Moonshots with Peter Diamandis - EP #23 The Secret to Happiness w/ Deepak Chopra, M.D.
Episode Date: January 19, 2023In this episode, Deepak and Peter discuss the role mindset plays in success, how to find happiness, and the meaning of abundance. You will learn about: 06:46 | Technology's effect on the Abundance... Mindset 14:15 | H = S + C + V. The Happiness Equation 38:00 | Money is a tool. Choose how it defines you. 1:15:28 | Meditation led by Dr. Chopra Dr. Deepak Chopra is a world-renowned pioneer in integrative medicine and personal transformation. He is the founder of The Chopra Foundation and Chopra Global, intersecting science with spirituality. Dr. Chopra is the author of over 90 books, many of them New York Times bestsellers, and he’s been at the forefront of the meditation revolution for the past 30 years. _____________ Resources Buy Dr. Chopra’s newest book: Living in the Light Learn more about Abundance360. Read the Tech Blog. Learn more about Moonshots & Mindsets. _____________ This episode is brought to you by: Levels: Real-time feedback on how diet impacts your health. levels.link/peter Consider a journey to optimize your body with LifeForce. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
That's the sound of unaged whiskey transforming into Jack Daniel's Tennessee whiskey in Lynchburg, Tennessee.
Around 1860, Nearest Green taught Jack Daniel how to filter whiskey through charcoal for a smoother taste, one drop at a time.
This is one of many sounds in Tennessee with a story to tell.
To hear them in person, plan your trip at
tnvacation.com. Tennessee sounds perfect. Pure consciousness is infinite possibilities.
It's infinite creativity. It's infinite evolution. It's infinitely self-organizing
and self-regulating. So once we get in touch with the source of creativity not only in you but me and we find
that we have different creative outlets you know you you are a musician and i'm a mathematician and
so and so knows how to program computers and so and so knows how to tell a good story then we take
a problem and we collectively harness our collective creativity
while staying with the collective vision we have
and staying connected with each other
at an emotional and spiritual level.
No problem is unsolved.
And a massive transform to purpose
is what you're telling the world.
It's like, this is who I am. This is
what I'm going to do. This is the dent I'm going to make in the universe. Welcome to Mindsets and
Moonshots. It's my pleasure to welcome world-renowned pioneer in integrative medicine
and personal transformation, Dr. Deepak Chopra. Time Magazine described him as one of the top 100 heroes and icons of the
century. Deepak is the founder of the Chopra Foundation, a nonprofit entity for research on
well-being and humanitarianism, as well as Chopra Global, a modern-day health company at the
intersection of science and spirituality. He's also a clinical professor of family medicine and
public health at the University of California, San Diego, and also serves as a senior scientist with the Gallup organization.
Incredibly, he has written over 90 books, including many New York Times bestsellers.
And we'll be spending time today speaking about longevity, purpose, and his most recent book, Abundance, the Inner Path to Wealth.
Deepak, a pleasure to have you here.
Thank you.
It's always nice to see you and be in conversation with you.
I think one of the things that is so fun for me is that 10 years ago, I wrote a book called
Abundance, the Future is Better Than You Think.
And just on the 10-year anniversary, you came out with Abundance, the Future is Better Than You Think. And just, you know,
on the 10 year anniversary, you came out with Abundance, the Inner Path to Wealth.
And I saw that and I love the concept of abundance. We define abundance slightly differently.
And I'd love to discuss, you know, sort of the your understanding of it and see what abundance means to you and
where we might see where the overlap is.
Let's begin with your definition of abundance, Deepak.
Abundance is the essential nature of the source of all experience.
The source of all experience is awareness or consciousness.
So if you want to define how consciousness is defined,
consciousness is that in which we have experience.
Consciousness is that in which there is experience.
Consciousness is also that in which we know that we have experience,
and consciousness is constantly modifying itself as experience
through what we call mind, body, and universe.
Mind, body, and universe are actually concepts.
They are not fundamental reality.
Mind, body, and universe are human concepts,
and they are the interpretation of modifications
of the source of all experience, which is called consciousness.
So when I say experience, I mean we're having an experience right now.
So what is the experience right now?
We're having a visual experience, and we're having an audit right now. So what is the experience right now? We're having a visual experience,
and we're having an auditory experience. And that visual auditory experience is happening in awareness, although it seems to be happening on the computer. But if you didn't have any
awareness, then there would be no, there would be no computer and there would be only squiggles
and wiggles on the computer,
colors and shapes.
The construction, oh, that shape is beta diameters.
That's a construct in human consciousness.
So without human consciousness, there is no experience.
Now, what is consciousness?
Consciousness, as I defined it, is the source of all experience,
but it doesn't have a form it just doesn't have a form.
It doesn't have a form.
If consciousness had a form like my iPhone,
then I would be able to see it.
But you can't see consciousness because it is formless.
And just like the tooth cannot bite itself,
the eyes cannot see themselves,
consciousness can't bite itself. The eyes cannot see themselves. Consciousness can't see itself.
It only sees itself as experience, as the mind, as the body, as the universe.
So consciousness being formless is infinite.
Therefore, everything it produces, the productions of consciousness in time,
consciousness is timeless, the productions of consciousness in time
are have their source in infinity so right now if you read the latest theories of physics
um they'll find the current interpretation of the universe in science it's multiverse
there are infinite universes everything that the that is
produced in consciousness has infinite reproductions of itself in every seed there is the promise of
thousands of forests okay in every choice you make there are multiple millions of choices to be made
okay every thought you have there are infinite are infinite thoughts you have access to.
Everything that you have created, there's infinite creativity.
The source of abundance is infinite, formless, irreducible, fundamental,
and its productions are infinite, abundance, affluence,
because that's what infinity does.
If you take infinity out that's what infinity does.
If you take infinity out of infinity, infinity remains.
I see that.
And it's the infinite potential of all options. When I think about abundance, I think about the notion of ever increasing opportunities
for everyone on earth.
And when I'm seeing this, Deepak, and you're a scientist,
a physician, as well as someone who's deep into the spiritual learnings, I see technology as a
force that converts what used to be scarce into abundance. Like we used to go and kill whales to get whale oil to light our nights and then coal
and then oil now, now, uh, now solar and soon fusion.
And that technology is converting scarcity into abundance in making it usable.
Um, how do you see the, uh, that play into, uh, into abundance in your mind?
that play into abundance in your mind?
I see the biggest promise of technology as harnessing our collective creativity and therefore producing abundance for a more peaceful, just, sustainable,
healthier, and joyful planet.
So technology has what we call these deep learning algorithms and also can harness diversity of opinion and
talent so if you look at what we call the emerging science of emergence as it's called social
scientists call it emergence they say that if you have maximum diversity of creative people, so maximum diversity of creative people means scientists,
technologists, storytellers, but also maximum diversity of storytellers
in the form of entertainment and songwriters and storytellers,
but also maximum diversity of ethnicity, of background,
of nationality, of technology.
So maximum diversity, maximum creative diversity, shared vision, emotional and spiritual bonding together, leveraging everyone's strengths.
There's no problem in the world that cannot be solved.
And I agree with that.
Yeah.
So as a physician, you know, when I had difficult cases, and I still do, I mean, I still have
a license to practice in California and New York and Florida and Massachusetts to renew
my practice.
I, you know, in medical situations, there's something called grand rounds when you have
difficult cases and you get everybody's opinion.
When people have cancer, for example, they have a tumor board.
So when I look at those difficult cases, I get all the doctors who are not specialists in the room.
Because the specialists know so much, it precludes them from knowing everything outside their specialty.
I get specialists.
I get storytellers.
I even get entertainers.
I get generalists.
I say, this is the problem.
How do you find a solution?
And we all incubate together.
lost, you know, when we've used this technology for healing people, getting maximum diversity of opinion and science and technology and story, we've been able to treat almost any illness.
So I said, why don't we employ the same process to solve other problems? There are nine steps to
creativity, Peter. First, intended outcome. Second, information gathering third information analysis fourth
incubation which I do through meditation fifth insight sixth inspiration seventh implementation
eighth integration and ninth incarnation death of the old story and the birth of a new paradigm
taking action you know it's it's funny I define an expert as someone who can tell you exactly
how it can't be done. And it's interesting, right? Because the ability to crowdsource is
what you're effectively saying, solutions, and bring that integrated vision that could never
exist before in the old world when it was just those into your village or those that were within a day's walk,
is really enabled by this new sets of technologies that are bringing us all together.
So I definitely see that.
And, you know, one of the other definitions I use, and I particularly want your thoughts on this around abundance, is that it's, you know, creating a world of abundance isn't about a world of luxury, but about a world of possibility.
What's your thought on that?
Yes, possibilities.
Pure consciousness is infinite possibilities.
It's infinite creativity. It's infinite evolution. It's infinitely self-organizing and self-regulating. So once we get in touch with
the source of creativity, not only in you, but me, and we find that we have different creative
outlets. You know, you are a musician and i'm a mathematician and so and so knows how to
program computers and so and so knows how to tell a good story then we take a problem and we
collectively harness our collective creativity while staying with the collective vision we have
and staying connected with each other at an emotional and spiritual
level. No problem is unsolvable. And that is a, it's a beautiful mindset to have. And it's
challenging for a lot of people to have that mindset. You know, one of the things that I also
feel very strongly about is that we're living in a world that is bombarded by dystopian media all
the time. That 24 seven, I call CNN, the crisis news network that is delivering every gunshot,
every murder, every crooked politician into my living room over and over again. Actually,
I've stopped watching media. How do you think about the world of media and this dystopian,
think about the world of media and this dystopian flow of information?
Well, media capitalizes on instant, what do you call it, results.
When you sacrifice sometimes truth and sobriety and creativity for melodrama, then you run risk.
So I don't see the news anymore.
It's not news.
It's called opinion.
Wherever you go, you get opinion.
You don't get news.
In fact, you don't know what news is anymore.
It's right-wing news, left-wing news, Al Jazeera, what do you call it?
Fox, yeah.
On and on, Fox.
So you don't get news.
I think this is a big problem right now that people are only watching what they want to watch because it reinforces their biases and their prejudices.
All you have to do is follow the money.
And, you know, wherever the the money goes that's where the media
goes and so if you have this extreme right-wing news then you have to have the extreme left
in order to compete it's a sad you watch do you watch the news no i do not watch news i show up
on it now and then this morning i did cnn on a program for how to prevent suicide in the world, and how to
use AI technology, in fact, to go beyond the conventional means of therapy. So if you get an
opportunity, share that kind of thing on the news. Otherwise, it's not melodrama.
I want to turn to this this because it's really important.
How do people stay in an abundance mindset?
So I speak about having an abundance mindset, which means the notion that tomorrow is going to bring more opportunities than today.
That we have a world of increasing capabilities where the cost of resources is coming down, the availability of resources coming down.
But when we're so bombarded
and we're driven back to that early scarcity thinking
that we evolved with and that fear-based thinking,
how do you recommend people hack that
and stay in a hopeful, optimistic abundance mindset?
You know, many years years ago i had the opportunity and since then i've had multiple opportunities to be close to his holiness uh
the dalai lama so in the year 2010 i think it was that a small group of us met him in Vancouver.
He was being given an honorary citizenship in Canada.
And a bunch of social scientists and others were invited to meet him.
I happened to be in that meeting.
I've known him from before that.
And he said to the audience, to the social scientists, in his typically simple,
innocent, joyful manner, he said, can you come up with a happiness formula? Do you have a happiness formula? And so we all went to work. And you know, there were some brilliant scientists in the group,
particularly one cognitive scientist. But ultimately through the group,
they came up with something called the happiness equation.
And I think that's the perfect way to understand the right mindset
for anything, including abundance.
So here's the happiness equation.
H is equal to S plus C plus V.
So H stands for happiness, is equal to S. S is called set point in the brain. So some people
are seemingly wired for joy and opportunity and abundance. And some people are wired seemingly
for what you call scarcity thinking, and also for looking at problems this thing called the set
point in the brain determines 50 percent of your so-called happiness experience every day
happy people are always looking for opportunities no matter what so whatever the situation is
instead of saying this is a problem or an adversity they
say this is an opportunity automatically they don't even see the problem they see only the
opportunity the unhappy people only see the problem always now how does this happen and it
was very interesting to see the research on this. If your parents
and if your social environment in the first five years of your life, if your parents particularly,
and your immediate social environment, your brothers and sisters, if all you heard was
criticism, condemning, complaining, and playing the victim,
then your set point is already always looking for problems.
So, you know, your parents were criticizing, condemning, complaining, or playing the victim.
You're going to always see problems.
On the other hand, if your parents, A, were always joyful, number one.
B, they were, I call these the four a's they were good
listeners attention appreciation they noticed everyone's gifts around them including yours as
a child appreciation then affection they showered you with unconditional love and they accepted you just as you are not just as
they would like you to be at these four a's attention affection appreciation and acceptance
you will grow up to be a happy person now you say this is bad news because that means that
whether i look at the world as opportunity or problem is determined for me already. I'm screwed.
The fact is you are because this is your conditioned mind.
Now, there is research that shows that you can change this by what we call reflective inquiry.
Reflective inquiry or cognitive therapy or something even more interesting called awareness-based cognitive therapy.
We can incorporate that right now in our meditation
when we do it towards the end.
So you can change your set point.
The set point determines 50% of your experience of happiness
or sadness every day.
That's beautiful.
S plus C.
C is conditions of living, primarily money.
Now, this was very interesting because when I wrote the book,
Abundance, which you just showed me,
actually it was inspired by a lyric from Bob Marley
who said, some people are so poor, all they have is money.
Okay.
I love that.
That's a beautiful lyric. You know, some people are so poor, all they have is money okay that's a beautiful lyric you know some people are so poor all they
have is money so what does the research show research shows that money actually adds 10 percent
to 12 percent of your daily experience of happiness or sadness if you win the lottery, for example, let's say you're making $20,000 or $100,000 a
year, and you suddenly win the lottery and you make $50 million. Will that make you happy? The
answer is ecstatically happy when you win the lottery. Six months you plateau, and one year
you're back to your set point. And then you're unhappier because now you confuse self-worth with net worth.
You have a big, big problem.
So there are two people who are extremely unhappy when it comes to money.
One is the extremely poor because they need the money to survive.
The other usually is the extremely rich because that becomes their identity,
their mood, their mood, their sexuality, their
personality, their behavior depends on what happens at 4.30 when the stock market closes.
That's their identity. So 10% adds to your happiness every day.
And I think the research shows that money makes you happier up to a point of, I think it was
$70,000 in the United States.
Yeah, that was old research.
That was old research, you know.
But if money, it doesn't matter.
You can make billions of dollars.
If money is used for a useful purpose, if it is used to alleviate suffering, if it is used to help you bond with your family friends take a vacation go on a joint
expedition or a learning experience money is very useful for that purpose but if money is used to
only make more money you know i know all these people i was just some conference in sweden
everybody is networking to make more money to make more money to make more networking to make more money, to make more money, to make more money,
to make more money. They don't even have time to enjoy it. They don't have time for a vacation.
Why? Because they're making money. Okay, so what's the point? 10% is money. Then there's 40%
left, and that's called fulfillment. And fulfillment comes from choices we make daily so the first choice
we make daily is for personal pleasure buying shopping is by the way the number one cause of
joy in our country it's the number one thing that people do shopping to feel instant gratification and we call human beings in this
country consumers what it's an ugly word to describe a stardust being with so much creativity
but anyway consumer it just tells you that this is how we seek to be happy consume consume consume can i can i guess that number two is eating yes number two is
eating number three is sexuality and alcohol and drugs and on and on now these choices can make you
happy initially but after a while they lose their charm you know how difference between this and
iphone 12 is a camera but you know% of people who can afford it will be convinced
that you need. So anyway, so there is another kind of choice we make. And that is meaning and
purpose. And a third kind of choice, make somebody else happy. The fastest way to be happy is to make
somebody else happy, or find meaning and purpose in your existence.
Now, if you apply that, that's 40%.
So 50%, 10%, 40%.
And even the 10%, don't feel guilty about making money.
Just make money in a way that brings you joy
and then spend it in a way that brings you joy.
Otherwise, you'll be stuck in a computer looking at the stock market and worrying about your blood pressure.
I love that happiness formulation.
Going back to the 50% set point, the reflective inquiry, is that mostly done through meditation?
Yes.
So there are many kinds of meditation.
So one is about inquiry.
It addresses very deep questions.
We can do it right at the end of the meditation.
And we can also incorporate the changing of the set point in that part.
But that is a very traditional way in Eastern wisdom traditions to reset your set point.
Yes.
I just think anything that's 50% of the calculation is something that we need to make sure there's some ability to uh to implement
a useful self adjustment we can do that. education, freedom on the planet. I attribute that to the impact of technology versus
better politicians or people becoming more intelligent. Do you agree that we're seeing
increasing abundance in the world? And what do you attribute that to?
I think we're seeing increasing abundance in the world because we are collectively
looking at new opportunities, even in the times of adversity. I mean, you know, look at what
happened during the pandemic. Zoom became such a big business, okay, and there are many other
businesses actually emerged, including you'll see new vaccines for diseases other than viral infections.
Now that we have mRNA technology and even more sophisticated understanding of epigenetic switches and what turns them on and off,
and what we have new understanding of self-repair mechanisms.
and what we have new understanding of self-repair mechanisms.
If this pandemic hadn't happened,
you wouldn't see the emergence of vaccines that are forthcoming for chronic illness,
for diabetes, for Alzheimer's, on and on.
Exactly.
Various kinds.
You're going to see more gene editing
and other things happening.
And you had the new technologies,
the new insights into the metaverse into
into nfts took off and the idea even though we're going through what people call what this winter
with crypto it's all known crypto blockchain is we're going to emerge as a new economy and
new creativity in technology deep deep learning systems, new algorithms
for just about mathematically mapping everything in the body
and finding creative mathematical solutions.
Even for things like emotional problems,
we have developed during the last two years
an emotional chatbot that prevents suicide,
that prevents people from taking drugs, that helps them with PTSD.
We're finding that at least our teenage audience is more fascinated and more comfortable talking
to an emotional AI than they are to a human being because they're not judged. Now, when they need a
human being, we're getting crypto and blockchain to even cover that.
So this all happened because of the pandemic.
It wouldn't have happened otherwise.
And I now know that you will, you know, maybe one of these days you and I will see each other without a screen right here in 3D.
Just by going on, clicking my iPhone and throwing it away, you and I will be in the same room in 3D holograms talking to each other. This is all happening because there are creative
people who are looking for opportunities while the rest are complaining, condemning, criticizing
and playing the victim. Thank God for solution-oriented individuals. And, you know,
there's a few things that I pulled out of Abundance. It's a beautiful book, and I've read
it and I've listened to it on Audible, which you read the book on Audible. So I want to commend it
to everybody listening here. Let me pull out a few of the things that were hit me and speak to them. So you reference a famous axiom of yoga in the book that
as you are, so is the world. I love that. Can you talk a little more about what that means
and its implications? So right now, if you look at your body and you look around you, wherever you are, that's a total reflection of your state of consciousness, of your state of awareness.
of fulfillment, which is based on Indian Eastern philosophical metaphorical expression through the seven chakras, as we call them in the East.
But the seven centers of happiness or creativity are actually an extension of Abraham Maslow's
hierarchy of needs.
So survival and safety, achievement, success,
progressive realization of worthy goals, love, belongingness,
insight, creativity, imagination, higher consciousness, transcendence.
If you have those seven levels and you're aware of them,
and you're also aware that in every moment the world is a
projection of your state of awareness then you take total responsibility to create your life
it's total responsibility i am responsible for everything i see for the feelings i
experience but also what i'm looking around me My perceptual activity is a reflection of my state of consciousness.
And once I understand that, then I don't look for external solutions.
I look for switching something internally that was off.
You know, in the 1970s, there was a book called The Lazy Man's Guide to Enlightenment.
I don't know if you've read it.
Okay.
It was a few pages, like five pages, but it was the most important bestseller of all time.
And in that book, there's one sentence.
It says, what am I doing in the state of consciousness where this is real?
You know, you just ask yourself, whatever is happening, what's my state of consciousness where this is real?
And then you switch internally.
So this, what is real, becomes the illusion and something else shows up, which seems more real.
You upgrade the illusion.
and something else shows up, which is seems more real, you upgrade the illusion.
Basically, what that phrase is, is we are already living in a VR virtual reality simulation,
which is what a lot of people are saying now, philosophers and scientists. And so once we shift internally, then we upgrade the simulation that we are part of.
then we upgrade the simulation that we are part of.
Yeah, well, you know, I've said it often.
I do believe that we're living in a simulation.
We are.
You know, it's a, well, I arrive at the simulation hypothesis a little bit differently,
which is when you look at the rate at which technology is progressing and our ability to create, you know, highly detailed
models of the world and the ability to, uh, to create AIs that might live in that, in that, uh,
that, uh, simulation of the world. And the notion that our, our planet, you know, the, if the
universe is, you know, 13.8 billion in our planet came into existence four and a half billion years ago, what would
the technology of a civilization just a million years more advanced or 100,000 years or 1,000
years more advanced? It seems inevitable that we'll be creating high resolution simulations
and that we'll deploy AI forms into that.
And the thing I ask myself is if I knew we were living in a simulation, definitively,
would I do anything differently?
And the answer so far is no.
I would keep upgrading it.
I think we are already living in a simulation, which is a human.
See, when you say models of reality what we call
reality is a model of reality you know the reality itself is according to some people force fields
atoms molecules gravity and all that okay but even that is an experience before you call that a model
okay what is reality without a model okay because what you're looking at you know if I ask
you what is this you'd say a phone I'd ask you this what is this you'd say a watch but that's
a human model for a color for a sensation for an experience okay what is the real reality is
sensations images feelings and thoughts and. The rest is a human
story. Now, once I recognize that this is my creation, and even the Milky Way galaxy is a
translation of sensations, images, feelings, and thoughts in my consciousness, then I'm the creator
of the Milky Way galaxy too, as you and I understand it through mathematical models.
you and I understand it through mathematical models.
Okay, so we are already living in a modeled reality that is humanly constructed.
You know, when you say there's a full moon, that's a human experience.
A horseshoe crab at the bottom of the ocean has no experience of the full moon that you and I have it.
And yet on the full moon night, it comes from the depths of the ocean to
mate, lay eggs and reproduce. It's a different moon for the horseshoe crab. So what you and I
experience is a human universe. And it's not even the real human universe. It's a model of the human
universe. So now that we've created models, and we have technology to create better models,
we keep upgrading it. I love that, you know, just I was reflecting on this, Deepak, and getting ready for our conversation here.
You know, our Milky Way, as you know, the estimate is 100 billion stars in the Milky
Way galaxy.
And 100 years ago, we only knew of this one galaxy.
We thought we lived in this one galaxy.
We only knew of this one galaxy.
We thought we lived in this one galaxy.
And then the estimate of the number of galaxies increased to 100 billion galaxies with 100 billion stars. And then it moved to 2 trillion galaxies.
And now the estimate is somewhere north of that, maybe as high as 20 trillion galaxies with 100 billion stars each.
That's got to blow everyone's mind.
And furthermore, 60 billion habitable planets just in the Milky Way galaxy.
And even more, perhaps a multiverse of an infinite number of universes.
All constructed as models in the human mind through mathematics,
which is a product of human consciousness.
So you might be seeing those things out there,
but the computing is happening in human consciousness.
Yeah, it is extraordinary.
And just when anyone thinks they have concerns or are worried,
you're just to stop and sit back and contemplate the infinity
of it all. It really is extraordinary. What I find even more extraordinary is what we knew to be fact
that is no longer and which of the facts that we currently hold to be true are not.
hold to be true are not? The facts that we currently hold to be true preclude us from knowing the facts that we don't know. So that's, you'll go back to Socrates. The only thing I know
is I know nothing. I have my ticket to freedom and freedom. I love that. This episode is brought
to you by Levels. One of the most important things that I do to try and maintain my peak vitality and longevity
is to monitor my blood glucose.
More importantly, the foods that I eat and how they peak the glucose levels in my blood.
Now, glucose is the fuel that powers your brain.
It's really important.
High, prolonged levels of glucose, what's called hyperglycemia,
leads to everything from heart disease to Alzheimer's to sexual dysfunction to diabetes and it's not
good. The challenge is all of us are different. All of us respond to different
foods in different ways. Like for me, if I eat bananas it spikes my blood glucose.
If I eat grapes it doesn't. If I eat bread by itself I get this prolonged
spike in my blood glucose levels. But if I dip that by itself I get this prolonged spike in my blood
glucose levels but if I dip that bread in olive oil it blunts it and these are
things that I've learned from wearing a continuous glucose monitor and using the
levels app so levels is a company that helps you in analyzing what's going on
in your body it's continuous monitoring7. I wear it all the
time. It really helps me to stay on top of the food I eat, remain conscious of the food that I
eat, and to understand which foods affect me based upon my physiology and my genetics. You know, on
this podcast, I only recommend products and services that I use, that I use not only for
myself, but my friends and my family,
that I think are high quality and safe and really impact a person's life. So check it out,
levels.link slash Peter. We give you two additional months of membership and it's something that I think everyone should be doing. Eventually this stuff is going to be in your body, on your body,
part of our future of medicine today. It's a product that I think I'm going to be using for the years ahead and hope you'll consider as well.
money is a tool of exchange and you speak about the different value, you know, the value that money has. One of the interesting lines in Abundance you have is money is a tool of consciousness,
which I found fascinating. Can you speak to that a moment?
Yeah. So, when the cognitive revolution occurred, say 40,000 years ago, there were eight different types of human beings,
maybe more. So we call ourselves Homo sapiens, which means the wise ones, so we were humble
enough for ourselves. But then there were all these other Homo erectus, Homo, what do you call it, chloroensis.
There were eight different kinds of humans, part of the human family.
Just like a house cat and a lion and a cheetah and a tiger are all part of the feline family, but they're different.
They don't mate with each other.
Although there's evidence that Homo sapiens did mate with me and but nevertheless of species usually within a family retains mating rights to its own species and so there were eight
species and they all had a common language and that language included three things danger calls mating calls and food calls
now when you look at the language of other species same thing danger food and mating
then this species you and i created a language for telling stories and this distinguished us
from all other species and the first stories were gossip, I'm told. Who's keeping you at home?
Who can be trusted?
Who can't be trusted?
The Kardashians were around even back then.
I know.
I mean, it's still the most common language in our culture is gossip.
Even the news has become gossip now.
So, you know, that hasn't disappeared.
But then immediately another language emerged.
And that was the language of money.
And as you know, in the beginning, there was no such thing.
It was, oh, you know, you cut my hair and I'll give you my chicken's eggs
tomorrow.
Or, you know, I'll fix your shoes.
Became too inconvenient.
So now here's a chef.
Here's a piece of rock. Here's a share. Here's a piece of a rock.
Here's a coin.
Here's a piece of paper.
Here's digital pieces now.
And here's crypto now.
It's the same thing.
One idea, the story of how we exchange debt or what I owe you as a favor.
Okay, you did me a favor.
I'm going to do you a favor.
Where does this start?
It starts in human consciousness
because of the thing that humans have called empathy.
And humans also have something they feel.
When I feel what you feel, that's empathy,
but then that brings another feeling, compassion.
I want to alleviate your suffering
and you want to alleviate mine.
That creates love and exchange.
So exchange, look at the word exchange.
Money is called exchange.
Money is called currency.
What is a currency for?
For me to help you and you to help me.
Now we don't need those coins.
We can just do digital zeros and ones
and see something on a computer
screen and feel good about it you know because now this thing on a computer screen can buy me
a building or whatever so this one story what can i do for you what you can do for me
created ultimately currencies wall street empires, colonialism, unfortunately, slavery, exploitation, and a lot
of bad things, but also good things. Money is a tool for consciousness, we should never forget
that. That's why in wisdom traditions say, the way you earn money, the way you spend money
is one of the ways to enlightenment. The way to earn money is to the progressive
realization of worthy goals, always keeping love and compassion and joy as the reason you're doing
it. And ultimately, save yourself and liberate yourself from the notion that money will buy you happiness. My money will be a tool.
I agree. I mean, money is a form of energy, energy to be used to do things with in the world.
Which we created, by the way.
Which we created, yes. It's a means for us to create impact and purpose at distance and on scale. Yes. Let me shift to the topic of purpose, which is, for me, so important to help people both
discover and fulfill their purpose.
Deepak, how would you define your purpose, what I call a massively transformative purpose,
your purpose on this planet?
So, again, I'm a very traditional guy um peter so i you know brought up
with the whole philosophical framework even though i migrated to the united states when i was 20 but
you know your formative years influence it so my first 25 years i was told by my parents is to educate myself as much as best i can same message for me
yes second 25 years fame and fortune go make as much money as you possibly can with the progressive
realization of worthy goals third 25 years giving back And now I enter my fourth. And the fourth in my tradition is
finally find out who you are, because you're confusing yourself with your uniform,
which is your body and mind. And that's not who you are. In fact, your uniform changes from moment
to moment. You were once wearing the uniform of a fertilized egg. Then you were an embryo.
Then you were a zygote.
Then you were a baby.
So don't confuse yourself with your uniform.
Who are you behind this uniform?
If you figure that out, you'll be liberated,
and you'll be ready to take your next, what you should say, voyage in the multiverse.
This is literally how I was brought up before these terms
so i right now say my purpose is to influence at least a billion people for a more peaceful
just sustainable healthier and joyful world and then consciously choose the moment of my death
for my next journey that's my purpose that That's beautiful. Your advice for somebody who is coming conscious to the notion that
they have a greater purpose on this planet and they're seeking it.
On the surface, I would say, what is the one thing that you do that expresses your unique gifts and talents
and how does it help somebody out there that's your purpose so you know during the pandemic the
woman that i knew um called me she got fired because she was in a technology startup. I said, did you enjoy that? She said, no.
I said, but now that you're fired, how do you feel?
She said, well, I need the income, but I didn't enjoy it.
So I said, what do you enjoy?
She said, I'm a very good chef.
I said, why don't you go on the internet and say in New York,
I can provide meals at your parties and your occasions.
So she did that.
But then she was so much in demand that she actually collected other people,
Greek chef, Italian chef, Indian chef, Chinese chef.
She has the most thriving business in New York now.
She could pay five times over the salary she was getting from the
high-tech company. Is she enjoying it? She's loving it. That's what she likes. Talk about
food, flavors. And now she's expanded her business from beyond being an Indian chef to, you know,
she has all these other chefs that she's working with together. And they're creating a marketplace in New York City.
So what you enjoy in the service of others
that provides you a means of living?
What you enjoy when you do, there's no time.
You lose track of time.
So it's not a job anymore.
That is it.
But we can do a reflection on that too
because the ultimate purpose is beyond
that ultimately. Deepak, you're a physician, a highly recognized physician. I'm an MD by training,
but not by practice. And the focus I've come to over the last eight years is a deep dive into
the field of longevity, health span, really more
than longevity, right? The notion of how do we have the aesthetics, the cognition, the mobility
at 100 that we had at 60. And you're doing very well in your fourth quarter of the first century.
How do you think, I believe that you can will yourself to life in the same way that you can will
yourself to death that a longevity mindset a desire for health is uh is incredibly important
what are your thoughts about a longevity mindset i think you have to begin there certainly if you
don't have the intention then there is no possibility for longevity you have to begin there certainly if you don't have the intention then there is no possibility
for longevity you have to begin with the right mindset but you also have to then look at what
we are seeing as the data now you mentioned health span and lifespan and you know i'm sure you've know david sinclair and other people like that
yeah we're talking a lot of very good science about self-repair mechanisms in dna and self-regulation
of metabolism through what they call signal molecules and the science is very good and
we're going to see more of that you know with rapamycin
and with metformin with other signal molecules what i think is not being addressed in the current
science is again as usual it happens all the time is you know because we are so squeezed into a
certain cultural mindset and a paradigm, even in science,
that is influenced by reductionism, that we're not looking at all the amazing literature,
spiritual literature and consciousness literature on longevity.
So I love the work, say, David Sinclair and his colleagues are doing.
I love the work, say, David Sinclair and his colleagues are doing.
But in the East, we say time is the consumer and we are its food.
And we are metabolizing time.
And metabolizing time is a process in consciousness. How do we change the metabolism of time?
consciousness. How do we change the metabolism of time? And for that, I'm incorporating the Eastern wisdom traditions that
say, the metabolism of time can also be shifted to the
metabolism of timelessness through transcendence. But there
are other things like as you know, as an MD, you have to
sleep, emotions emotions stress management
vagal stimulation in fact nobody's giving importance right now that i know i'm holding a
bookie here on my hand called anchored it's about the polyvagal theory there are new technologies
coming for vagal stimulation even you know what we call digi-ceuticals yes and for
for full body inflammation and autoimmune disease yes stimulate the auricular nerve here while
you're wearing a headphone and you won't even know it decreasing inflammation increasing self-regulation
but the most important thing so sleep, vagal stimulation, mind-body coordination,
breathing techniques, breathing apps, emotional resilience, biological rhythms, circadian rhythms,
but also seasonal rhythms. Then there are also gravitational rhythms, lunar rhythms,
and ultimately transcendence can change the whole landscape
of the longevity experience.
And actually, I'm going to be doing a retreat in November,
and we're starting with the Middle East.
It's easier because, you know, you don't have to go through
all these rules and regulations about what you can prescribe.
I can prescribe metformin, rapamycin anywhere in the world.
And then you can also incorporate these other
techniques, particularly the experience of time. You know, when people say, I don't have time,
that's the worst thing you can do for longevity. If you're running out of time,
if your internal dialogue is I don't have time your heart rate will speed up your hrv
hrv will go down you'll have jittery platelets high levels of adrenaline and cortisol
inflammation and sooner or later you'll drop dead and time will run out so how do you how do you
manage time is even more important you know than anything else is time efficiency to the ultimate. So you
never lose the internal experience of being timeless. That is, to me, the key. And then
all these other things come together, mind body coordination, of them the worst that the best promises
polyvagal stimulation through technology also through breathing and through the creation of
new apps because you can do anything with apps these days and then we'll have a true longevity
experience i don't think according to my what know, you should live a minimum of 100 years,
and you should make disease optional, and you should die by choice in meditation.
At least that's my intention.
I love that.
You were saying?
I'm sorry.
No, I'm 75, and my biological age couldn't be more than 50 right now.
You know, my blood pressure is 110 over 70.
My cholesterol is less than 60. My HDL is over 100. And you know, nobody can believe that. But
I think if I can do it, anyone else can do it too.
So let's break that down. I'm going to come back to the question in a moment of
how old do you want to live and how old do you think you can live but i'll come
back to that so sleep for sure it's fundamental uh to the human organism i speak about that
extensively and and uh matt walker who we've both know well has written incredible books and work on
this exercise is we are having a biological experience and exercise is key.
Do you do your exercise simply by walking or do you do weights?
What other exercises do you do?
No, after a lot, you know, I have I have practiced movement all my life.
OK, so all my life.
all my life okay so all my life but after a lot of experimentation going to gyms going to weight going this that this is what i do now i do 10 000 minimum 10 000 steps very easy in new york
you know i take the subway even during the pandemic or I walk in New York City.
And if I'm going somewhere, I stop like two stations before I walk.
I do my 10,000.
The rest, by the way, I've come to the conclusion that a good yoga practice or Tai Chi or Qigong along with breathing is the best thing you can do for everything,
for muscle flexibility, for what we call weight training.
I mean, strengthening your muscles.
Yoga is as good as anything, tai chi, or any martial arts.
Qigong, all these.
So I don't do gym exercise.
I do walking.
I do two hours of yoga and breathing every day in the morning and then i do
a little bit again in the evening as far as movement is concerned 10 000 steps yoga and
breathing practices next up diet right diet here sugar is the poison i think everybody agrees it's a neuroinflammatory it's a glycosylating agent across the body
um are you do you practice a vegan diet or what kind of a diet do you choose i have a diet that
has maximum diversity of plant-based foods okay and i'm not i'm not averse to poultry or fish or even I don't eat meat.
But, you know, if you do, as long as it's not coming from a factory,
as long as it's not manufactured, refined, processed, or has pure sugar in it,
and if you're eating meat, it's coming from a farm and you're eating sparingly,
a diet that has maximum diversity
of plant-based foods therefore and also it's varied because you change your microbiome with it
as you know 99 of the genetic information is microbial anyway only one percent is human we
can upgrade the human but we can change the microbial and if if the genes are the software and your body is the
printout and if you can change 99 of your genetic information and upgrade the one percent then you
should be able to print out a new body every year and i think that's where the secret is it's in the
diet 80 of serotonin comes from your gut anyway so i i say eat the seven colors of the rainbow
every day and the six tastes of life sweets are salt bitter pungent astringent and you've covered
all the phytochemicals that you need to have a healthy body i love that the body is the printout
that's beautiful yeah um a brief note from our sponsors. Let's talk about sleep.
Sleep has become one of my number one longevity priorities in life. Getting eight deep uninterrupted
hours of sleep is one of the most important things you can do to increase your vitality and energy
and increase the health span that you have here on earth. You know, when I was in medical school
years ago, I used to pride myself on how little sleep I could get you know it should be five five and a half hours today I pride myself on how much sleep I can get and I
shoot for eight hours every single night now usually I'm great at going to sleep if I'm exhausted
you know I've worked a hard day I'm right out but if I'm having difficulty and it occurs I'm having
insomnia or my mind's overactive and I need help to get that eight hours,
I turn to a supplement product by Lifeforce called Peak Rest.
Now, Peak Rest has been formulated
with an extraordinary scientific depth and background,
includes everything from long-lasting melatonin
to magnesium to L-glycine to rosemary extract,
just to name a few.
This product is about creating a sense of rest and really giving you
the depth and length of sleep that you need for recovery. It's a product I hope you'll try.
It works for me and I'm sure it will work for you. If you're interested, go to mylifeforce.com
backslash Peter to get a discount from Lifeforce on this this product but you'll also see a whole set of other
longevity and vitality related supplements that i use we'll talk about them some other time but
in terms of sleep peak rest is my go-to supplement hope you'll enjoy it go to mylifeforce.com backslash
peter for your discount so deepak you mentioned rap mycin earlier. I think you mentioned metformin, both medications that I'm taking at, I think, the appropriate levels.
How safe are they?
What are you taking?
What do you typically recommend with the medical supervision?
Well, in general, with medical supervision, I do recommend metformin.
I take about 1,000 milligrams a day of metformin.
As do I.
And then I take rapamycin, 6 milligrams once a week for men and 4 milligrams once a week for women.
For that, I usually do a metabolic profile medical examination
i think they're both with minimal risk you know people have as much risk taking aspirin or
other things and you know so i i don't think those medications are at all risky,
or if they are, they're very minimally so,
less than most, I would say, prescription drugs,
given those doses.
But I also recommend nicotinamide mononucleotide, NMNA,
and I do recommend quercetin and pisetin um and yeah it looks
like we're in the same in the context of everything else is in the context of all the lifestyle
shifts as well absolutely i know it's uh i think the conversation around longevity around extraordinary about
increasing health span is is finally coming uh into into mainstream uh you mentioned something
earlier choosing the moment consciously choosing the moment of your death and meditation which is not having it happen to you, but having it happen for you.
So let me ask it slightly differently.
How long would you like to live?
Do you have a sense of that?
Yeah, I have a sense, but it's not important.
I think once you say been there, done that, that's the right timing.
Okay.
That's the right timing.
Now, in our tradition, the spiritual tradition, which is Vedanta, which I come from,
the minimum life you should be able to live is 100.
You know that I know that right now we have the limitation is so called
120, the Hiflick limit and all of that. But you know, that kinds of changes. I think though,
as you know, less than 5% of gene mutations, less than 5% of disease-related gene mutations are fully penetrant in that they
guarantee the disease. If you have Baraka gene or something like that, and for that we have new
technologies including gene editing and CRISPR on the horizon. So that 5% will be taken care of.
The remaining 95% are basically how you live your life.
The remaining 95% are basically how you live your life.
Yeah.
I was just with Eric Verdon at the Buck, and his numbers are very similar.
7% is genetic determination of your lifespan, and 93% being your lifestyle.
My genetic experts say even less than 5%, 4%. Rudy Janssen.
Wow.
Yeah, I love Rudy.
He's a brilliant uh a brilliant
brilliant friend it's i think it's this idea that we can live a longer healthier life um
flows well with abundance abundance of time abundance of opportunity coming back to the
to the theme of of your book um know, the breakthroughs coming on are happening
faster and faster.
We're seeing the work that David Sinclair and George Church have done in epigenetic
reprogramming.
We're seeing in mice models being able to reverse the biological age of multiple organ
systems.
We're seeing it in human skin tissue and petri dish. And, and,
you know, if you speak to George and David, we're not far from, from, you know, in their case,
using these three Yamanaka factors to reduce reverse epigenetic clock in the body.
in the body. If we start bringing in that kind of gene therapy, do you think we can exceed the
120-year limit, which has sort of been historically, to the best of science's knowledge, the upper end of what we have? Yeah, I do. I do think think so there's no gene for aging as you know and yet there's something called
apoptosis programmed cellular death for the cells to rejuvenate themselves so it's complex
but and it says epigenetics and here if you really understand epigenetics you know even there people
are going a little too reductionist, because epigenetics is
every experience right now, as you and I are speaking, your frontal cortex is firing here,
because we're using this right now to communicate intellectually. And that requires gene activity
that requires, you know, all these markers, acetylation, methy methylation deacetylation to constantly going on and off
so there is no experience no experience including an intellectual conversation but particularly an
emotional experience that does not either enhance homeostasis or disrupt homeostasis. So if we can maintain homeostasis, then that is the key.
And homeostasis is best regulated through joy.
If joy is not your experience right now, then homeostasis is disruptive.
Joy is not happiness, by the way.
It's much more fundamental. Happiness is always for a reason. Joy is not happiness, by the way. It's much more fundamental.
Happiness is always for a reason.
Joy is for no reason.
Like you look at a little baby, it's joyful.
It's curious.
It's full of mystery.
It's full of awe.
It's full of wonder.
And it's full of joy, unless it's wet or it's hungry.
You correct that and it's back to its baseline status.
So that kind of joy joy which is so fundamental
which comes from our spirit is the ultimate homeostasis and that's what the goal should be
if joy is not the measure of wealth being then you have failed doesn't matter what else is
happening sure i mean living a a life without joy without happiness into your multiple
hundreds of years is uh is not something any of us i remember you and i were both at the vatican
uh a few years back during a longevity uh conference and i a room filled with uh with
scientists and i was up giving my presentation on the morality of immortality
or put differently, the immorality of mortality. Um, and I asked the question of the audience,
how many of you here would like to live past 120 years old? And about a third of them raised their
hand. And I was kind of shocked. And of course, it's because our internal
vision of what 120 plus looks like is decrepit, old, drooling, and without any joy.
Yeah.
Now, I think about the ideological, the sort of evolutionary origin of our current lifespan.
evolutionary origin of our current lifespan. You know, as early hominids, our mission was to pass on our genes to perpetuate the species. And back before food was abundant, the last thing you
wanted to do was take food out of your grandchildren's mouths. And of course, we now
live in a world, and I've heard you speak to this, where it's a massive amount of abundance to the point we now have a pandemic of obesity
versus a pandemic of hunger. And we have culture and we have recorded science. And I guess the
question is, you know, what should be the ultimate lifespan of a human being?
Your answer a moment ago was until the experience of life is boring or I've done that.
As long as you can contribute.
And again, my culture, it's possible to have the wisdom of experience and the biology of youth.
wisdom of experience and the biology of youth. And if you have that combination, then you are serving a purpose for improving the quality of life. To have the wisdom of experience and the
biology of youth would be a great combination. That is, that is, that is. Deepak, you've had,
we've had the pleasure of having you at our X prize visioneering events in the
past. And, and we've launched now some $300 million in prizes and, uh,
we're attacking the problems that we see that should be solved that haven't
been solved. Um, um,
working on a age reversal X prize right now,
which I'm excited about reverse the biological age of human beings by 20 years or more.
Working with David and David Sinclair and George Church.
I'm curious, a question I ask all my guests, if you had, could, you know, snap your fingers and have any XPRIZE created, fully funded,
any XPRIZE created, fully funded. We would get entrepreneurs, scientists, technologists,
theologians, anyone around the planet working on this. What is a problem that you would love to have launched as an XPRIZE? Do you have anything that comes to mind?
I've thought about this, Peter, and I think all problems are interrelated. And right now,
the biggest problems in the world are war and conflict. Number one, number two, an unsustainable
planet. Number three, social and economic injustice. Number four, health.
And number five, the absence of joy.
So about 30 years ago, I thought to myself,
is there one solution for a more peaceful, just, sustainable,
healthier and joyful world?
One solution.
Okay.
Peaceful, number one.
Sustainable, number two. Just, number one. Sustainable, number two.
Just, number three.
Health, number four.
And joy, number five.
Not in that order.
They're all equally important and they're all interrelated.
And the more I thought about it, the key is, in fact, these are windows,
the longevity experiment, the reversal,
these are windows to see the interrelatedness of these things.
So when the pandemic occurred, we were in our cages.
The climate was reversing itself.
There were fish in Venice in the dead canals, dead waters.
People were breathing in Bangalore.
You could see the mountains, Himalayas, from 500 miles away.
And nature was saying, hey, humans, when you come back,
be a little more respectful.
Otherwise, we'll send you back into your cages.
So I think these pandemics, these mutations, the health problems,
the mass migrations because of social and economic injustice
and the war and terrorism are entirely one problem, entirely one problem.
And the key is resurrecting life.
And the resurrection of life is both for this biosphere, which we call the body,
and that biosphere, which we call the world, but they're the same biosphere. I mean,
this Goldilocks zone is looking at what? The biosphere that might sustain life. And the
question again, amongst evolutionary biologists, what came first? You know, did the biosphere came first?
Did life come second?
Or did life come first and the biosphere adjusted?
It's a wrong argument.
They are the same thing.
Sustainability, biosphere, health, and self-repair, and homeostasis are one thing.
And the key is the genetic information of this planet.
So I'm not talking about the human microbiome.
If I go under the soil in the Amazon or anywhere in a rainforest,
one teaspoon of soil under that soil has more genetic biodiversity
than the entire surface of the planet so there are species there
that are extinct you know theoretically i could have done i have what do you call it dinosaurs
coming back if i want to resurrect the life i have jurassic park right under the soil in one
teaspoon of soil and then look at marine life,
the ecosystem of marine life, and look at what's happening
in coastal marshlands and so on.
It's all connected.
So if I were to choose one project, I would say resurrect the planetary microbiome.
Resurrect the planetary microbiome, combine agriculture with forestry,
preserve the marshlands, and, you know, other than they do many other things, buffer against storms,
et cetera. But if we do lose the genetic information that gave life to the biodiversity
of this planet, we are doomed for extinction.
So is that first and foremost, catalog it and being able to have it in a seed bank,
if you so to speak, or a genomics bank that could be brought back?
That is essential. Absolutely. I know Rob Knight has done some of that
and University of California, San Diego, but there should be a global project to seed and catalog and bytes of genetic information, which is some massive
number of exobytes of genetic information. If you don't realize, we see such a limited
slice of the segment. There's a company that I'm an investor and advisor in called Colossal
that is bringing back extinct species,
the woolly mammoth that just announced today, the Tasmanian tiger and so forth.
But that's a drop in the bucket still compared to.
What we're talking about is so important.
If this was globally a collaborative project, the seeding and cataloging,
the rest will happen.
You know, humans are very intelligent.
They'll develop technologies to resurrect the ecosystems of our existence.
I recently participated in something called the Panther's Path in Florida,
restoring the Panther's Path across Florida.
But what happened?
As they restored the panther's path
every other species came back you know that's how it is it's all ecosystem self-regulate through
biological genetic information exchange so we're never going to have more biodiversity than we have right now. And so being able to capture that
as a set as a baseline point, and then grow from there.
Yes, and use AI and use deep learning to actually not only catalog it, but also see the
interconnectivity of these ecological systems for maintaining life on this planet and that is
the most important thing otherwise we are sleepwalking to extinction i love that not the
sleepwalking to extinction but i love the idea of your x prize thank you deepak i appreciate that
i want to bring us back to close uh to the 50 percent uh that we can control of our happiness. We'll talk some other time about
a happiness X prize, which I have formulated and I'm excited about. But the formulation of
happiness, 50% being your set point that came from your youth, your parents, those you grew up with.
The ability to control that, you said, there is reflective inquiry there that can help.
Would you close us out with a meditation, perhaps, to see abundance in the world and to increase that set point.
Okay, so let's do it.
To all our friends who are listening or watching this,
please sit quietly on a chair, be comfortable,
cross your legs, keep your feet on the ground firmly planted
and keep your hands open and close your eyes
and we'll start with just a little bit of breath observation observe your breath Like every sensation, breath arises, is experienced,
and then it goes back to where it arose from.
wrong. Just observing the breath gives us insight into the nature of impermanence. If you hold on to your breath you will ask yourself, who am I?
Even better, who is it that wants to know? What is it that wants to know? Who am I?
Who am I?
Am I the changing body or am I the awareness in which the body is a changing experience?
Am I the changing mind or am I the awareness
in which the mind is a changing experience?
Who am I? Don't try to answer the question, just ask the question and let it go.
Now switch to a second question.
What do I want?
As you ask this question, be aware of any sensations, any images, any feelings, any thoughts that spontaneously come to you.
Don't look for answers.
What do I want?
And be aware of any sensation, any image, any feeling, any thought.
Notice it and let it go.
What do I want?
Third question, what is my purpose? Again just ask the question. what is my purpose? Allowing any sensation, any image, any feeling, any thought to spontaneously arise.
Final question, what am I grateful for?
This question will open the door to abundance.
Once again, not looking for an answer, just asking the question,
what am I grateful for?
Allowing any sensation, any image, any feeling, any thought to come to you. And now let go of this inquiry and mentally repeat your name to yourself.
I'm Peter, I'm Deepak, I'm Emily.
Even as you repeat your name, remind yourself that's your name, that's not who you are.
So now let the name
be dropped. Instead of saying I'm Peter say I am
And now we introduce what we call intention in this quiet of awareness.
Just mentally repeat these words to yourself. Affluence.
Unboundedness.
Abundance. Unboundedness, abundance, infinity, immortality.
Affluence, unboundedness, abundance, infinity, immortality.
And now just rest in awareness.
Rest in being.
Awareness is a fundamental state of infinite possibilities.
So rest in that field of infinite possibilities. So rest in that field of infinite possibilities.
And if you feel ready now, you can slowly open your eyes.
Thank you Deepak. That was beautiful.
Everyone, this is Peter again. Before you take off, I want to take a moment to just invite you
to subscribe to my weekly tech blog. Today, over 200,000 people receive this email twice per week.
In the tech blog, I share with you my insights on converging exponential technologies,
what's going on in AI, how longevity is transforming,
adding decades to our life.
In the Tech Blog, I often look at the 20 meta-trends
that are going to transform the decade ahead
and share the conversations I've had
with incredible tech thought leaders
on how they're transforming industries.
If that sounds cool to you and you want to try it,
join me.
Go to dmads.com backslash blog,
enter your email,
and let's start this weekly conversation.
Let me share with you the incredible progress we're seeing in the world of technology and the
positive impact it's having on our lives. Again, that's dmandes.com backslash blog. Looking forward
to sharing my insights and incredible breakthroughs I'm seeing with you every single week.