 2 (38:13):
Yeah, and so then I connected with the business guy
and he helped me. The first guy helped me a time.
He kind of was like, hey, you you you need
well he's the one that helped me get a website.
We actually made a divert different types of clothing, and
then he kind of served his role and then I
kind of learned what he learned, and so he kind
(38:33):
of went his way. We're still friends, nothing like that.
It's just he helped me to where he could help me.
So I connected with another business guy and he and
then I started diving in the business books. I started
reading like crazy, and uh, he kind of helped me
to a certain point. Then I connected with another business
guy and he helped me. But really I just meant
toward with a lot of different people, which is awesome.
Speaker 1 (38:54):
You were you were mentored by a lot of different people.
That's what you think you meant to say a lot?
Speaker 2 (38:59):
Sorry, yes, sorry, A lot of business guys like I
how like and by practice, when I work with people
I have I've mentored with, say like chiropractors or dentists
or somebody that's had like working with the general public.
So I've always I believe in mentorship, and I believe
(39:20):
in reading books because you can get a lot of
information just by reading the book.
Speaker 1 (39:25):
And then.
Speaker 2 (39:28):
And we started doing trade shows because the bio hacking
community they're looking for what we had. Because I thought
I have a huge, vast network in the sports world,
it's But what happened was when we went to the
sports world, the guy goes, this is really good. I'm
not going to tell anybody, but no, no, no, tell everybody, no, no, no,
this is my secret. This is going to help me out.
(39:49):
I don't want to tell the rest of my teammates,
which I don't blame them because it's a cutthroat, a cutthroat.
Speaker 1 (39:54):
Business, right.
Speaker 2 (39:55):
And so we realized going to the bio hacking world,
the people there's more of them. First off, there's millions
of them, and they're looking for what we have, right,
we just have to prove to them that works. We
started doing trade shows and my goodness, everybody love. I mean,
we have some people go that's not true. The haters.
That's great, And I don't blame them. Because quite frankly,
(40:16):
I wouldn't have believed it either until I experienced it.
And so but once people experience this, it was really good.
Like the last weekend, we were just at a chiropractic
conference and really everybody there is really nice, and we
show them the science and we showed them this and
that and they all like, wow, that's really cool. So
the receptions were And then the other thing is we
(40:38):
started doing lots of different testing. We had different parties
come in and do testing. We're doing a test right now,
we're doing we have we actually have like three or
four tests ready to go. As soon as we get
this first one done, then we're gonna go back and
do a bunch more. So I don't think that will
ever stop. So we brought it. We brought in the
credibility of it. We made the fashion. Then we got
all different types of clothing, bed sheets, cases, so use ability, fashionability, fashionability,
(41:04):
we raised that up as well, and then we started
raising awareness and marketing. I'll tell you a story there
was there was a book that we read and the
author of the book. We called the author up and
said hey can we as a business book? We say, hey,
can we meet with you, and their company said, yeah,
(41:25):
they this person will meet with you. So we meet
with them, and the author of the book says, wait,
Intelligent Threads, Brian Brazinski, and they go. We said, yeah, oh,
I love your product. I use it all the time
and I give it to all my friends. We go really,
they go, yeah, how can I help you? And so
they literally kind of gave us the book basically gave
(41:46):
us a blueprint of what to do, and we just
followed it. And so there was a bunch of strategies
in there, and so we kicked off the social media game,
which I didn't think was possible. And this year our
social media has jumped off the room. And that's now
their internet sells were before it was one on one
storefront conferences. Now all of a sudden, we're seeing a
(42:07):
big game in the social media and internet. And then
now because we're reaching all over the world, we're getting
testimonies in from everywhere and we're starting to see a
huge ground swell. So it's like, okay, here we go.
Sow years later.
Speaker 1 (42:22):
Somebody who's a doubting trauma, where can they go to
allay their concerns or their doubts? How do they get
to be confident and become a you know, a devote
of your products.
Speaker 2 (42:38):
Absolutely. We have a couple of different places they can go.
Obviously they can come to Texas. We have a storefront
and also an office that has the technology people in
their train. They can show you firsthand exactly that works.
I think that is the best way. Another way you
could do is just order something on line. Is a
thirty day money back guaranteed. Try it. There's a video
that shows you how to do the push test or
(42:58):
the pain relieving test your there's some movements you can
do that. Check it. If you have an HRV machine
or like a or ring or whatever. Once you put
it on, you can track your sleep in your HRV
and different things, and you can see the improvement in
that as well. We see that pretty much across the
board with unless you're unless you have an amazing sleep score,
(43:20):
we see a change in that as well. And then
we do different conferences. We have two we have three
more conferences coming up this year, and we posted on lines.
So if I'll meet you in the lobby, I'll meet
you at the restaurant or whatever, and I'd love to
show you because once you feel it, you'll get it.
Until then it's intriguing. But you know I always just hey,
(43:43):
get something, we'll give your money back if you think
it's a bunch of whoy. Quite frankly, I don't blame
people think it could be a whoy or a bunch
of who because there's a lot of junk out there
as well.
Speaker 1 (43:53):
So yeah, this is true, and that's I was just
reading an email this morning from one of my podcast
Ask guests, doctor Goodenow from pro Drone Sciences, And you know,
he does a lot of work with well he has
a whole supplement line, but he does a lot of
work with plasmaagens, which are you know, lipid molecules, and
(44:15):
basically he's done some amazing work. But his his title
of his email this morning was ninety eight percent of
all supplements of garbage, So you know, and that that
includes products too that are out there. So you have
to be so careful and discerning and like you said,
you know, you better fix yourself and then start to
(44:35):
supplement because the supplements could just be doing nothing if
you're still if your body's still out of alignment, or
you have some organ problem or you know whatever. That
it's it's you know, you're better off trying to do
things structurally like you're doing.
Speaker 2 (44:51):
So some people need the structure work first, and I
think some people do need the supplementation first. Maybe they're
deficient in something. So it's a it's a basis Somethingoats
are great. I'm not knocking them. You just got to
find the right ones.
Speaker 1 (45:03):
You just have to have the right ones. Okay, So
get since you're bringing that subject up, what supplements do
you take or would you share with our viewers to
you know, basically if they if they want to go
just buy you know, several that they think will be compelling.
Speaker 2 (45:23):
Yeah. Uh so on our website Synergy Synergy released method
dot com. I linked the vitamins that I take in
there because everybody asked me this, and so it makes
it simple.
Speaker 1 (45:34):
Okay.
Speaker 2 (45:35):
The website in there is called mother Earth Labs. But
if you you can just go through a website and
figure it out. It's the pH balance. Stuart Hoover, doctor Hoover,
he figured out that he was a nutritionist and he
had he was sounding like ten twenty vitamins per person
like coming in the door because they needed it. So
(45:57):
he just combined everything in one, which is genius and
it's a liquid and it's uh, he's when you read
the label, it's like, there's so much stuff in it's ridiculous.
So it was funny because I was talking to him
and he was like, you should try my supplement. I
was like, Okay, what's in it? He said, what are
you taking? I told him I was taking probably about
(46:18):
two hundred and three hundred dollars a month in vitamins,
which isn't hard to do. And he said, well, everything
you're taking is in my formula plus a whole lot
more said how much is your formally? He's like about
fifty bucks a month. I was like, well, I'm kind
of dumb if I don't try it. At this point,
I think I think now that was fifteen years ago.
I think now it's like seventy bucks a month. But still,
(46:41):
and I started taking it and I could I couldn't
tell anything physically, but cognitively I could definitely tell a
difference in there. But it's one of the best mitochondria
of builders I've seen. But since then, there are some
really there's some really cool investment advancements that come out,
Like we were before we go on are we're talking
about a supplement. Nathan Bryant, Yeah, yeah, that you go said.
(47:11):
He's kind of the he's the guy that kind of
figured it out. That guy, I love him. First off,
he's an amazing fellow. But he's got a great product.
But it's interesting because I'll find myself wanting to take
that one with my with because it's two different things, right.
And then there's a guy named Ian Mitchell who has
wizard sciences. Most of his are I can't say most
(47:34):
all of his priests are good, but there's a couple
of them, like the Neu RX or the Olympics RX.
That's some of the stuff that he's coming up with.
I'm like, I'm just blown away by. And another company
I really like is Activation Products Ian Clark. All these
people I've got to know over the years because what
I like to if I find something, I'm gonna go
(47:56):
figure it out and talk to the people and get
to understand it and really push through. And I take
a variety of different things from all these people. But
he has some stuff. Some of his stuff is just
common sense and it's pretty much free. He'll teach you
how to take care. Everybody won't really some of the
stuff he's taught me doesn't cost anything, so it's pretty cool.
Speaker 1 (48:18):
Oh yeah, you know what, when we get off the air,
if you could send me a list, because I want
my assistant to put if it's okay with you, to
put it in the show notes. But I wanted to
have the right names and the right because everything you've
mentioned except Nathan Bryan of course, who's you know, my
friend and I've been on my podcast and I just
(48:40):
told you before that I wrote an article on him
and Talk Doctor magazine. So so he and I take
his Lodgenger every day.
Speaker 2 (48:49):
Good.
Speaker 1 (48:50):
So, yeah, nitric oxide is the bomb, right as they.
Speaker 2 (48:53):
Said, it really is. It really is really good. Yeah,
And if you could.
Speaker 1 (48:56):
List those other ones for us so we make sure
we have the right name, are the right products? And
are those mostly liquids? I know you mentioned one is liquid,
the first.
Speaker 2 (49:05):
One, but yeah, yeah, most of them are liquid.
Speaker 1 (49:08):
Yeah, because liquid seems to be much more absorbable, particularly
if people have information or digestive issues, because let's face it,
they have to go through your gi tract get to
where they're going to be. And so are you taking
an ad product for the molecular.
Speaker 2 (49:27):
Yeah, Iron Clark, are I'm shooting I'm Mitchell. I get
it's Ian Clark and Iron Mitchell those anyways. Yeah, Iron
has a one part that has that in there, and
it's really good. I like it a lot.
Speaker 1 (49:43):
Because the nad is so hard to absorb, just like
glued to thion, which is the master antioxidant. You know,
you can take them and they're just not ever going
to get to where they need to be.
Speaker 2 (49:55):
He's literally figured out how to combine a couple of
things with it to make it work even better than
the body in my opinion, And there's a little bit
of research I've done. It's the best one I've seen
in the market. Maybe there's a maybe there's a better
one out there. I don't, you know, it's not my forte,
but I've done a little bit of research and just
talking with him, seeing the studies behind it, I'm like, wow,
this has got to be the best one on the market.
(50:15):
He goes, we think so, so pretty impressive.
Speaker 1 (50:18):
I'm interested in knowing about them for my viewers, but
also potentially for being a podcast guest.
Speaker 2 (50:24):
Oh yeah, they do it for sure.
Speaker 1 (50:27):
You know, there's so many Charlatan's in the world. And supplements.
So to get those that are really efficacious is really
is that really important?
Speaker 2 (50:40):
So I found great value in all those people. And
there's probably some other ones too out there. There's a
new doctor that I'm starting to work with and I'm
really liking a lot. So I'm always keeping my ear
to the street.
Speaker 1 (50:51):
Yeah, so so give us a list, Give me a
list on text no problems, that'd be great. So when
we spoke briefly the other day, you said there was
a doctor that was having an AHA moment with your
products and you're now working. So tell us a little
bit about who that is and what's happening.
Speaker 2 (51:10):
Yeah, doctor Jefferies. He we were on a trade show
together and his booth was next to our booth, and
he kept seeing us have people come on our booth
and freak out and go oh my gosh and I
feel better and their structure straightens up, and he's just
watching it. And so finally we had a little law
and he walks over to our booth and he says,
(51:30):
what are you doing? He said, well, let me show you.
So I did the same thing to him and he goes, huh.
He goes, I can tell you if you're actually doing
something or not, if it's passible or not. I said, absolutely,
what do you mind? He says, come over to my booth,
which is like, you know, five steps over, you know,
and he goes, sit down. He goes, do you wear
(51:52):
your stuff all the time? Yeah? I have them on
right now. He goes, okay. He goes, okay, he hooks
me up to these machines right, put stuff here and
here in my stomach and he goes, all right, be still.
So I'm sitting there and I'm watching him, and he's
running a scam to see how well I am. And
at first he's like okay. Then you see him go
(52:15):
and then you kind of see the face lighting. He's
like oh, and then he starts smiling a little bit.
And this is over a couple of minute period of time.
Then he starts laughing. He's like well, he goes yeah,
and he's smiling real big. He goes, well, Brian, congratulations,
you have a body of fourteen year old kid.
Speaker 1 (52:31):
Oh wow, And I go, what do you mean?
Speaker 2 (52:34):
He goes, I do thousands of test like this all
the time. He goes, whatever you're doing is working, And
I go really, because I don't know what he does.
He goes. He goes, I want to test your product,
and I go really, He goes, yeah, he goes, I've
never seen anything like this. Wow, really, and so I
was absolutely, what do you want? He was like, don't
(52:57):
pay me anything byproduct from you, and then I'll test it.
I was like, heause, I don't want it to be
tainted it anyway, but whatever I find I'm going to
put out there. I said, great, go for it. And
so several months, oh, it's probably been four or five
months at this point. He goes, Brian, you don't understand
what you have. And I go, yeah, I have this.
(53:18):
It does this, it does because no, no, no, no, it
goes so much deeper. He goes. Once you get the
body in the right positional and take all the stress
off of it, everything gets better. And I go, yeah,
that's my theory. He goes, no, no, no, I can prove
this out. He goes, you're once you go in the
parasit but that state, once you put that on, within
fifteen minutes, everything bounces out. Your brain does this, your
skin does this, your homebow levels does this. And I
(53:40):
was like really, He's like, yeah, I've been trying to
find somebody like doctor Jefferies for a long time, and
so hopefully with the next month or two he has
a white paper put out and then for a review.
And the cool part is is anybody could use those
same machines and test it and should get the same results.
Speaker 1 (53:58):
What was the machine thaty is?
Speaker 2 (54:01):
I believe it's called neuralink. He he has, Yeah, he
has a machine and what it does is schanged you.
But he uses several different types of machines. And the
test that he's doing for us.
Speaker 1 (54:11):
And where does he practice?
Speaker 2 (54:12):
Doctor Jeffries Virginia up in Virginia.
Speaker 1 (54:16):
Okay, so will you put him in the notes too?
Speaker 2 (54:19):
I'm wanting absolutely. Yeah, he seems to be I don't uh,
Like I said, I've probably even known a half a year,
but he seems to be a great fellow and really
has a heart to help people. That's what I look for.
I look for a heart to help people. Start talking
to me about how to make upon the cash and
(54:39):
I'm like, Okay, I get it. You got to have
a business aspect to it, but how do we help people?
That's that's just how I would look at stuff.
Speaker 1 (54:45):
That's a very noble mission. Honestly, Brian, and that's why
I started this podcast because you know, I like you.
You know, we've had other histories and other experiences in
our lives, but certain things are those aha moments where
you say, you know what, it's time to do something
that I want to, you know, show give back. Basically,
(55:07):
it's philanthropic in the sense that you're trying to, you know,
help another human being to realize your best potential. So
before we get off, because I just got signaled that
we're at the end of our time, what I know,
we talked briefly about you wanting to incentivize our viewers
to try your product. What is it that you would
(55:29):
like to suggest and how can people take advantage of
your whatever offer you want to make.
Speaker 2 (55:36):
Yeah, right now, right now, if you go on our website,
you can get free ship in our first orders. So
that's cool. Then let's figure out if we could do
something else too. Unfortunately I wasn't prepared to like offer something.
Speaker 1 (55:48):
I'm sorry, I knew, I knew there was something else
that was well, we're and.
Speaker 2 (55:52):
We're we're we're just we're redoing our website and so
we're posting launch today or tomorrow. And I don't know
if the offer we I'm not a technical guy. Refer
to why don't we talk?
Speaker 1 (56:04):
Why don't we talk? Offline? A lot of our a
lot of our guests will do you use an ageless
the ageless code and and there'll be some percentage?
Speaker 2 (56:14):
Yeah, for the first order.
Speaker 1 (56:16):
It would not go on in perpetuity, but just just
something that would you know, drive people to say, Okay,
this is really intriguing. What you know? What what do I?
What do I? How do I get some advantage for trying?
So that's something it's completely up to you, and I
didn't mean to put it on the spot something for sure. Yeah, okay,
(56:38):
very good. Well is there anything that you would like
to say in closing one, you know, like a final
statement to uh some this some this whole thing up.
Speaker 2 (56:48):
Yeah. I think it's all about loving and helping people.
So the more that you can love somebody, the better
off you are in all areas. I think for we
didn't talk about this, but I think forgiveness and emotional
health it's really important as well. So figure out how
you need to forgive and forgive them, and a lot
of times it's yourself. If you give yourself and love yourself.
So if you can love yourself, if you give yourself
and help other people here, lives are going to be
(57:10):
so much better no matter where you are in life.
Speaker 1 (57:13):
So that's kind of well you you sound, you know,
I've been obviously after Charlie Kirk's assassination, there's been so
much spiritual revival and you know, and you can't go
on the internet without hearing people express this very same
feelings that you've just expressed, which is you know, adding
on some of the other aspects of free speech and
(57:35):
so forth. But the spiritual energy that comes from self love,
I think is one of the biggest ways to release
a lot of tension in the body, right, Yeah, and
not taking any drugs. You know, this is the other
thing that people are forgetting that these chemicals and I
don't mean to proselytize, but when people take a lot
(57:56):
of chemical drugs, chemical you know, pharmaceuticals or or recreational
they're basically you know, putting into their body substances that
are just not naturally meant to be there. So yeah,
they may help a symptom, but it's going to be
deeper problems. So if you can find the solutions without
(58:19):
having chemicals. Don't you think that's another absolutely?
Speaker 2 (58:24):
I mean you can breathe deep in the reason exercises
which would change their chemicals. But love, but love changes
a ton of stuff and it's free, I know, and
it's going to help you big time. That's one of
the best bout hacking tricks I've ever learned is just love.
Just love people.
Speaker 1 (58:40):
So yeah, I always say love is everything, and I'm
sure it is. We're saying the same thing. Well, Brian,
this has been a lot of fun, and now I
just hope that people that have heard this watch this today, uh,
you know, can get beyond the I can't believe this
is true because that's what it seems like at the outset,
(59:02):
and I remember I had the exact same feeling, and
probably Doctor Jeffries until he tested you. So it's always
about the science, right, because people want to know what
is scientifically behind this technology that makes it worth my exploring.
So you've given us a good explanation today, and obviously
(59:24):
you have a lot more that's going on, and the
mission and the vision are you know, not stopping here.
So I look forward to hearing more and more about
or more about your next generation of products and developments
that you that you're alluded to today.