Call Recording for Vagus Nerve Live !!! Feb 21st, 2026 !
Hey everyone - super great Live Webinar today - I will be attempting to post snippets of the Transcript - with any links below in the comments, so hopefully some of the people looking for specific topics can get their answers - first time trying that.
We covered a lot today !! Answered so many question we didn't have any time for Ultrasound haha !
Here's the transcript posted:
and then we'll do, gonna share my PowerPoint.
Here it is, no audio, there we go.
Okay, let me confirm that works, perfect.
Okay, great, so I think a big point of this video
just so you guys know kind of what you're in store for
is to talk a little bit about the Vegas nerve,
which is why we're all here.
And then to talk about how ultrasound
can stimulate the Vegas nerve.
And what places on the body that you would wanna place it,
left side of the neck, right side of the neck,
spleen on the left side, colon on the right side,
and then also direct you to,
I get questions all the time.
What if I did it here?
What if I did this?
What if I did that?
And I go, that's a great question.
I've likely already answered that question
'cause I've been doing Vegas nerve stimulation work
for like eight years solid
and my work in ultrasound is 13 years.
So I've been working in ultrasound for 13 years now.
I'm an old soul when it comes to this technology.
So I know a lot about it.
So I got a lot of questions
and I'm gonna show you this cool thing
called the search bar in Vegas Skool.
Now I'm not trying to be patronizing,
but you can understand.
I get these questions a lot.
They're very repetitive on Twitter.
I know you guys can empathize with the plight
of what I have to go through every day.
And I have this, I shouldn't admit this
'cause I'm sure some people will take advantage of this.
But if I have a question on Twitter
from somebody that I don't even know
with like an avatar that's just not even their face,
it's like an anonymous account.
And they ask me a question about ultrasound.
I can't help but like wanna answer it.
And so, but this isn't sustainable.
It's like an OCD kind of thing.
Like I wanna answer the question if I'm asked.
But I'm realizing now with 20,000 followers
and literally millions of impressions in a single day,
I can't, that's just impossible for one human to do.
So now I'm gonna be like, that's a great question.
We have a search feature.
The key term you'd probably wanna use is
you've asked me about the spleen search for spleen
'cause I've definitely covered that.
So we'll go over that.
And then I also want to do some actual stimulation.
I'm gonna do some demo of ultrasound.
I'm gonna, it's not really a demo.
I'm just gonna stimulate my vagus nerve with ultrasound today.
Not graphic, it is safer work.
It's just gonna be on my neck.
And I'm gonna show you a little bit.
People have all kinds of questions.
Is it here, is it there?
Why don't I feel something?
Is it warm, is it not warm, et cetera?
So I wanna kinda cover as much ground as I can.
And also, this will have a transcript.
So once this is recorded and reposted,
I will put the transcript in the description of the video
so that you can now search through the entire video.
And if you do a search, it will find you the exact part
of the video where I cover that from the text.
So I don't know, I think we're building something cool here.
Tell your friends, tell your family.
But at first, use ultrasound yourself
and make sure it works, right?
Like, do you like it?
Is it something that you enjoy?
I wouldn't recommend you recommend anybody anything
if you haven't tried it yourself and you don't love it.
Like, if it doesn't do anything for you,
that's okay.
I just think you're not probably consistent enough.
That's typically what I see is you're not consistent enough
in using ultrasound if you're like,
"Oh, I'm not sure what I should be feeling."
We'll cover that a little bit more once we go.
This is a very big topic.
And also, the vagus nerve, vagus is the Latin word
for wandering and the vagus nerve goes
through the entire body, right?
So keep that in mind.
All right, so we're gonna go to full screen PowerPoint,
slideshow mode.
Okay, I'm just gonna make sure that works.
Okay, perfect.
All right, okay, so let's dive into it.
I think that everybody can agree
that when you listen to music, you feel something.
Now, isn't it funny that there are very few psychiatrists
and psychologists, but mostly psychiatrists,
who will quickly prescribe you a pill,
an antidepressant, then to recommend music
or dance or exercise or a better diet
or how about you just try sleeping more?
Like a lot of these things kind of aren't even considered.
A pill is considered.
So what do pills do that music allegedly can't?
Well, it has to do with frequency
and the new science that's emerging looking at microtubules
and the bioelectric system of the body.
And it's not just electricity, it's light.
It is vibrational energy within your own body.
There's a lot to do with frequency and vibration
in the human body that makes us healthy
and the lack thereof, the lack of frequency in your body.
And I'm not saying, you have an ultrasound shaped hole
in your body that can only be fixed with ultrasound.
Just a disclaimer, I don't, I want you to be healthy.
I don't care how you do it.
Ultrasound is a great option
in a tool chest of things that you can do.
So, and also I want to put this disclaimer like upfront
is none of these ultrasound devices
that I recommend on Twitter
or here in the Skool group or anything like that
are things that I make any money from.
These are just, I don't make, I don't take a commission.
I don't have an affiliate link.
I just genuinely like the tech.
That's it, right?
So, I think that's important to mention
'cause people like, in this day and age with influencers,
they're always trying to push some AG1 crap powder.
You know, oh, these are green gummy bears that are,
whatever, anyway.
So, okay.
So why do we think ultrasound could be better
than a pill-based method of stimulation?
I guess, yeah, it is stimulation.
Chemicals will stimulate your body
and in some very terrible ways, right?
So, there is, I would just say, can we agree?
There's a problem with the chemicals.
There's something going on in the chemical supply, right?
They're putting something in the water.
Let's just say that.
And so, when I first heard
about Stuart Hammeroff,
who many of you've probably seen on a podcast
talking about the work that him and I have pioneered
with Alzheimer's treatments, with ultrasound,
which is really cool, really exciting,
like an opportunity of a lifetime
to work with Dr. Stuart Hammeroff,
now probably for the last 13 years.
But I remember when I first heard,
and it was really red 'cause he was in on a podcast,
back in 2012, 2013,
when he published a paper on using ultrasound
on the right temple to stimulate the prefrontal cortex,
which is where you have a lot of microtubules
that kind of like generate consciousness
or sustain consciousness in some way,
is that they showed that it worked for people
who didn't have the best mood at the time.
And their medical profession would call it
major depressive disorder.
So people who are like really at the extreme end of,
I don't have a good mood today.
And the drugs didn't work for them either.
So these are people who, the drugs just didn't help them.
And so they thought, well, could we stimulate
some of these neural connections with ultrasound?
And this is based on Stuart's work with microtubules.
So he knew a few things,
like he knew something more than what other people knew.
So that's where they started to try this.
And he tried it on himself first,
and the feeling that he describes was,
at first he didn't notice anything.
So like two to three, four minutes past.
And he's like, ah, well, that was an interesting idea.
I guess nothing's gonna happen.
But then kind of suddenly he could feel it taking hold.
And the ultrasound wasn't even on his head anymore.
He had only done like 30, 45 seconds or something like that
on his right temple with a scanning ultrasound.
And five minutes after it's gone,
after it's literally just turned off and placed away,
he starts feeling this like really nice feeling
in his being, not just globally,
like it's not like a body high or a brain high,
but he just felt this nice calming sensation.
Like he was, like he was a, you know,
drinking a dry martini, that's how he describes it.
Like just kind of an analgesic type of like,
ah, that's kind of nice.
Just kind of like a little settling
or a little bit of relaxation.
That's what he described from just less than a minute
of ultrasound, which is cool.
And I read this and I went, oh my God.
This could be huge.
And that got me thinking, could you,
could you theoretically see a future
where you didn't have to put chemicals in your body,
but you could take sound, it's really ultrasound,
high frequency sound, which works more at that neural,
like that synaptic kind of level.
So it's where these drugs are trying to work,
not very well, but ultrasound is working there too.
And you know, there's not chemicals.
So that's a win, right?
And I grew up in Oregon and United States on the West Coast
and I grew up seeing people as kids develop
dependencies on chemicals.
Marijuana was one of them.
Alcohol was another one.
Then, you know, a lot of these kids were affluent
in my hometown of Ashland, Oregon.
And they became hooked on their parents' pills.
They become pillheads.
And they would take, I guess they would steal their mom's
Xanax or something like that.
And that's a pretty heavy duty chemical for a kid.
So I was like, this is fucked up.
This is really, really fucked up.
And so by the time I was in college,
and this was like kind of entering into my conscious idea
of could you do this with just sound
that that was the genesis of me going,
okay, this is what I'm gonna work on.
And I've continued to work on it since.
And it's taken me to some incredible directions.
And so yeah, ultrasound is sound
and it can work like medication,
but it doesn't stay in your body once you've stopped.
But the effects can last for sometimes hours.
Sometimes you can have beneficial improvements
that last for weeks or months.
And some people, it does seem to fix some things.
It releases some locked up patterns in their body
that I have had cases 'cause I did one-to-one work
with people for seven years in the vagus nervous space.
And I touched a thousand specific different cases
all monitored individually.
So this isn't just like in the zone of theory,
I've seen this work.
I've worked, this is the space that I worked in
for a long time.
So it's really cool.
Anyway, so when I started,
I was focused on the brain, just like Stuart.
But then in 2017, I was learning Wim Hof breathing.
And in this video, we'll do kind of a quicker
Wim Hof style Valsalva squeeze too,
while doing the vagus nerve on the right side
with ultrasound.
So you'll get to see that here in this video.
But I was generally just wanting to influence
my heart rate variability.
That was it.
I had a device that you could wear on your chest,
a leaf, which is a great, great product by the way.
I was an early backer on Kickstarter,
as my friend's company in Shenzhen, China.
He's an American, but we built.
I built ultrasound in China.
He was building an HRV product in China back in 2015.
And I was an early supporter.
So I had this and it was shipped in 2017.
I put it on my chest.
I put the ultrasound on my vagus nerve on my neck.
And I started just doing a breathing practice
with a Valsalva squeeze.
And I was thinking, my number is gonna go up.
But I seem to have triggered an out-of-body experience
for the, in this case.
A really good feeling, like really good,
like hard to describe how good it felt.
But more than just how it felt
is what it did in my consciousness.
This really deeply hit my conscious experience.
And that's kind of led me to believe
that the vagus nerve itself very likely
could be another form of consciousness in your body.
So before we start talking about,
we're not gonna get into this today,
but I see people on Twitter all the time
talking about the vague, the AI is conscious, maybe.
I, they're like, I was talking to chat at GBT.
I was saying some pretty interesting things.
I believe it's conscious.
And I'm like, okay, hold up.
You probably don't even understand
the consciousness in your head,
let alone the consciousness in your body
or your vagus nerve.
So before you can even say that AI is conscious,
I think you would first need to,
you know, again, I can't force people
to believe anything, right?
But to at least consider the possibility
that there's more than one primary consciousness
in your own body.
And most people haven't even gotten there.
And they're going around calling chat GPT conscious.
And I'm like, hold up.
What's gonna be more beneficial for you?
Developing AI psychosis with chat GPT
and falling in love with a large language model
or falling in love with your vagus nerve,
which is conscious.
My proposal is that the vagus nerve itself
is a evolutionarily adapted entity that is in your body.
That would be called Nemertian theory
or vagus nerve origin theory.
And that's what's doing all of this stuff
without you having to do it and think about it.
And so you can influence it with ultrasound and breathing
and other stuff.
And yes, you can hum and you can gargle,
but yes, that's easy to say.
I wouldn't really have a,
if I only believed that gargling in a humming
or the best ways to stimulate your vagus nerve.
I don't think I would have this group.
And had I not had an out of body experience
like a deeply spiritual experience
from ultrasound on my vagus nerve,
I would not have made this group
and wouldn't have ever entertained any of these concepts.
So all right.
So now that we know what the vagus nerve is generally,
according to me, let's talk about the place
where it all started, left side, right?
We'll talk about the right side too in a moment,
but left side vagus nerve stimulation
is where it all started.
Now, the reason it started on the left side on the neck
was because of the vagus nerve stimulator implants
that were getting wide adoption and FDA approval
for treating epilepsy.
So seizures, if you stimulate your vagus nerve
just before you start having a seizure,
it will stop the seizure from happening,
which is really cool, really great
for people who have epilepsy, for sure.
Then the other thing is
the other uses for vagus nerve stimulation
from the implant side
where then it also helps with depression.
It helps with obesity.
It helps with, now it's just been approved
for rheumatoid arthritis.
So these, now we're talking about the inflammatory condition.
So maybe you could say, oh, well, maybe epilepsy
is kind of an upstream or downstream of inflammation.
Obesity, definitely inflammation in the pancreas,
rheumatoid arthritis, 100% uninflammatory condition
of the joints in your body.
So the vagus nerve is very tied into inflammation.
And inflammation is the number one driver
of illness in the world right now.
So it's an important place.
So when I started doing vagus nerve stimulation
with ultrasound on the left side,
that was because I knew there would be tens
of thousands of medical reports that I could reference
to go, hmm, okay, so this person was depressed.
They stimulated their vagus nerve.
They did it for three minutes at a time.
In a low medium kind of setting
and it seems to have helped.
And then you can see 10, like again,
tens of thousands of these kinds of medical reports.
So I thought, okay, if I were gonna start anywhere,
it would be on the left side.
So that's why it started, is basically because
the existing research was on the left side.
That doesn't necessarily mean that today,
I would say that's the only side you could do
or the only place 'cause we've learned more about it.
But that's where it started.
And the vagus nerve is gonna be,
I think the largest branch of your vagus nerve,
even bigger than the one on the right side,
the left vagal nerve branch is bigger, thicker
than the one on the right side.
They're both pretty close, but it's the matter
of a few millimeter, it's like a millimeter
of a diameter difference, right?
So it's small, but it's kinda big.
So yeah, there's a lot of things that the vagus nerve does,
mood support, sleep quality, anti-inflammatory
and stress reduction, we know these things for sure.
So that's kinda why it started there.
Recently, this has got a lot of attention,
is they did a study on the right side of the vagus nerve,
which does go to the heart.
And they found that mice, now this is a mice study.
So of course, if you don't believe in mice research,
and you think it has nothing to do with humans,
then ignore what I'm gonna say.
But if you're at least open to it,
'cause technically the left side vagus nerve stimulation
also started in mice, but it turned out to be correct.
So I don't see why vagus nerve stimulation on the right side
shouldn't be looked at when it's now starting with mice,
but I think it's pretty cool and it's timely.
And I know it's safe, you can do ultrasound
on the right side too, never seen any kind of incident.
I think the reason they don't do right side stimulation
with electricity is because it can trigger
heart palpitations, 'cause it is so connected.
But ultrasound on the right side,
I've never seen any heart palpitation stuff.
So take that with a grain of salt.
It's precursory research, but enough people, in my opinion,
are gonna try it, that they might as well at least
get some guidance from a well-respected expert
that would be me, who knows about this?
How to do it safely, because if you don't do that,
then you're gonna see people doing it themselves
and probably doing it incorrectly.
And I don't necessarily want that.
So it puts me in a weird position,
but again, 'cause of my OCD, I want to help.
I want to get the information out there
so people can do it properly if they are gonna do it at all.
So what they found is that in a model of heart,
damage from a cardiac arrest,
they can trigger a heart attack in a mouse.
That during the process of recovery,
is that when they stimulated the vagus nerve,
they were able to see the heart recover way faster
than without stimulation of the vagus nerve
on the right side.
So if you have, again, I can't make a recommendation,
but in my mind, it would be if you have a heart issue,
I could just think your heart, like it's getting older.
It's probably not as youthful as it used to be.
You want to send it some signals to say,
"Hey, I need you, I can't live without you."
Really, it's like write a love letter
to your vagus nerve and to your heart
and see how you feel.
And I actually do believe that you can do that
and it feels good.
So ultrasound is like another form of a love song
to your vagus nerve.
And yeah, this is something that I think
you'll see more and more people,
especially in the vagus nerve,
doing, talking about, reporting on.
So there's always gonna be different types of people.
There's gonna be people who know the technology well enough,
who are not afraid to try it and do it.
And then there are gonna be people who may wanna wait
for three years for another thousand people
to post about it before they wanna try it.
And both sides are fair, right?
So it doesn't benefit me to give the impression
that I'm telling people that they have to do anything.
Like I said, this is so that those wackers
keep people like I was when I started
who may not have every data point in the world,
but have enough to know that a low intensity
ultrasound stimulator isn't going to make you die.
You know, nor is it going to damage your nerves,
nor is it going to hurt you
and that you'll get stimulated, you'll get to feel it
and then it'll wear off and you can decide right there.
Do I wanna try this again or do I not want to?
I don't tell you, you know, back in 2017
when I was doing the vagus nerve stimulation
on the left side and wearing the HRV monitor on my chest
and I was able to trigger a full out of body experience.
Like the kind that you hear about
when people are going under anesthesia
and they're getting a surgery
and then they report that they floated outside
of their body and they could see the surgery
or they visited somewhere, they astral projected somewhere.
This exact thing happened to me the first time
that it did Wim Hof, like a hardcore Wim Hof breathing session
is already taking you to a level of physiological activation
that you're not, like if people are hearing this and go,
"Oh my God, if I put ultrasound just on my left side,
"I'm gonna have an out of body experience,
"that sounds crazy."
It wasn't just ultrasound, it was intense Wim Hof breathing
which I'd been doing for a year,
holding my breath for four minutes
and then inhaling and squeezing really hard
to activate the vagus nerve more.
Combining that with ultrasound, that combo
was able to kick me out of my own brain for a moment,
seemingly, or deeper into the conscious fabric or something.
So when I started it, the reason I'm telling you this
is when I did that and I came back
from my astral projection near death experience
out of body thing, I didn't think
I was ever gonna do it again.
I was like, "Did I almost just kill myself?
"What the hell just happened?"
I was like, "What in the fuck happened?"
And so, yeah, like the first time I did it,
I didn't know if I was ever gonna do it again,
but in the back of my mind, I went,
"Well, hold on a second."
That was unexpected, that was powerful.
And I said, "At least for me,
"because I consider myself kind of a research pioneer
"and nobody else is gonna probably accidentally discover
"this feature of ultrasound and the vagus nerve,
"that I should do it one more time
"and replicate it, make sure it wasn't a fluke
"or anything like that."
And it turns out, second time I did it,
even more intense, different,
but definitely out of body experience.
So for me, that confirmed that it wasn't a fluke,
it's reproducible, but I didn't die.
And hey, think of the contribution I would have made
to science in that moment, if I did die,
'cause people go, "Oh, well,
"probably shouldn't be playing around
"without-of-body experiences Wim Hof
"and ultrasound at the same time
"because your soul might legitimately float away forever
"and it will never come back."
And I'd be floating in some astral plane
for the rest of eternity, who knows,
until I'm reincarnated or something.
So yeah, you know, be responsible,
but for those people today who are like,
I'm kind of like you, Sterling,
if I know that it's reasonably safe,
which it is reasonably safe,
can I say nothing bad is gonna happen
if you stimulate your right side?
I could say, "I don't think you're gonna have a heart attack.
"I don't know, that's about all I can say."
But the fact is, people are going to do it,
and it's better for them to at least have some guidance
on it, in my opinion, rather than nothing.
So, I'm gonna do it today.
Well, I'll do it today.
If you, I won't die, but yeah, could be interesting.
So that's one, you know, Vegas nerve on the neck.
These are like the top two places to start.
The other place that has gotten a lot of attention,
especially in the last day or something,
is there was a, there was a study done
where they did one megahertz ultrasound.
The ultrasounds here are one megahertz,
but they pulsed at like six times per second.
This one does a hundred times per second,
and it improved people's memory after five days,
25% improvement in memory.
According to all of the tests.
And it only took five days,
and they did it for like five minutes.
So, people are asking about that.
The good news is, I've already put in the Vegas Skool,
cerebral stimulation instructions,
so that you should be able to see pictures
and know where to go.
And like I said, we'll do a demo
of the search feature in Skool.
It's actually really good.
In the past, if you tried searching for things,
you would, in the past, I mean like,
even Google or other websites that you find,
the search features just suck.
The search feature in Skool is actually really good.
So we'll show you how to use that.
So you'd be like, where do I get cerebral stimulation?
Because you remember, you gotta do me a favor.
If you like me, and you like me as a person,
and you don't wanna see me suffer,
then don't trigger my OCD.
And don't, you know, again, should I say,
don't ask me questions?
Eh.
In an ideal world, I'd be sleeping.
I'd be kind of like laying in bed, just chilling.
Doing programming work, homework.
I have all kinds of things I gotta do,
rather than answering the same question the thousandth time.
So if you could help me, you would use the search feature.
'Cause I've already totally covered this whole topic.
But yeah, there's, there are some potential good benefits
for your memory.
That's why we chose ultrasound for Alzheimer's
investigation as well, because it does improve memory.
I knew that way back when, back, I think in 2012, 2013,
that there was a memory angle here already.
So we just have a lot more data on that.
So cerebral stimulation, it's a cool idea.
It's a cool topic, it's doable, it's in the Vegas Skool.
So, but yeah, there's different frequencies you could try,
but you gotta do what you have.
Now, some people are like,
well, some of these devices are like $30,000,
when will I ever get to use the $30,000 version?
I'm like, well, the thing, the reason they're $30,000
is because they're research grade.
And research grade means that they, on a little keypad,
can say, I wanna do one megahertz, but pulsed
100 times per second, but I wanna change the duty cycle
to 50%, or 5%.
So research grade, it's still ultrasound.
It just also means that they can go,
you know what, 100 hertz has been great,
but what if we doubled it and went to 200 hertz,
200 times per second?
So faster, what if we slowed it down to 50 hertz?
What if we went to 40 hertz,
which is interesting in Alzheimer's?
So it's these devices that you're getting in a research lab
that allow you to test these frequencies.
I have an exciting announcement about that
later in this presentation, but yeah.
Some of these things you can replicate
with the ultrasounds that we recommend,
the US-1000 or the US-2000 Pro,
or the equivalents if you're outside of the United States.
So there's some pretty cool stuff that's possible here.
So, alright.
So beyond the vagus nerve too and beyond the brain,
there are other regions in your body
that are really phenomenal.
And I'll start with the spleen,
which is on the left side of your body.
And before you ask, where is the spleen?
How do I stimulate the spleen?
I wanna do the spleen.
We have a search feature.
You just type spleen, S-P-L-E-E-N
into the search bar in Skool,
and you'll see tons of community posts,
a lot of classroom modules that directly cover this
with pictures, with video, with text.
It's covered on how to do the spleen.
So search for spleen and you'll find
the questions that you're inevitably going to ask,
'cause I've written this.
And so yeah, you can stimulate the spleen,
that's very anti-inflammatory.
That's probably why the vagus nerve stimulation
in the neck works so well for anti-inflammation.
It's because that left side goes right to your spleen
and lots of other places, but your spleen is one of them.
So it's very anti-inflammatory.
And then there's the colon, which is on the right side,
and that is a huge, open, exposed branch
of your vagus nerve that you can stimulate with ultrasound.
That's another one.
They found something like a 250%
increase in vagus nerve activity
over a 10-minute window
after doing stimulation with ultrasound
of the abdominal vagus nerve fibers.
So that would be the colon and the gut.
So you can stimulate the vagus nerve through the gut.
And people go, "Well, I have pots
or I have gastrointestinal problems.
Would it work for me? Could I do it?"
These kinds of questions are pretty much going to have to be
because I'm not working, I don't work one-to-one
with people anymore.
I'm actually pursuing a graduate-level degree
right now in college.
So I don't have time to do any one-to-one calls.
Just I don't have time.
I'm loaded with homework.
And it just wouldn't make sense for me
to suffer from Skool to do that.
But my general response is,
even if I did do a call with you,
I could get you better insight into it.
But it's just insight and it's just me,
it's gonna be me also including in that conversation
that you need to try it
because I could compile a thousand papers
about ultrasound and another thousand papers
about the vagus nerve
and look at your entire medical history.
There were some clients that I took on back in 2017,
2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022,
2023 up to 2024 when I stopped doing one-to-ones
to go to Skool is I would take everything
that could be relevant and compile all that.
And this is before AI existed.
So I was a coach before AI existed
and I had no access to large language models
and I would do it all by hand.
I would literally sit here with this exact keyboard.
I still have this thing and just clickity-clack
to type down every single thing
and then deeply consider it and look at it
and then make a recommendation.
But even then, even if I did that
and even if I did have AI doing that for me now,
there's still only one way to know
and it is get an ultrasound, get a US 1000.
They're like $54.
So you could find that, oh my God,
it works better than I could expect it
or this position doesn't seem to do anything for me.
There's only one way to really know
and that is for you to do it.
The doing is on your side, not online.
So yeah, I know this video will only create more questions.
Of course, that's the nature of information.
A good place to start is in a subject
that creates more questions than it answers questions
because we get better kinds of questions that we can ask.
But at the end of the day,
the real true answer to the question
is you just have to try it for yourself to know.
I can't answer, I can't tell you if I did this
and I had ALS or multiple sclerosis or Parkinson's,
will it work for me?
I can't even legally, I don't even wanna say that
just on a personal level,
nor can I even say that on a legal level.
I can't, and I never would.
There's no benefit to saying that.
So you can try it yourself.
You can absolutely put ultrasound on your colon.
There's nothing that's gonna happen there.
As long as you're using the right ultrasounds.
Now people go like, well, I could buy a fat loss ultrasound,
the ones that output like 1,000 watts of power,
way more than this one that does like one watt.
So I could buy an ultrasound that outputs 1,000 times
the power and energy,
and then I could hold that on my body and maybe I'll,
hey, look, if these small ultrasound devices are so good,
then 1,000 times that should be 1,000 times better.
No, you couldn't be more wrong.
I had a, I heard a report, a report rippled back to me.
This was not a client of mine.
I had never, you know, consulted this person
to do what they did.
They did it, I think because you know how men are.
Men don't like to ask other people for advice or help
or anything like that.
It's kind of true.
It's unfortunate, but it's a good and a bad.
But anyway, all this person had ever heard
was ultrasound good.
And so they bought a Chinese knock off lipo destroyer machine.
One, ones that like you put up to the fat on your body
and it like so targets the fat that the cells rupture
and it used by a professional, they work,
but he was like, I want to try stimulating.
He wanted to stimulate his brain.
He quickly realized you can't put that on your head.
So powerful, it's so painful that he decided,
well, at least I have an ultrasound that can do fat loss
and I've got some belly fat.
So I'll put it down on my, on my belly,
on my love handles on the fat, you know,
the fat on the left and the right side.
He put it on his right side.
It's like something I'll show it like about this big,
like this little speaker I have.
And so it's like this big of a transducer
and then he put it on his right side, on the love handle,
can unconveniently for him also where your appendix is
and your colon.
And so he, he beam formed into his appendix
and immediately ruptured it.
And then he had to be rushed to the hospital
where he spent two weeks basically almost dying.
So that was really dumb.
I never would have told him to do any of that.
So all this is to say,
if I say like the only way to know is to try,
I don't mean any ultrasound.
I mean these two that have been very heavily tested,
the US 1000 and the US 2000 for these types of purposes.
Okay, so don't, don't misquote me
or take me out of context.
I'm not saying anything, all things.
That's super dumb.
That's irresponsible.
I think you have bad intentions.
If you think I'm saying all ultrasound
or that it's for everybody or that will work
or anything like that, that's just not true.
And you know, but yeah, you can, you can do ultrasound
from low intensity on your colon.
Anyway, then I also get questions a lot about,
I have, oh, my knee hurts or my elbow hurts.
Can I put ultrasound on my joints and muscles?
That's technically speaking how it's used
in any physical therapy office today.
So that's even a question that I'm like,
not really gonna spend much time on.
Because yeah, of course, that's like a no brainer.
You could put ultrasound on your elbow.
If you have tennis elbow, you played too much tennis
and your elbow is kind of sore or something like that.
Yeah, you could put ultrasound there.
It's just not my focus, you know guys.
So like, it's not that interesting to me.
But yeah, you can, if you want.
But I'm not a physiotherapist.
So, you know, sometimes I know you'll know
who I'm talking about 'cause you'll probably
be listening to this, but you asked somebody asked,
I have an impinged nerve, could I do ultrasound there?
I think that's what they're kind of asking.
And my response ended up being,
well, basically you could put ultrasound there,
see if it helps, but as far as like the exact nature
of the issue, this is something that I feel
is a hands-on test, you know?
So that means go to a physical therapist,
go to somebody who can put their hands on it
and actually inspect it and do range of motion testing,
these kinds of things, that needs to be done.
So yeah, all right, moving on.
So I think a key thing here is the frequency as well.
And so generally speaking, the majority of what I've covered
in terms of these frequencies or whatever,
ultrasound is the core thing that is being delivered.
And that's 1 million times per second.
But you can put a gate, like a little kind of gate
on the pulse so that you can pulse 1 million times per second
for one second, and then you can stop pulsing for five seconds.
And then you start post, you start not posting,
but stimulating or outputting ultrasound
at the next period of six seconds.
And if you do that, then you have a six times,
oh no, I'm not, sorry, that would not be correct.
It would be 1/6 of a second to get you to a six hertz.
Pulse, so fair.
I'm thinking in terms of seconds and times per second.
So six hertz is, if you take one second
and you divide it up into six pieces, divide by six,
and then you pulse ultrasound in 1/6 of that one second,
then you have a six times per second pulse rate, six hertz.
So that's what six hertz is, that's theta.
That's what we covered when we talked
about the brain stimulation earlier in this video,
which is that if you do that, you can stimulate,
how would I say this?
You would basically be doing something akin
to restorative sleep pulsing, like EEG world.
You'd say theta range is my brains
and deep meditative relaxation states, right?
So that's six hertz, then there's 40 hertz,
which is like a alertness, neuroprotection,
it's literally being looked at as a treatment
for Alzheimer's, pretty cool frequency, 50,
that's therapeutic, they're all therapeutic to some degree,
but they can all have kind of different effects.
And then the 100 hertz, the US 1000 is a 100 hertz
and the US 1000, the smaller one is 150 hertz.
So it pulses 150 times per second.
So kind of interesting, the two devices
do different frequencies.
So more reason, I believe, to start with the US 1000
for $54, see what you like, start there.
And then if you want to go up in terms of intensity
and try another frequency, then the 2000 pro,
maybe a good option, something to consider.
But then that doesn't even stop there.
When I was working in Berkeley, we had a system
that again, a research grade machine,
you could put a 1000 hertz in there
and that can really make you feel like,
wow, I just popped an Adderall, I feel like very focused,
I feel like very alert, like more alert
than just if I drank coffee, but without jitters
or side effects that are, without any of the side effects
that are noticeable to you, you're just like,
wow, I feel really activated and that wears off
and then you're back to normal.
It's very interesting.
So something we are going to explore a lot more
in the coming months and years.
So if you work your way up to the US 2000 pro,
then that's cool.
I would work your way up, that's how I did it.
I started with the US 1000, then later, years later,
I went to the US 2000 pro to try it out, to experiment it.
I never recommended the US 2000 pro,
even though it was available at the time
when I first started, because I wanted to be sure
that the US 1000 was okay and it is and it was.
And I wanted to check the US 2000.
US 2000 is not perfect because it has the high intensity,
which is continuous wave, non-pulsed ultrasound
and that is intended to make the tissue warm up.
That is, it's explicit in purpose
for the high setting on the US 2000
is to put enough power that the tissue heats
because we know that like,
if you have a knee that's kind of hurt,
that if you put warmth on it, that it helps.
So why not do that with ultrasound?
So it's not ideal because I oftentimes see people
who always like to overdo it.
They go, oh, I put a hot, you know,
I did high on my neck and it was warm.
I'm like, well, yeah, that's what it's supposed to do.
I think somebody else asked me this morning,
I did it on my neck and high, but I didn't feel anything.
One thing to know as I responded in that comment is
the ultrasound has a mechanism that can tell
if you've actually gotten it on your skin.
So there's a mechanism that knows
if you're actually on the tissue
and the ultrasound is able to pass through with gel.
If you don't put the gel on and it's just dry
and you put it on your neck,
it's gonna stay in a very low setting
and it's not gonna output high intensity.
So gel, use it and placement, check it in the mirror.
That's what I would recommend.
But yeah, so one thing I'm working on in college right now
and why it's more important for me to do college work
than one-to-one stuff is because we're currently working
on making the US 2000 pro as capable of those 30,
as capable as those $30,000 devices.
So that's what we're working on.
And eventually by, I believe this summer,
we'll have devices that let you
reflash the ultrasound to do 40 hertz, to do 200 hertz,
to do six hertz, whatever you want,
you'll be able to do it with the US 2000 pro.
And it's all wireless, so you just tap your phone to it
and you can flash it, not with Bluetooth, but with NFC.
So it's not gonna be emitting Bluetooth
when you're not using it, it's just NFC,
which is a momentary sending of signals
and you don't do it while it's on your neck,
you just do it while it's in front of you.
So it's very cool.
And then yeah, you could basically read research,
go, I wanna try six hertz today
and then have it on your ultrasound within a minute.
It's very simple.
And for those who like this, wanna try this,
you know, you're more in the, I really like this,
I really support this.
Then my recommendation for you would be to go
to the ultra Skool and help support that work,
which is the ultra Skool is kind of the inner sanctum,
the inner circle of all things ultrasound.
That's where all this stuff is developed.
And you guys are the beneficiary here in the Vegas Skool,
but it goes to people in ultra Skool first.
So if you wanna get that done,
if you wanna see that done faster,
see the progress updates, all that kind of stuff
on the US 2000 pro modulation thing that we're doing
in a funded project with a team of five really capable
engineers working pretty nonstop on this.
Then yeah, I would invite you to join the ultra Skool.
It's a cool group.
There's a lot of stuff in there already for content
and you can just find the link in the Vegas Skool
on the sidebar, I think,
or click on my profile and you'll see ultra Skool.
And there's a free seven day trial so you can kind of see
like what's in there if you wanna support it or not.
So yeah.
So, okay, so what we wanna do right now is I want you to,
based on what you've learned today,
ask some questions in the chat.
I'm gonna give you guys about five minutes.
I'm gonna play some music, give us about five minutes.
And I want you to type your questions in chat.
And I will come back and answer them, okay?
So we're gonna do a little music break for five minutes
and then I'll be right back.
Ask your question.
I did a, let's see, share screen, share music.
(upbeat music)
♪ More in the 80s ♪
♪ I had to be more than a lady ♪
♪ I was like a girl gone wild ♪
♪ I became a one woman army ♪
♪ Now I'm getting dirty ♪
♪ No thickness and warming ♪
♪ And they can't stop the pieces ♪
♪ So I have taken over you ♪
♪ I can't stop me ♪
♪ I'm taking over ♪
♪ We can't the new world for you ♪
♪ I'm taking over the new world for you ♪
♪ The new world for you ♪
(upbeat music)
♪ I'm on my way ♪
♪ I'm coming now ♪
♪ I'm making plans sad ♪
♪ To take the crown ♪
♪ There's no more hiding in our shadows ♪
♪ Baby, I am going to be number one ♪
♪ I'm taking back my soul ♪
♪ I'm looking great as they go ♪
♪ The new world has begun ♪
♪ I'm taking over you ♪
♪ The new world for you ♪
♪ I'm taking over the new world for you ♪
♪ The new world for you ♪
♪ I'm taking over you ♪
♪ The new world for you ♪
♪ I'm taking over the new world for you ♪
(upbeat music)
(upbeat music)
♪ The world as you know it is about to change ♪
♪ Are you ready? ♪
(upbeat music)
♪ All right ♪
♪ The world for the world for you ♪
♪ The world as you know it is about to change ♪
♪ Are you ready? ♪
(upbeat music)
♪ 'Cause during the morning's the road ♪
♪ The world as you know it is about to change ♪
♪ I'm taking over you ♪
♪ The world as you know it ♪
♪ To war ♪
♪ I'm stuck in the sky ♪
♪ I'm stuck in the sky ♪
♪ Oh I'm stuck in the sky ♪
♪ I'm stuck in the sky ♪
♪ I'm stuck in the sky ♪
♪ We'll get to all of them ♪
♪ We'll cover every question ♪
♪ I'm taking over you ♪
♪ The world as you know it ♪
- All right, boom, and let's go.
Okay, so how do I'm gonna unshare my screen?
Okay, so, all right, awesome.
Thank you guys so much for the questions.
I'm gonna go through the questions now
and address them.
So boom, boom, boom.
Also, if you like the song,
I generated that with AI, it's pretty cool.
You might not like AI, I like AI, you know,
it is what it is, it is what it is.
Okay, so let's see, cool, cool, cool, cool, cool,
Elaine, good to see ya.
Very interested in arthritis connection
and study protocol.
Yeah, I mean, basically vagus nerve stimulation
on the left side of your neck.
That was, when I did one-to-one coaching,
that was one that we saw got better a lot.
Rheumatoid arthritis and fibromyalgia
both improved significantly
after doing vagus nerve stimulation of the neck.
So yeah, and then even the FDA recently was like,
yeah, it kinda does, you're right, we'll approve it.
But it's for the implanted version.
So yeah, so yeah, do that, do that, try that.
Cool, Chris, let's see, good to see ya.
Can you tell us what the difference
between the gen two and gen three version
of the handled ultrasound unit, tens unit?
Well, it's just ultrasound unit, not tens unit.
It comes from a company, well,
the distributor is called tenspros.com,
one of the distributors.
So it's not a tens unit though, tens unit would be electrical.
Ultrasound is just ultrasound.
And the difference between the gen two and gen three version,
I don't even think you can find a gen,
you can't really find different gens.
This is a US Pro 2000, it says second edition on,
it says second edition right here on my device.
And there is no third version,
there's no anti-memetics division.
But the version that we're working on right now,
which is, yeah, it's kind of a third version of this device.
It's not gonna look any different.
It's gonna look visually from the outside,
exactly the same.
It's gonna be basically programmed
with the same buttons, same expected functionality.
If you set five minutes,
it's gonna be on for five minutes and then turn off.
It'll have a low, medium and high intensity.
But the only difference will be
that it outputs different frequencies.
So it's a frequency controlled stimulator
with that's ultrasound,
which is kind of the, not the first of its kind,
but it's gonna be the first of its kind
that doesn't cost $30,000.
It'll be just a little,
we have a little microcontroller
that we add in under the faceplate
and then you just put your phone up to it, boop.
And then it takes a second to do, it's really cool.
So you'll select the frequencies on your phone.
I'll show you the app that we have.
We literally have an iPhone app for this.
It's pretty cool.
This is our, so here,
you can't really see it very well.
This is the,
it just,
this is the iPhone app that we're working on.
And then you have a library
of different selectable frequencies.
And then you'll say, "I wanna do one Hertz or six Hertz
or any of these frequencies that you've read about."
We'll also include like this one's typically good
to use for memory, for sleep, for energy.
There'll be a whole different library of ultrasound frequencies.
This is what a tester version looks like right here.
This is an actual iPhone app.
It's not a picture of an iPhone app.
It is the iPhone app.
If you scroll down, you press that button
and then you literally get the dialogue for ready to scan.
So this is an NFC enabled iPhone app.
So this, you literally hold this up to your iPhone
and then you would be able to flash it.
If it's off, you can't flash it.
You have to have it on with the lights.
Man, this background blurring thing is aggressive.
Okay, anyway, you know what the ultrasound looks like.
So that's what the difference will be.
You won't see a difference in the physical device,
but how it feels will be very different.
The differences in frequency pulsations
is as big of a leap in the user experience for ultrasound
as you going from like icky ear clip stimulation
with electricity to you trying ultrasound for the first time.
So that big of a jump like, wow,
I can stimulate my vagus nerve
and my ear doesn't feel like it's being stung by a bee
for an hour.
Oh, and I get to use the ultrasound for three minutes.
I don't feel anything, but I feel it.
That jump in terms of like, wow,
this is a better user experience.
We're going to have that much of a leap
in terms of user experience
just from also within the ultrasound device itself
because you'll be able to change the frequencies.
It's really cool.
Very, I'm very excited.
I'm very, very, very excited about this.
So yeah, and then Amel, good to see you.
Be not afraid, heal myself.
Yeah, I agree.
You can't, look, if you went to a doctor,
they're probably going to pump you
full of experimental research chemicals anyway.
So I don't, I think,
I think the hate that I get on the internet is so unfair.
If anything, I'm trying to be more responsible
than most doctors for Christ's sake.
So I don't know, man, whatever.
I respect your opinion of me, I respect it.
If it's good, if it's bad, it's your opinion.
You should have opinions about things.
So I'm not going to try and disabuse you.
You know, I've learned a long time ago
that getting into a situation
where you're like trying to convince somebody
who's pretty much determined to hate you,
you're not going to win them over.
So I don't care.
I'm not going to try.
It's not important for me.
And yeah, I is as nice and bubbly and fun and friendly
as I can be.
I've certainly not made every friend on the internet.
There are people who hate my guts and have never met me.
Don't know who I am as a person,
but they just, they want to punch me in the face.
That's it.
I don't get that comment too much,
but I have gotten the comment.
I would love to punch you in the face.
You have a very punchable face.
So I've gotten that really amazing compliment on Twitter
for doing really compared to what other people do on Twitter.
I'd say I'm pretty tame, but still, it is what it is.
Cool.
So Jonathan asks, I have the UK one you recommended.
Will that have the same capability?
I believe so.
It has to be the U.S.
So this is not a system where every ultrasound
that ever existed in the entire planet
will always have that capability.
It has to be the U.S. 2000.
'Cause we're designing it to fit inside of this device.
If you have a U.S. 1000, it's not gonna work.
Maybe it's a good opportunity for you to consider an upgrade
for the $150 ultrasound.
Now the ultrasound, the one with the frequencies,
it's not, I can't give it for free, obviously.
We're gonna try and keep the price
as close to the manufacturing cost as possible.
And these are like little circuit boards, little modules.
We'll talk more about that.
We don't have anything specific about what that'll be,
but you'll never pay more than $500 for any of this stuff.
All total.
I think the electrical devices that you stimulate
in your neck with that are like $500 sometimes,
$500, I'm like, that is bullshit.
That's a nine volt battery.
It's insane, anyway.
But you know, of course, here's the other thing.
If you like what I do,
and you would like to see me do it for more time,
that does have a cost.
So oftentimes the way I read it when people go,
why is it this for free?
Everybody deserves this for free.
I'm like, well, I would love that.
But you'll typically notice that the,
do like a meta-analysis, okay?
The companies that provide stuff that is so cheap
that it's nearly free, how long do they last?
Not a long time.
And you might find a few exceptions,
but they generally do prove the rule.
When you find products that are more priced
in a reasonable way where it makes sense
for the company to survive, they are more expensive.
That's a factor of that.
So I wanna build, if I'm gonna spend my hard earned time
and energy and my money to build this,
I don't wanna do it where I go broke and bankrupt
as soon as possible.
I'm not trying to speed chapter 11 bankruptcy.
So it's not gonna be free, but it's not gonna cost you $500.
We don't have the exact price of it yet, but that will,
and anyway, even if you're in the ultra Skool,
you'll get the best deal on the planet.
So go there and you'll, if you're like,
I want a good price for this, go to the ultra Skool.
You'll get the best price.
But then if you wait till it's out on X,
if you see me posting about it on Twitter,
it'll be full price.
I'm not making any deals for those cocks ockers.
Fuck those people.
Besides you guys, I like a lot of people on Twitter,
but yeah, there will be no deals on Twitter.
That's for sure.
Okay, so the next question from Kim,
US2000 Pro on low versus medium versus high.
Yes, low and medium are 100 Hertz.
High is nothing.
It's not a, it's not pulsed.
It's continuous wave,
meaning it's just 100% of the time, full one mega Hertz.
That's why it's so hot.
So it doesn't do pulsing on high on the US2000 Pro.
On the US1000 though, it's different.
The US1000, it's pulsing 150 times per second
and low, medium and high,
because the US1000 doesn't do continuous wave.
Continuous wave means there's no room
for it to start and stop the pulse,
meaning there's no pulsing, meaning it can't be,
you can't say it's 100 Hertz because it's not pulsed.
But on the US1000, it's 150 on all of them.
The US2000, high is continuous wave.
Low and medium are pulsed.
Yeah, second edition is the one they sent me.
Yeah, that's great.
That's perfect.
Kim, thank you, and then Michael,
how is the testing the Orco-R theory coming along?
That's a great question.
I'd say that's more of an ultra Skool question,
but it's going really good.
On your bond, Banjapade is an Indian researcher
and he's got like a multi-multimillion dollar lab.
They're growing microtubules in petri dishes.
They're probing them, they're testing them,
they're building them from scratch.
There was a post today about,
his lab is looking at cancer treatments
that measure the bioelectric frequency
coming out of cancer cells,
and then using that signature of cancer
to send specific things that can only latch
onto that frequency, time crystals,
that can actually wrap around the cancer's nucleus
and it will kill it.
So yeah, Orco-R is going really good.
Thank you for asking.
I feel really bad for all the people
over the last 20 plus years
who've probably tried to shit all over microtubules
and talk about some phenomenology,
the ontology of consciousness.
I don't like consciousness is interesting.
I'm actually really interested
in the scientific physical part that gives us consciousness.
And I believe it's microtubules,
and I believe Orco-R is the best theory of consciousness
of how that happens.
And again, the result of any ideology,
any belief system, the test should be,
what did they produce from that theory?
We've produced ultrasound that came from Stuart Hamroff.
Possible cancer cure from an Orco-R friend in the community.
So how do you think Orco-R is doing?
You telling me, what do you think?
I think it's pretty good.
But that won't stop some, you know,
Yale, Yaleite from talking shit to me,
like this is a bullshit theory.
There's no possible way that microtubules are quantum.
And then I put a paper that's like,
when birds can detect north and south with their nose,
it's proven that they use quantum mechanics to do that.
The magnetic spin of a protein in their beak
lets them see where north or south is.
Did you guys know how that works?
When a bird is looking north, it becomes brighter.
And then when they look south,
or really more towards the equator,
their vision actually changes and it becomes darker.
I believe it, or it's vice versa,
but it's tied into their vision system.
They can see north and south.
And they're doing it through a quantum mechanical mechanism.
And that's proven photosynthesis in plants
is seriously a quantum mechanic thing.
A plant leaf can capture photons
in quantum mechanical gates
and have a 99.8% optimized system for energy capture
because of quantum mechanics.
So plants figured out quantum mechanics.
Bird beaks figured out quantum mechanics,
but you're telling me that in the human brain
in the most advanced complex system
that we know of that exists anywhere
in neurons and microtubules
that these were the exception.
The neuron as smart as it is was too dumb,
was not smart enough like plants
to figure out anything quantum.
Quantum has no play in the brain.
These people are fucking out of their mind.
They are psycho.
They're the fucking crazy ones.
I'm not fucking crazy, okay?
That's exactly what a crazy person would say, but.
No, I actually think we're doing good.
Anyway, moving on.
All right, so Elaine, I typed out a message
and it was told me it was larger than 280 characters
and threw it away.
Oh man, Elaine, I'm so sorry.
That sucks.
I'm gonna take a screenshot of this.
Okay, I'm gonna send it to support on Skool.
'Cause I think that's like really messed up
and I'm very sorry that that happened.
Like legitimately legit, that sucks.
Sorry, I'm saving this right now, so.
Boop.
There you go.
All right, I'll get that up to support.
I have a regular Clariest Imaging Ultrasound device.
That's awesome.
That's freaking awesome.
So your device can do scanning B mode
and you can put that on the vagus nerve on the neck.
You could put that on the spleen.
You could put that on your head.
I would, so for diagnostic imaging,
which is the Clariest, which is what that is,
you could be putting that on the temple.
You can see this phenoid bone in your head.
So you can see where the back of the nose
in the skull area bounces off.
You'll see a little point in there.
And you're not gonna see much else in the brain
'cause that's not what ultrasound isn't the best thing.
Well, it probably could be,
but it's not optimized for brain scans.
So you're not gonna see anything,
but you are 100% getting ultrasound in there.
And those typically pulse between 40 to 50 to 60 Hertz.
So they're scanning at about 60 times per second.
Sometimes lower than that, sometimes higher,
but you have a really good tool.
And I think doing that consistently is gonna like,
you know, help a lot.
So yeah, that would be, I'm sorry I don't have your message.
I really am sorry.
I have that happen to me.
And it's like, why do I even try?
Why am I even trying?
And I hate it and I feel bad about myself for 15 minutes.
And then I just go, well, okay, it is what it is, right?
I can't offer any more, you know, help than that.
But other than to say, try, try again, try again.
Right, life, life throws us curveballs.
Okay, so then you do, you are asking, okay, good.
So Elaine, I'm interested in monitoring before and after
on tissue blood.
Okay, blood flow or whatever.
There's worth monitoring after using low intensity ultrasound.
So if you have, you have Doppler mode,
you can see the blood flow in your carotid artery
and jugular vein in the neck.
And you can even see the heartbeat,
which is the flow, the Doppler flow.
And you can look at it.
I don't think they have an HRV plugin for that yet.
So, but ultrasound would be the most accurate.
I don't know.
I don't think, I think, I hate to say it,
as much as you have like a really good tool.
It's not the best for measuring your heart rate variability,
though, because they don't, you know,
a heart rate variability, you wanna wear it for specific
purpose that just never got plugged into ultrasound imaging
systems, maybe in the future they will be.
But yeah, I don't know.
And it's only gonna work with big vessels, too.
So like, if you're like, oh, I wanna see the blood flow
on my wrist, the little capillaries that go here
in the skin, you're not gonna see any ultrasounds,
not that advanced to resolve that,
or consumer grade devices are not that advanced to do that.
There are ultrasound systems that image 50,000 times
per second and can see individual blood cells
and they can show you the exact movement with ultrasound,
which is crazy.
So it's possible, but I know that device
and it doesn't have that feature.
Those things are like a quarter of a million dollars.
It's not worth it.
And then, got it, okay, cool.
So then Jay's question, one, how long before people
usually notice effects benefits for various of the locations?
So I'll answer that one first.
How long depends on how broken your body is
just to be blunt with you.
If you are extremely chronically ill,
it can take a month, two months for you to notice anything.
Second part of that question is,
it's not even that nothing has improved.
It's oftentimes that people become so used to the situation
that they don't even notice it themselves subjectively.
But if you, there was a survey done
in a vagus nerve stimulation trial
and they were asking their caregivers and their family members,
what do you notice has changed
about the person getting the stimulation of the vagus nerve?
The family were like, oh, it was like a week later,
they were like very much improved.
But if you ask the person, they're like,
I still don't feel, I still, I don't notice anything.
I'm not noticing anything from this, this is not working.
And this, you know, typically very depressed people
are like that, you know, you know, the kind of person.
But their family's like, wow,
this person has gotten so much better on every level.
And it's been two, three weeks.
But they had cases where the person who was depressed
where everybody around them was like,
their mood is so much better.
They're like, there are times of the day
where they're just like, calm as can be,
they're not in a stupor.
But then you ask them, they're like,
don't feel a single thing, don't notice anything.
I don't think it's working, nothing works for me.
I've tried everything, they do all that.
And it's just not true.
So it is subjective.
If you're in, you can try to say this nicely.
If you don't have any friends or family
that are nearby that can give you any reports,
or if you don't have a coach or anything like that,
you probably won't notice.
You could not notice anything for two months.
So yeah, that's kind of my answer.
And that's dependent on any of these things.
But like I said, going back, I did say this,
there's only one way to know.
I could give you facts and figures of a thousand people
that did ultrasound for 30 days, 60 day, 90 day, six months,
one year.
I rarely encourage people to do it more than six, seven, eight months.
By that time, whatever problem you started with,
it's probably pretty, pretty well in its way,
or you're just not going to respond ever.
But yeah, I mean, I could give you all kinds of facts and figures.
The only way they knew and that I knew was to ask them.
And just see, you know, I can't predict, I can't predict anything.
I'm not, I'm not psychic.
What conclusions can you draw if you don't notice any benefits
after that time?
First one would be, well, the reason that I did coaching
was because people can forget what they are doing.
And it helps to check in with them every week to see,
how's your sleep?
What are you eating?
What are you listening to?
What are you watching?
What do you talk to yourself about?
What are your influences?
Do you exercise?
So there's so many factors that in the, you know,
there is a huge disadvantage to how I am doing things now,
compared to how I did it for seven years.
When I did it for seven years,
you would get on a phone call with me.
We would work out a strategy.
We would make a proposal for a plan for 90 days,
and you would either sign up for that or not.
And if you did, we would talk every single week
and work on things, right?
We would be a team problem solvers.
And that works really well.
You can imagine why.
However, I don't do that anymore.
So you guys are all at a disadvantage.
You guys came too late, sorry, too late.
You're too late to the party.
It's over.
You're going to have to do it yourself,
or find someone who is a coach who does find a coach who's
an expert in ultrasound and some of these conditions.
And get them on board to help you, you know,
make sure you get the most out of the time
that you're using the ultrasound for.
Those are the conclusions I can draw,
is that the way I'm doing it now is a lesser method, factually.
So I don't know.
You could even-- you could send the same message to me,
Jay, hey, I used it for six months.
I don't think I noticed anything.
I go, well, OK, that's all I can say.
Because I don't know what you did over the six months.
That's the honest answer.
So yeah, sorry.
So moving on.
Number two, is the stomach or sacrum
more or less effective for gut motility?
So the sacrum would be down by your tailbone.
That's what I'm thinking you're saying.
Or the stomach for gut motility.
So your colon, the lower colon close to your butt hole,
that is innervated by the sacrum part of your vagus nerve,
essentially.
So the vagus nerve goes through your sacrum
into your lower colon, your lower GI tract.
So if your digestion issues or gut motility issues
are down there, then it would be more effective for that type
of a gut motility issue.
But if they're more higher, like pyloric valve or upper
kind of smaller intestines, then I
would try to stimulate up there.
So it depends on, again, where it's
happening to be more effective.
Three, if it is sound and not electricity,
why does it need gel?
That's a great question.
There's something called impedance.
Impedance.
And when you're designing ultrasound systems,
you have to match the type of pressure that's generated
from the transducer vibrating.
And you have to match it to the other kind of tissue.
So I'll give you a couple of examples
of why this is not that.
Have you ever seen somebody play a trumpet?
[MUSIC PLAYING]
OK.
So notice that their mouth is like very small.
And they're blowing into a small little mouthpiece.
Why is the end of a trumpet flared out like this?
Why do trumpets flare out?
Why is it a bell shape?
Well, that's because there's an impedance.
There would be an impedance mismatch,
not matching, between the pressure,
the high pressure in the mouth and the vibrations,
and then the lower pressure outside of their mouth.
And when you have pressure differences,
high pressure meeting low pressure,
if they hit each other without anything in between that
matches that, then you get reflection.
So actually, when you're going [MUSIC PLAYING]
you're trying to make annoying jazz music with your mouth.
You don't realize it, but a lot of that sound
is bouncing right off of the air right in front of your mouth
and trying to go back in your mouth.
So by putting a long stem and a horn,
is you're focusing it into a small cavity that's
small and high pressure at first and slowly tapering out
to match the lower pressure here.
The ultrasound transducer is made out of metal very hard.
To be able to move metal like that a million times
per second, it's high pressure.
Your skin is not metal unless you're T-1000 terminator.
You're made out of flesh and mostly water,
so it's a low pressure zone.
So if you just put the ultrasound right on the skin
and there were little air pockets in there,
then you would get ultrasound that can't even bounce
into the skin.
The reason we use water or gel is so that the sound can properly
impedance match into your skin without going through air first.
It'd be like if I had a long trombone,
but I took a saw and I cut a section,
would the trombone still kind of work?
It depends, not very well.
So if you have a discontinuity of impedance
and they calculate this as they build them,
then the sound is not going to go through.
So it's not electricity, it's sound.
Why, you know, again, a brass band playing music,
why do all the instruments have a horn on the end of it?
It's the exact same thing.
We even talk about ultrasound systems in engineering as a horn.
You use the same calculations for impedance matching
between high pressure and low pressure
when you're designing musical instruments
as when you're designing ultrasound.
It's kind of crazy.
So that's why, and it's not electricity.
So hope that answers your question.
OK, Elaine, would like to develop a protocol
on how to monitor changes using regular ultrasound
on application of low intensity ultrasound.
Be happy to take the protocol and use it
with your new device as well.
Yeah, that's great.
I have a protocol that works on weekly chart in the course.
And yeah, I'll pull that up right now.
I have-- it's in the classroom.
I think it's on here.
Here it is.
OK, so module 5-- so ultrasound level 2, module 5,
ultrasound journaling, which specifically
says when you're on week 1, 2 minutes and 30 seconds
on green on the left vagus side, week 2,
you do left and right side of the neck.
And as you go, you layer in things as needed.
Now, remember, this is created when
I was doing one-to-ones with people.
So we would pull this up and actually plan this out.
This is based on, again, 1,000 data points.
So it's a good chart.
So this is kind of like what I would recommend.
I think it's still open on the internet.
Yeah.
So you can see the full protocol here in a doc.
It's linked right here.
So that's the protocol, essentially.
But yeah, I mean, since I'm not so involved--
oh, I don't think I was sharing my screen.
Oh my god.
Sorry about that.
Let me try that again.
So yeah, if you go to classroom, ultrasound level 2,
and then you go to module 5 here,
then you're looking at the journaling protocol.
And there's a chart, which says week 1, 2 minutes and 30
green on the left vagus nerve.
This is for the US 1,000.
And there's a chart that says what is what.
But generally speaking, that's a lot of work.
That's a lot of work.
It took me a lot of work to help people do it, to make it.
Would I recommend it for someone who's not
working with someone?
Probably not.
Because it's in the degree of complexity,
where unless you're really good at following your own instructions,
you'll probably just revert to some average.
The average is going to be medium for five minutes
on any of the devices.
If you have a US 1,000, medium, five minutes, left side vagus
nerve, that's what I revert to.
That's the reversion to the mean.
That's the average.
So you can take the full culmination of all of this
and go, OK, well, the average overall, if you plan on using it
for 90 days, which is what I kind of recommend,
I would just say five minutes.
If you feel like you're overstimulated,
then you should go down.
There's a person who posted a question yesterday
in the Vegas Skool.
She's like, I've been doing five minutes on high for about a week
now, and I feel really overstimulated.
I don't feel good.
Did I do it wrong?
Should I go down?
Should I stop?
My recommendation was, well, yeah, you should definitely--
you probably definitely overstimulated.
The good news is you haven't permanently
damaged yourself.
I know that.
I can absolutely assure you that your system will
find its equilibrium.
As soon as you stop ultrasound, you'll start--
especially after one week.
If you stop ultrasound, you're going
to revert back to where you were just before.
That's not the same if you did it for 90 days, though.
Like, if you are trying to learn a skill,
and you did it for a week, and then you
stopped for the rest of your life, whatever skill that was,
you can forget it.
You're not going to keep that.
If you trained a skill like, I don't know, learning chess,
and you committed to 90 days of playing chess every day
for 90 days, even if you stopped for a year,
you would be able to pick up chess a year later.
Same thing with learning languages,
learning how to play a musical instrument, any of those things.
But yeah, if you stopped playing chess after five days
and said, feels like my brain's overstimulated,
I'm unhappy.
I wouldn't blame you.
And you stopped.
You're going to go back to not being able to play chess
very quickly.
It's just the fact.
Even in math, I didn't do math for college level
calculus for probably 15 years to go back to the program
that I'm in.
They're making me do math again.
And I'm like, oh my god.
Trigonometry, sine, cosine, arctan.
I learned this, but it was like 15 years ago.
And I did it full time.
I can at least pull back some of what I learned.
Had I not taken classes in high Skool and college
on calculus, I would be in a really bad spot.
Or if I only did a week of calculus as a kid,
I'd be in a really bad spot.
But your brain can retain things.
So people try to use that against it to say, well,
then you're saying I have to use this for the every--
there's a difference between saying,
I recommend 90 days of usage versus that does not
mean I'm saying, use it for the rest of your life
for the next 40 or 50 years every day the same way.
These are totally different things.
You see why I don't like being on the internet so much,
because I'm like, I get misquoted,
taking out a context, told I'm saying something
that I never said all the time.
I'm sure everyone in the chat is like, yep, been there.
No, it's like, so these are different.
But I would just say, unless you have some kind of person
who wants to take on this with you,
then just revert to the mean and do five minutes,
medium intensity, left side, every day for 90 days.
And again, how I responded to Jay is,
you could do it for three weeks and you
wouldn't notice anything.
That doesn't mean nothing's happening, far from it.
Probably a lot could be happening.
You just don't have access to all that.
Like people get sick.
Sometimes people get sick with chronic illnesses suddenly.
Like it just comes out of nowhere.
But there had to have been some signature in their body
that they didn't have mental access to that was changing.
Like, how long you could ask it the other way?
If I started eating, what's the worst kind of junk food
you could eat?
Let's say you're eating talkies.
You know, those little like Doritos, flavored, salty, crunchy,
spicy, orange, twirly-cue things, talkies.
And you're like, how long do I need to eat talkies
before I develop a chronic illness?
And I would say it depends.
Are you eating them consistently?
They're like, well, how long until I notice something?
How long do I have to eat junk food until I really feel it?
I really want to feel sick.
I really want to feel like I'm dying.
There's no one answer.
Some people can eat it because they're younger
and not feel anything.
But is something happening?
Yes, absolutely.
And then they develop a chronic illness after five years.
And then they go, I don't know what happened.
All of a sudden, I got cancer and I'm dying.
But it happened like it was like suddenly.
It's like, was it suddenly or was there something else?
So I don't know.
Maybe you could detect a little bit of--
I don't distrust any of you.
I like all of you.
We could probably be best friends in another life.
You know, if we grew up together and we went to high Skool
together, we would all be in a club together
and be best buds or play in a sports team or something
like that.
So I'm not saying I distrust you.
I generally do distrust what one person subjectively
remembers about their own activity.
People are chronically terribly bad at that.
So yeah, I would say the only way you can guarantee
that you were consistent is if you revert to the mean
and say, well, I didn't follow this kind of complex,
like, advanced protocol.
But I did-- I know I did five minutes yesterday.
And I did five minutes before that.
If you are overstimulating it, you'll know.
The woman was like, oh, I'm like, my brain so--
it's working so much that I can't fall asleep.
And I'm like, well, I have the same problem.
I have the same problem.
But it's not because of ultrasound.
It's because that's how I naturally am.
My brain works all the fucking time.
I hate it sometimes.
But then I get into a computer lab or an electronics lab.
And I'm able to build ultrasound for like 12 hours
straight and think about every complex problem involved
in developing ultrasound technology, which isn't easy.
It's not-- it's non-trivial work.
Could I do that if I were in the opposite spectrum
where I could just lay in bed and just fall asleep
and not have a solitary thought in my brain?
I think probably not.
So there are advantages and disadvantages to everything.
So it's kind of like, you know, like some people,
if they're content watching Netflix and laying in the couch
and not doing anything, and that's all they want,
I'd say, you probably don't need to do anything.
You could just keep on doing that.
That sounds nice.
That sounds fucking awesome.
But if you stimulate your nervous system
and your brain starts going, holy shit, holy shit.
Maybe there's something in there for you.
Explore it.
You could be a genius and you didn't even know it.
You could be developing memory that you never had before.
These are all real factors.
So like, you know, again, you could see.
I could keep on going.
It's complicated.
But you can only know if you do it.
And you're just going to revert to the mean anyway.
So just do five minutes on Medium.
Even if there were a US 3000 device
that did different things, my general recommendation,
I obviously, with advice that, you know, in 10 years,
it doesn't exist.
I can't say that exactly.
But it's most likely going to be designed that way.
That Medium is fine and at five minutes is also probably good.
Yeah, so I wish I could have better answers for you guys.
But just the honest truth is that I just
know how people work.
It's not nothing personal at all.
It's nothing personal.
It's literally just, you know, yeah.
OK.
Jay asked, I recommend creating a master fact, single document,
and put it on Skool, and add it to--
I think you have a great point.
I was just thinking about that.
Like a post that's pinned to the top that says all the questions
that I've been asked, here you go.
I think that's a great idea.
I will do that.
I also think you should just use the search feature.
Christ's sake, please God.
OK.
Anyway, Chris asks, for those asking about a monitoring,
let me stop the screen share here.
For those asking about a monitoring app,
I use an app called Weltery, also a great one on your iPhone.
You can scan before and after and see the differences
in your parasympathetic nervous system.
Yep.
It uses the camera on your phone and the light,
and you put your finger on it.
And it will literally do heart rate variability monitoring
from your fingertip on your phone.
I think it costs like $5 or something like that.
Super cheap, super good, totally an awesome option.
I like the O-ring because I can wear it while I sleep
and check my HRV throughout the night.
So, but yeah, there are some great options.
You just search heart rate variability monitoring.
Put it into an AI, put it into chat GPT, grok, clod.
Do a deep search and be like, I want to measure my vagus nerve.
How do I do it?
Give me 10 things I can do.
And it will be like, boom.
All right, and then Elaine, there's a lot of mental health
issue people on the social media platforms.
Don't you know it.
Oh my God.
Yes, there are, there are.
So, yeah.
Yeah.
LOL, yes, Chris, you get it.
We've all seen it.
We've all seen it.
And then Casey asked the question, is that the guy
from Star Wars, the old guy from Star Wars?
That's cool.
How would you describe the vagus metaphorically?
Sort of an oddball question.
I like that kind of question.
Metaphorically, I've gotten some pushback on this,
but I still believe it.
It's kind of like your inner child.
It's like an inner pet.
I think it is kind of a worm-like creature.
I consider the vagus nerve to be like the Nemertian descendant.
And this is completely different than polyvagal theory.
This is a refutation of polyvagal theory.
Polyvagal theory would say that your vagus nerve
is like the lovey-dovey nerve.
And when you're around people, your vagus nerve
is like activated.
And you love them.
And blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, bullshit, bullshit.
But it's not true.
And another example would be, you know, oxytocin.
Oxytocin is the love chemical, apparently, right?
So when you can inject oxytocin in nasally through a mist,
you can give someone oxytocin.
And they thought, oh, well, if we took two people
who didn't know each other and we gave them oxytocin,
they could probably become best friends, maybe more than that.
Who knows?
So they did the experiment.
Turns out that it made them more radically like racist
against any other race.
They loved their own more with oxytocin than without it.
So it was like, oh, fuck, we can't talk about this anymore.
It made people extremely racist and discerning and anti-equity.
It was the opposite of diversity, equity, and inclusion.
So you don't hear people talk about it anymore.
But that's a real study.
I'm not making this up.
They gave parents this and they fell in love
with their kids on a deeper level.
But they almost became anti-other parents' children
to an extreme degree.
So again, it's not simple.
And when you actually test polyvagal theory,
you're like, why do people get a heightened sense of energy
when they're around other people?
Not really because they love them.
And I'm not saying that they're not also loving them.
Maybe they do love people.
Some people just are wired to be around people and be like,
oh my god, my mom is like that.
She gets around people and she's like, oh my god,
she could talk for 10 hours.
It's annoying how much my mom can talk to a stranger.
I grew up with my mom meeting some person who she barely
knew at the outside of a safe way
and would just talk to them for an hour
while I'm standing there holding the bag.
And I'm like, can I go to the car now?
Can you just stop fucking talking?
So I know people are wired differently,
but I think the vagus nerve,
I think the thing that works more
is your vagus nerve is an evolutionary weapon.
That's actually more accurate.
The reason is because,
well, right now I'm talking
and my vagus nerve is controlling my talking.
So if you cut my vagus nerve, I wouldn't be able to talk.
So I believe that the vagus nerve plays a role
in what I'm gonna say next.
And I believe that the vagus nerve is deciding
before I unconsciously know it,
what the next words out of my mouth will be.
And that's especially true if I'm out with people
and talking to them.
If I'm angry at the person,
or if I don't really get angry at people,
there are people who I've gotten angry at before
and it definitely held a grudge.
Definitely 100%.
I'm a human just like anybody else.
Or I'm like, oh my God, that fucker.
If I ever saw that person on the street, I would,
oh my God.
Mostly people that I've encountered on Twitter actually,
'cause they could be really shitty.
I'm sure I've decked it out too.
So it is what it is.
But I think your vagus nerve is like a weapon
that used responsibly and consciously
can be very potent and powerful,
can hurt or heal, can destroy or create.
I believe all of these things about it.
I think the best way to kind of grok what that is
is to do priming.
I think I have this on the website, on vagushub,
And there's a video there and it's called mega ultra priming.
And there's a phrase in there.
If you watch the whole video in VR, it's fucking incredible.
It will change your life 100%.
I should talk about it more, but I should talk about it more.
It's fucking awesome.
It's like maybe one of the best things
that I've ever put together.
But there's a phrase in there from Tony Robbins
where he's like, now I am the voice.
Now I am the voice.
I will lead, not follow.
I will create, not doubt.
I will, you know, create, not, or I will,
I will believe, not doubt.
I will create, not destroy.
I am a leader.
These kinds of affirmations are really potent.
And now you can read them on a book.
But if you actually say them, right,
somebody's like, how will I know
if I do these affirmations, if they'll work for me?
I'm like, well, I'm sure they'll work for me for you
because they worked for me.
And they've worked for millions of other people.
And because of the way you're wired
was that when you speak it,
it's coming from your vagus nerve.
And your vagus nerve comes alive.
And you won't know the feeling of what that's like
until you do it.
And when you really do it,
and when you really commit to saying it
and believing it when you say it,
a different part of you comes out,
a different version of you appears, 100%.
And it's the vagus nerve.
That's what I believe is happening.
When you're yelling and pounding your chest
and saying, oh, I am a leader!
This kind of shit, these affirmations,
you are waking up your vagus nerve to its full power.
That's where you start to develop psychic ability
if that is a thing.
Whatever, the closest thing that you could approximate
to being somewhat psychic or more in tune or sharper,
like an evolutionary weapon comes out
when you activate your vagus nerve through speaking like that.
So the best metaphor,
which is the exact opposite of what you're gonna see
on the internet, from Polyvagal, whatever the fucks,
is that your vagus nerve is a deadly weapon.
But it's also your inner child.
So yeah, that's my metaphor.
Okay, sorry, I lost where the questions were
'cause I put something in the chat.
Okay, we're back, okay.
Where were you?
Okay, yes, sort of an oddball question, I know, yes,
but I like those oddball questions.
I own a US 1000 and look forward to exploring its uses.
Awesome, Casey, you're gonna love it, it's great.
Jonathan, I see the US2 Pro is available in the UK,
bioelectric frequency for cancer like Rife.
I mean, dude, it's so hard to say like,
oh, we found the frequency that cures cancer.
I don't think you're gonna see me say that.
That, if I invited the amount of hate and vitriol
when I said that Alzheimer's is as good as cured
because we have scanning ultrasounds
and you can just use them today
and you saw a week ago, the post where a doctor
did a scan of his mother's brain
who happened to have Alzheimer's
and she started recovering all of her memories
and getting better, that's literally a cure for Alzheimer's
and it was just a couple treatments, that was it.
That's pretty, I thought that's as good as cured
as I think that we have.
I hope not that we get, maybe you will take a pill.
If it's a pill, you take it, your Alzheimer's
is cured magically, that'd be great.
But we know that's not how it works.
A lot of people have died taking these Alzheimer's drugs,
these lechembe's, they die within six weeks of taking it.
Horrific deaths, so if you can do ultrasound on your brain
and you don't have Alzheimer's symptoms anymore,
that's great.
I don't know about cancer though.
That's an area where I really am gonna probably not,
not gonna be that reckless.
And I wasn't reckless when I did that thing
about Alzheimer's, that was actually true.
And I had two studies that were unpublished at that time
that proved that already.
So, yeah, anyway, that's when you realize people
on the internet are really fucking mean, really mean.
They went after my mom, they tried to attack my mom
who had nothing to do with that.
They're terrible.
Anyway, good question, Jonathan.
Casey, on the US-1000, which level do you recommend
for VNS?
Medium, five minutes, left side, neck.
I have some poking around to do on the group
where you could probably find the answer very, very new here.
That's totally okay, welcome.
Dara, high sterling, what is Orcoar?
A link that you like?
Yeah, that's a good question.
I think it's a post, it's a linked post in the Ultra Skool.
Ultra Skool has a lot of Orcoar stuff in it, actually.
If you go, yeah, just Ultra Skool,
there's a whole module on orchestrated objective reduction
or Orcoar, Roger Penrose, Stuart Hammeroff.
It's got every, that's the best resource
that exists on the internet, 100%.
There's a video of me that's like six minutes long
and I just explain the whole fricking thing.
It's one of my top performing videos
that I've ever made on YouTube, that video,
where it's called Orcoar 101.
And people are like, holy shit, you've explained it so well.
I actually start to kind of understand it now.
And it's Orcoar with an H.
So orchestrated, so O-R-C-H-O-R.
So yeah, one of my best videos I've ever made probably ever.
It's fricking awesome.
Oh yeah, Orcoar is why you're going to J-R-R token sites.
It's, yeah, that makes sense.
Little bit of a lesson in branding.
Think about that kind of stuff
before you create a name for it.
It's probably the best name
that they could have made at the time.
But even I'm like, Ork, like an Ork from Lord of the Rings.
Is that what, okay, well, but I love Stuart.
So, you know, it's all good.
It's all water under the bridge.
Chris writes, birds are so crazy.
Yes, we have a conure, which is like a miniature parrot
and are convinced he is more intelligent species.
Oh yeah, totally.
I've seen videos of some of these birds
that they can speak and it's amazing.
For those that scoff, I like to ask the question,
who is learning whose language?
Yeah, it's true.
Who's domesticating who?
Are we domesticating cats?
Or did they domesticate us kind of?
If you're a cat owner, kind of know.
Kind of know what's up.
Michael, both Nikola Tesla and Einstein
were both shamed by the so-called scientific community.
Yeah, totally.
You and Stuart are making great strides, stay the path.
Hell yeah, man, that's my intention.
I'm not, I've seen more than enough
that convinces me that Orcoire is the one true way
and the one true light and all of that cult-like stuff,
but not for those reasons.
I realized back in 2024, 2023, 2024,
when I had to do anesthesia for pain
and I have a video about that too.
That's about, you know, I think Orcoire, that video,
I talk about anesthetics working on microtubules.
I won't go into the full story,
but that experience and the experiences that I had
finally convinced me 100% that all the weird shit
that you think they're talking about
in orchestrated objective reduction
and out of body experiences and all that stuff,
that's absolutely real.
That's 100% real.
And you'll see people who are highly skeptical,
but then they have a religious experience
from doing ketamine and they go,
oh fuck, everything I thought I knew was wrong.
Shit, I gotta rethink this.
That always happens.
It's never in the opposite direction.
And if it is, it just proves the rule.
So yeah, thank you.
Jay, have you seen QRI, EM field topology,
theory of consciousness?
Yes, and I know Andre,
Andre's like personally from my time in Berkeley.
I've met him many times.
He's this very smart guy.
Could be totally right.
I mean, yeah, I, you know, anytime somebody starts saying,
it's like manifolds or it's like curvy lines.
Consciousness is like, it's like a Gaussian wave
that goes like this.
I know that they're doing drugs
because that's not consciousness.
You're describing a process.
You can describe,
there could be many descriptions of processes.
Like I could have a theory of consciousness
called the pain theory of consciousness
that says like, if you get stabbed with a pencil,
it'll hurt and you'll feel it in your consciousness.
Therefore pain is consciousness
and consciousness takes on the shape of pain.
And all things are just varying degrees of pain
or not pain.
And that's consciousness.
And that's almost like a Buddhist kind of,
that's actually kind of what Buddhism is saying.
We're in a painful world.
That's what consciousness is pain.
Consciousness is just pain.
And that the only way to escape it is to meditate out of it
and all this kind of bullshit.
So yes, everybody has a theory of consciousness.
I just think that you have to have a physical mechanism
for why I'm conscious and why a rock is not conscious.
No theory that talks about manifolds
or field topology or anything like that
can differentiate between why do anesthetics
make me unconscious when it doesn't make my iPhone unconscious?
They don't address that.
So they're just weak
and they're only as strong as the example
that I gave about the pain consciousness thing.
And they can all be valid.
What I said about pain, 100%,
if I got an hour to drill you on that concept,
you would come out of it believing
that we live in the pain simulation.
But your ability to persuade people does not create truth.
It creates a kind of truth, but it's not true truth.
It's not capital T truth.
EM field theory is a lower case T truth.
My pain theory that I just created right here
on the spot right now is a lower T truth.
Funny side story.
On Twitter, you know how people come in the comments a lot
and they're like, I just figured out this theory.
It's the six gigawatt tensor field Lagrangian theory
of everything.
This solves physics.
And like they really just like put a bunch of bullshit
into chat GBT and then copy pasted its output.
And they're like, I am now a genius.
You know, it's like they think they're the meme
of the big brain playing itself,
the game of chess against its own brain.
They're really the version of the meme
where their head is caved in and they're drooling.
That's the kind of like thing.
But I've seen these so much.
I was like, okay, grok, make me a theory of everything
called the butt plug theory.
And it was like, I think I have it up.
I'm gonna pull it up.
It did a really good job at making
a completely fake theory.
I'm gonna share my screen here for a second.
Seriously, I can see this.
This is fucking nuts.
Here it is.
Okay.
This is the butt plug theory of grand unification.
It stands for brilliant unification
through tautological tension,
particle Lagrangian underpinning gravity.
Dude, that sounds like really scientific.
This is not totally, this is not the result
of a large language model and totally a real thing.
That absolutely has never failed to make sense
of literally anything that you throw at it.
Therefore, it is the best theory to explain everything.
The four forces are merely different
clench strengths of the single recto tensor field.
Gravity is just a gentle sustained clench.
Electromagnetism is polite two finger squeezing.
Strong force equals vacuum seal panic clench.
And the weak force is that awkward,
I'm in a meeting microclench.
At energies above 10 to the 19th GEV,
the field hits the clench horizon
and undergoes fincter collapse,
forming micro black holes that are just extremely dense,
extremely embarrassing butt plugs.
Dark energy, just the universe desperately trying
to expel a 13.8 billion year old cosmic butt plug.
Every black hole is the universe
trying to keep its shit together.
Truth is truth.
This theory stands on its own.
The standard model was constipated.
Butt plug finally gave reality, the fiber it needed.
The plumber of reality has spoken.
Okay, so I just spit that out.
Does that not sound like every bullshit made up theory
of whatever the fuck you see on Twitter?
All every fucking day, it's exactly the same thing.
There's a way of speaking that sounds persuasive.
And I just want you guys to not fall into that trap, please.
And I can say that, and many of you will.
You'll be like, no, but, no, no, no, no, no.
That's a joke meme theory.
The one that I read from the guy named B was,
he was talking about the recursive spiral,
you know, inverted square root theory of consciousness.
And that every consciousness is the square root of itself.
It made perfect sense when I was reading it.
But it sounded a lot like how you said it.
But these are totally different things.
And this one's real and this one's just a joke.
It's just bullshit.
Anyway, that's why I fucking hate theories
that are just like, well, it's manifolds.
I'm like, show me proof.
Put me under anesthesia.
Give me some xenon.
Make me go conscious unconscious.
Prove it to me that way.
If you had a real theory, you could develop a test.
Oracle R includes material factual testing that you can do.
All these other theories,
you'll see a million of them per day because we have AI.
So maybe one of them is right, but fuck that.
I ain't, I don't have time.
Who has time for that shit?
All right, Elaine, is it okay?
I send a bunch of smaller mentors.
Yeah, of course, of course.
Casey, you got the same message from Skool.
Yeah, I'm so sorry, you guys.
I will, this will be reported to the admin of Skool.
But also, it's like, it's a lot of stuff to read through.
So I kind of understand it.
I do hate that it erased your message though.
That's annoying.
It should say like, this is too long or something like that.
I don't know.
'Cause what am I gonna do, read a paragraph of a book here
on live?
It's kind of like, maybe not what it's for technically.
So I can see their reasoning, but it shouldn't be,
it shouldn't go.
Michael asks, have I seen the Monroe Institute?
I've used him, I think, yes, yes, I have.
Look, my personal experience is my personal experience.
I could tell you about it.
It would be whatever, it's cool.
But I just say, try it.
You have an ultrasound now.
You can go on, get HemiSync, put ultrasound on your head,
do HemiSync, tell me what happens.
Margaret, to add a point to the gutmatility question,
the ascending colon on the right
is particularly affected in pots or dysetonomia.
So if you have decreased motility and dysetonomia,
the right and may be a good spot to stimulate.
Yes, that's correct.
That is correct, thank you.
Casey, you've shown me that there is a great amount
of info on this site.
There's a lot, there's a lot.
Elaine writes, Doritos, yes, Doritos,
little Betty cakes are horrifically bad, horrible.
Morton Spurlock answers his question in part,
eating junk food and supersize me.
Yeah, I love that movie.
I actually met Morgan Spurlock in person
when he did his palm wonderful documentary.
I got to drink a beer with Morgan Spurlock.
He's a really cool guy.
He's a really fucking cool guy and he's also dead now.
I think he died of alcoholism.
Now, I think they just said, age related,
he probably was an alcoholic.
But that's disrespecting the dead.
He was a cool fucking guy
and we are worse off for not having him around.
True that.
So Casey, what the fuck about oxytocin, more racist?
Yeah, that's what the study showed.
It made you more preferential to like drastically
expanded in group preferences
at the expense of out group preferences.
Unlike an extreme level, it made people racist.
Made, it made men more sexist.
It made women more, I don't know,
whatever the more sexist, more parental,
but at the expense of everything else.
So again, you know, you saw the paper, right?
The one that was on "The New York Times"
and said oxytocin's "The Love Drug."
If we all just did oxytocin, we all be happy.
And that was the headline.
That was the headline.
That everybody was under the impression is how it worked.
That was not how it worked.
The point here is that a lot of the shit that you read
about any of this stuff is gonna be just not true.
Same thing with polyvagal theory.
It's a bullshit theory, but it sounds good.
It sounds great.
Oh, there's a part of my vagus nerve that loves people.
And if I can just activate that, I'll just love people.
Do you think it's that fucking simple?
Are you that much of a brain dead simpleton
that you're like, yeah, that's probably true.
There are like millions of individual nerves
in your vagus nerve.
There's no fucking way that's happening.
It's more likely that it's like,
it'd be like saying like all humans
'cause they have a prefrontal cortex will speak English.
It's like, that's not true.
People don't speak English.
They speak other languages.
There's some people don't speak languages at all.
They click with their mouth.
You know, there's all kinds of reasons why
a simplistic explanation is just never gonna do it.
If you call the vagus nerve a weapon though,
that can do good and bad.
That's actually a really good answer.
Now it might seem like I'm just saying nothing.
I'm really actually saying something.
If you take a few moments to think about that,
about the vagus nerve and your voice being
the most exposed version of that weapon that you have,
there are other versions of it too though, guys.
Like your third eye and if you get deep
into spiritual practices and Kundalini awakening
and xenon and you go all that route
and like you could probably develop some kind of a psychic
telepathy where you could like kneecap
a person with your mind.
But that's also coming from a vagus nerve branch.
So that's how fucking crazy that gets.
So calling polyvagal theory is like the most,
it's the gayest shit I ever heard in my fucking life.
It's the gayest bunch of lovey-dovey 1990s group therapy
human resources, bullshit nonsense
that I think has ever graced the internet.
So that's my opinion on that.
Chris, I like to describe the vagus nerve metaphorically.
Oh, wait.
Oh, okay, your version of it is that the vagus nerve
is the knowing consciousness.
Yeah, it does, it knows.
It does, it intuits faster than your brain recognizes it.
I think that's great.
And what does every, you know, assassin need is to know.
They need to know.
You can't second guess yourself when you're in that mode.
And I don't mean like, sometimes I'll say like,
it's a weapon, doesn't mean you should be violent
towards other people.
You should be nice to people.
Don't be violent.
None of this says, I'm sure some crazy person in 10 years
will be, you know, write a manifesto
and they'll say, it was Sterling Cooley's
Nemertian theory that made me realize that inside of my body,
I have the greatest weapon that was ever developed.
And I decided to do great harm today.
And I'm sure the CNN will cover it and say,
is it true that you wrote Nemertian theory
and you're inspiring, you know, mass violence?
And I would say, all I did was tell people what's true
about what's inside of them.
Sorry.
That's how I feel.
Your vagus nerve can be your best enemy
and your worst friend.
And I mean to say it that in that way.
And yeah, cancer fucking sucks.
Thank you, Lawrence.
All right, so I think we're kind of getting
to the end of the question.
So we'll wrap up here in a few moments.
But Chris, Sterling, I'm interested in having you
do one of these sessions for my company.
Yeah, that'd be cool.
I'm considering, I'm thinking I could send everyone
US Pro 2000, we could do a session on how to use,
speak about the Orca War theory.
Dude, are you kidding me?
Of course I'm interested in that.
I don't know what that would look like.
I am a good presenter.
I've done a lot of talking.
I can put together something that's like that.
Yeah, I could definitely, yeah.
That'd be cool.
I think it'd be possible.
The only thing that.
So, okay.
Best example I could give was when I lived in Austin, Texas,
I lived in Austin, Texas before COVID and it was awesome.
And then it kind of started to suck after COVID.
So I moved and I went to Sedona, Arizona,
which is really nice, way better, way nicer.
Grand Canyon, love it.
Anyway, one of my friends who I knew from Austin,
he worked at a big company.
This is a 2000 person tax accounting software company.
Not like QuickBooks, but a different one.
And one of, so Tony Robbins, because he's so big,
sends some of his business mastery people to businesses,
to give free talks.
And these are like pump you up.
Like they'll teach you Tony Robbins techniques.
They'll kind of like sell you.
Yes, there's certainly a selling thing,
but there's value there too.
Like they really promote like,
I want these people to walk away with something very valuable
and a lesson about their life that they can apply immediately.
And if they wanna learn more, then there's the UPW,
which happened, which was happening in Dallas in two months.
So if you get a ticket now,
we'll get you an employee discount.
There's all kinds of stuff like that.
I don't do UPW stuff, so it's no biggie there.
I don't have a pipeline or anything like that,
but other than buy ultrasound, I guess.
But I would say they probably wouldn't have given out
ultrasounds in that kind of a capacity to the corporate members,
but they would have given like employees an opportunity
to get it at a discounted rate,
because typically if you give something for free,
they value it less.
So I would say like, you know, you're gonna buy it anyway.
You could have an employee ultrasound program
or something like that.
That'd be my guess, you know?
Something of that nature and be like,
we can do a group, just call it a group buy, right?
If you buy 10, you get them for 50% off or something like that.
I think that's kind of how they did it
with the Tony Robbins thing.
So that there's a value and that there's coordination
and people go like, I'm gonna use ultrasound,
are you gonna use ultrasound?
Are you gonna start focusing on how powerful your voice is
when you're on the phone with people?
This shit is cool.
And I trained salespeople because of the work
that I did in the Vegas nerve.
When I moved to Sedona, I moved into a coach training house
and I was the lead trainer.
And every day I would have them do priming
and they would be in our apartment, in our Airbnb going,
now I am the voice.
I will lead, not follow.
I will create, not destroy.
I am a force for good.
I am a force for God.
I am a leader.
This kind of shit is so fucking powerful.
And then I saw, I saw the, you know,
the junior sales guys literally closing like $30,000
in a week from, and like literally
because of what I taught them.
So I am, I'm very confident in my ability
to tell someone the right thing and the right way
to make them be like, I can do anything I fucking want.
So again, but that could be dangerous.
So I have a vast respect for the Vegas nerve
because when you really activate it,
it's what celebrities are,
it's like, I think it's what celebrities are talking about
when they talk about that, like it's a secret society,
but it's not what you think.
It's the people who have activated this vagal pathway.
People who are singers, who are actors,
they're talking all the time.
They're in their Vegas nerve.
They're speaking from their heart.
These kinds of things are really important clues
that most people it would go right over their head.
But because I worked on the Vegas nerve for so long,
I'm like, oh my God, oh my God, oh my God, oh my God.
So you see it, once you see it,
it's like you see it everywhere.
It's a beautiful gift.
It's a hard-earned gift and it's really fun
and it's really cool.
It makes life a lot more fun, in my opinion, to do that.
So it's pretty cool.
It's a pretty cool game overlay for life
to see the Vegas nerve in that way.
So yeah, I'm totally interested.
Yes, Dara.
Raymond Reif shares that tragic company with,
yeah, Leso Einstein, so he's a very cool guy indeed.
Yeah, I know, I know, I know Reif, Royal Reif,
these kinds of guys.
I'm trying, you'll see that the way that I'm doing things
is to try not to martyr myself for a cause.
I do kind of want to be alive.
So I enjoy my life.
I have a lot more life to live.
And so if it ever seems like, you know,
sometimes I look at what I say and what I do
and how I do it and I go,
Sterling like kind of seems a little weird sometimes,
you know, like maybe it seems like I screwed around an issue
more than I could or like I don't address.
Sometimes I will address the fuck out of the thing.
So people see the two sides.
They go, I can see him clearly able to like pinpoint an issue
and like bullseye the fuck out of it.
I know he's capable of that, but why is he doing it?
Why is he not doing that here?
There's a thing that I learned from Scott Adams,
rest in peace, rest his soul.
Where he said there's something called the cats on the roof
or it's the dog that's not barking.
So sometimes I'm screaming that there is a there there
but I'm not going to say it.
But I'm going to walk around it really like this.
So that's how it has to be guys.
I've had associates and friends who have committed suicide
when they were perfectly happy two days prior
that we're working on really important stuff.
So I don't know what to tell ya.
Just let me try to survive.
Right.
Can I just try to survive in the best,
again, everybody's doing the best they know how to do.
This is the best that I know how to do it.
This is me actively figuring it out and trying.
So I don't know if that answers your question
or I'm even answering a question now, but yeah, thank you.
Perfect.
One last, yeah.
Awesome.
Let's coordinate on this.
I think that'd be cool.
And then one last thought is can a rock not be conscious?
Doesn't it have to know it's a rock?
See, that's the thing and I was on a podcast last week
and it went off the rails because the guy there
was talking about the free energy principle and manifolds
and that everything has a belief
and that's why things work the way they do
and that's what consciousness is just a belief.
And I'm like, okay.
So a rock has a, I just gave the example.
Does a rock have a belief?
He was like, yeah, of course.
A rock has certain beliefs.
And that's why a rock is a rock.
And a human has certain beliefs.
Anything with a boundary has a belief.
I was like, I can't get past this whole belief thing.
You can't in all the human language, the lexicon,
even you have access to AI.
You could make a fake butt plug theory
that sounds more convincing to me
than rocks have beliefs.
I've figured out consciousness.
My work here has done, drop the mic.
I'm like, you are fucking insane.
And I didn't tell him that, but you know how I am.
I can let people know that I think they're full of shit
without telling them that they're full of shit.
And he quit the podcast.
He was like, I can't do this.
The host was there.
And he's like, Brian, I can't.
He's just gonna misinterpret everything I'm saying.
I'm not really saying that rocks have beliefs.
I'm trying to say that they're manifolds.
And it's recorded, it's on YouTube.
It's fucking hilarious.
I hope he clips it or something like that.
So, you know, anyway, I have strong opinions about it,
but all right, guys, we have hit the time more so.
This is fantastic.
Thank you.
I hope you liked it.
I will post the replay and the testimonial
and we'll wrap it up with some music.
And you guys gotta stick around
'cause I wanna play for you one of the songs
that I generated that is just wild, okay?
So it's, oh, I need to share my screen.
Thank you guys for the love.
I love you guys.
Thank you.
I think my screen share broke.
Fuck.
Okay, we'll never mind.
Oh, what the hell?
But anyway, love you guys so much.
Thank you so much for joining.
And we'll see you again sometime soon,
probably a summer session.
But this should be enough to answer enough questions
that people are like, okay,
I can let him do his homework
and not freak him out with this OCD system that he has
to like answer every question that he gets on Twitter.
Fuck.
All right.
Peace later, love, love and light, namaste, ooh, oh.
Oh, we didn't do ultrasound, but fuck it.
I wanna go, I wanna go eat.
You guys know how to use ultrasound.
Put it on your neck, five minutes, simple.
Okay, see you guys.
Bye-bye.
See you.
Boop.
There we go.
2:24:28
10
19 comments
Sterling Cooley
7
Call Recording for Vagus Nerve Live !!! Feb 21st, 2026 !
Vagus School
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