stress you can be one of the things that's very important to note about
stress is that stress primarily comes from not taking action over something
that you can have some control over so if I find that some particular thing is
causing me to have stress that's a warning flag for me what it means is
there's something that I haven't completely identified perhaps in my
conscious mind that is bothering me and I haven't yet taken any action on it I find
as soon as I identify it and make the first phone call or send off the first
email message or whatever it is that we're going to do to start to address
that situation even if it's not solved the mere fact that we're addressing it
dramatically reduces any stress that might come from so stress comes from
ignoring things that you shouldn't be ignoring I think in large part so stress
doesn't come people get stress wrong all the time in my opinion stress doesn't come
from hard work for example you know you can be working incredibly hard and
loving it and likewise you can be out of work and incredibly stressed over that
so and likewise if you kind of use the you know use that as an analogy for what
I was just talking about if you're out of work but you're going through you
know a disciplined approach of you know a series of job interviews and so on and
working to remedy that situation you're going to be a lot less stressed than if
you're just worrying about it and doing nothing I'm not just playing around I'm
not just beating the air I'm not shadowboxing I'm not just goofing off
life is too important to waste your life he says when I fight I fight to win I
want to win in my marriage I want to win in my finances I want to win in my
career I want to win in my spiritual growth I want to win in my character I
don't fight the place I fight to win number one thing that's going to change
your life the only thing that will change your life change your business
change your money change your relationship you must raise
your standard I know that sound boring stupid basic but it's the truth
the only thing that changes our life long term is when we raise our standards
where's that mean that sounds so boring and dumb it means that all of us in life
have things we want we don't get what we want we get what we have to have
remember I said earlier we all get what we tolerate in ourselves and other
people but when you're no longer willing to tolerate something that's when your
life changes the difference in people is their standards period the difference in
people is their standards period and what I mean by standards everyone in the
world has a list of things they think they should do I should lose weight I
should work out I should spend more time with my kids I should work harder I
should make more calls I should I should I should I should and then you know what
people don't do their shoulds and they get mad at themselves and they what I call
should all over themselves they beat themself up about it
what changes people is when your should becomes a must when suddenly the thing
you said should happen has to happen that's when human beings change it's
like if you want to take the island and you're the head of the army you want
to take the Island the most powerful way to take the island is burn
the boats because if there's no way to go back it's amazing what happens when
it's a must to do something versus the should that's what makes human being
succeed what is it that's going to actually change somebody's life it's not
removing their limiting beliefs and I know that sounds silly but it's like
just if you just put less pressure on the brake in your car it doesn't mean
you're going to speed up right your foot still on the brake if you're always
focusing on these things that are limiting you you're always going to be
limited just because your relative weight of importance
and duration of your focus and your attention is on these limiting things
and it's a time in our culture just like in our psychology in our study of
psychology we got to move from mental illness to mental health we've got to
get you to move from your limiting beliefs into something bigger and
greater and grand about yourself we've got to stop you focusing on all the
reasons that you're a mouse in life and start focusing on why you're a lion why
you have something within you that's more bold and powerful profound than you
ever even knew so what we have to do is change what I call your dominant frame
of attention and focus most peoples dominant frame they're given
that relative weight of importance to those things that limit them and I say
you know what this year this next year has to be the year for you that your limitless
that you're going to go okay you know enough I mean how far have you gotten in
your life now where you're just constantly beating yourself and berating
yourself and worrying about your limits and worrying about all these things of
all the reasons that you have to be worried to be weak to be less than you
are there's like Marianne Williamson said so long ago you're not serving the
world by playing small and you're not serving the world by constantly focusing
on your limiting beliefs and trying to remove them look you will always have
insecurities I know that's really motivating but you're always going to
have it I work with some of the top professionals in every given field some
of the best athletes in the world some of the best well-known celebrities and many of
the people who are the best performers in any given industry and I can tell you
they still have their doubts and their fears they still have times when they
wake up and they're just like I don't know to do with myself
that doesn't ever go away and that's great because it's part of the human
condition that also makes us humble makes us real makes us check ourselves
and I'm not saying that you know we all have to go around being happy optimists
all the time but I will share you with you if you didn't know optimists are
much more capable of change in the world than pessimists are it's not a guess
it's proven by science to me what's exciting about studying is not that I'm
going to get some grades or I'm going to say that oh I know some trivial facts
like I know when the war of 1812 started and why it started and I
all the causes of this and I know how the physics of that works that's not
important at all to me it's all about understanding life life is so
fascinating I want to understand it to me this is one of the most important
missions that I have as a human being living here like as a life form this
goes really deep for me as a life form this is the most important thing that
I'm doing through my short time on this earth in this universe is that I'm
learning how the universe works I'm observing it with my senses and then I'm
dissecting it and analyzing with my mind that's basically the foundation of all
study
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For more infomation >> Stress Primarily Comes From Not Taking Action - Study Motivation - Duration: 7:33.-------------------------------------------
Tony Robbins: Stop Thinking That I Can't Do It ( Tony Robbins Psychology ) - Duration: 25:17.
About digging inside and figuring out what are the things that control every
thought every feeling and emotion of your life if you ever wanted to make a
change you wanted to lose weight you wanted to transform your relationship
you wanted to make a shift financially in your life and you find yourself
making progress but pulling back or never really even getting started just
being excited about it for a while talking about it but not really
following through then there's something there something that affects the way you
follow through something affects the quality of your life and I'm here to
tell you there's two things that control everything in your life every thought
every feeling every emotion every action you have in your life what you're
wearing today whether you're gonna turn this off within a few minutes or whether
you're gonna stick with me here for two or three minutes is all controlled by
two things your beliefs and your values whatever you believe if you think life
is just a waste of time doesn't matter what you do or you know you're big-boned
then obviously you're not gonna go for it you're not gonna try to lose weight
you're not gonna go push for that next level of your career or your finances or
or your relationship or anything else beliefs control us but so do our values
some people you know value just kicking back some people value making it happen
some people value their family the most some people are value love but you know
the real challenge is we have values in conflict when you really want to make a
difference in the world or you really want to do well for your family or you
really want to do well financially but simultaneously you know you don't want
upset anybody do you want to be totally honest you want to make everybody happy
when we have conflicts between what we want and what we think we can have or
you know you have a goal of what you really want to make happen but then you
have this other belief inside that says damn stuff never does work those inner
conflicts are what keep people from using all of their energy it's kind of
like taking two steps forward and three steps back people who succeed in any
situation have a pattern of what they do to
succeed and it doesn't matter whether that person is succeeding at a business
context or a relationship context doesn't matter what the environment is
the fundamental lessons or cause for succeeding are very very basic
so if we're looking for the ultimate success for me the very first thing we
have is you have to know what you want which we call know your outcome you're
gonna succeed at anything it's hard to succeed hard to hit a target when you
don't know what it is and as simplistic as this sounds dunno if you most people
really know what they want what do you think yes or no at least not consciously
they don't right and so it's gonna be very very difficult to achieve what you
want waited to having to find it but this is going to become a question we're
gonna want you to ask yourself a lot what is my outcome in this situation I
even have a time management system that I developed it's really a life
management system which we call opa because the first Oh sounds for what's
my outcome cuz you can come up with a question like what should I do and
you're gonna end up with a long list but as you do all these things what'll
happen is you can cross something off your list and still be unfulfilled and
not really achieve anything that matters so you say what's my outcome first then
you begin to decide what you need to do to get the outcome so in this case we
want to say what's your outcome you want to make it a habit ask this question i
watch your the middle of a conversation stop yourself if it seems to going
nowhere and say what's my hell come here I want to connect you don't want to
influence this person you want to learn something what's your outcome for
example how many of you have ever been caught up in an argument and you even
forgot what you're arguing for but you knew you had to win how many been there
say I okay if in the middle of that argument you would ask yourself the
question what's my outcome here I guarantee your brain would say well my
outcomes like the fight my outcomes to resolve this and if you get clear on
what your real target is your behavior will change automatically so very very
few people know what they want and the more you clear you can get about what
you want the more you can really achieve so my right underneath this is the
subset of number one still number one just like clarity is power
clarity is power but more clear you can become but what it is you really want no
more power you're gonna have cuz your brain is like a servomechanism in a a
bomb as an example they sent a missile out it has a servomechanism it knows
what the target is and when the target moves it follows it well your brain is
very similar when you decide exactly what as you want you start picking up
information that you never would have picked up before consciously for example
have you ever bought a particular car maybe or maybe a certain outfit and then
all of a sudden you see that car or outfit everywhere how many got that
experience ai well what's that car outfit already around you all the time
yeah but you didn't notice it because there's a portion of your brain that it
was responsible for one thing and that is screening out 99% of what you see
here and feeling life because if you were to notice everything that's going
on in this room right now you go stark raving mad but most of you don't you put
attention to a small number of things if you could right now notice what millions
of things you can notice my voice you could listen to what I'm saying you can
notice what's going on the background the screens you could hear the air
conditioning you can smell your neighbor off to all that jumping up and down
notice that right you can feel it maybe a little sweat trickling across your
chest or whatever was going on after all that jumping up and down you could feel
the blood maybe vibrating or circulating through your left eardrum but you don't
think about those things so maybe I mentioned them or something triggers it
so this part of our brain that's responsible for deleting most of our
thoughts and most of the things that are going on around us that part of our
brain when you know when it knows what you want it makes you notice those
things you suddenly see that car because it's important it's called the reticular
activating system you don't have to write all the down for sure that's
called Ras the reticular activating system tells your brain what to pay
attention to so when you say that this is what I really want now anything that
relates to that that you would have noticed before will start popping up
into your focus and a lot of times people say it's amazing I decided this
and it was kind of you know synchronicity these things started
popping up all these things were probably around you before but you never
notice them because you haven't decided your outcome
now when you know your outcome you're had a 95% of the population
but that's not enough ii think i don't know is a lot of times you know your
outcome but you lose your drive you know you want something but you forget the
most important thing which is know why you want it
know why you want it you gotta know the purpose in our opa training system when
people are managing their lives we have them ask what's my outcome and then why
do i want this because any person's success so really successful knows
exactly what they want they know why the reason i don't know why is remember I
said yesterday reasons come first answers come second get enough reasons
you can get a big enough why you can figure out hide of you about anything
but you got to have purpose because purpose provides drive now if you know
what you want and you know why you're lightyears ahead of most the population
but you gotta go the step that most people seem to avoid and that is you got
to take massive what that's right and a key word there is massive massive action
can be a cure-all when you know what you're after and you know why you want
it cuz we know what you're after when you take a CH and you won't just be
expending energy you'll be moving yourself in a direction towards
something you really really want and by the way last night we call taking
massive action personal what power which means ability to take action and what
stops people from taking action primarily what fear and the way you get
over that fear is what do you think is the number one fear most people have
failure and the reason is they feel if they fail they won't be loved
they'll be rejected they'll be hurt they'll be judged so what they really
are afraid of is losing love and they think that this rejection or I should
say this failure will lead to that rejection or loss of love the truth of
matter is you can't fail unless you don't try you try something doesn't work
you just learn from it and that'll make you better the next time you go about it
now if you know your outcome know why you want and take massive action you're
now in the most small percentile of people on the planet
so what's the next step though well you can take a lot of action and get caught
up in a pattern like become so determinate you became what tunnel
vision like I know this is gonna work and so you keep running east looking for
a sunset with total certainty and a lot of belief high-standard still doesn't
work so what you have to be able to do to succeed
you don't get caught up in some old pattern is you got to know what you're
getting know what you are know what you are getting the word we use for this is
for sure is we call it sensory acuity sensory acuity is the idea that you want
to become acutely sensitive to whether what you're doing is working or not you
don't want to just say okay I know what I want to know I don't want it I'm just
gonna make it happen this is how I'm gonna do it you keep hammering and
hammering and hammering it doing something that doesn't work and people
do this all the time right do the same thing over and over again expecting a
different result that's called insanity you can't do the same thing again and
again expect a different result when you can see it it doesn't get the result but
we get caught up in our patterns so we want to get really sensitized acutely
sensitized sensory acuity to whether what we're doing is working or not
and by the way sensory acuity is really the measure of a person's intelligence
what I mean by that is how do we measure intelligence intelligence is a measure
of the number and quality of distinctions you have in a given
situation like for example if you talk to Eskimos that's actually not the
politically correct term anymore I guess it's in a way you talk to it in a way
what we formally called Eskimos you'd find out that in a way have more than a
dozen words for the word snow more than a dozen now I'm from Southern California
guess how many words I have for snow one I don't see any of it it's called smell
baby right but they got to know what kind of snow they're gonna make more
refined distinctions to be effective in the world to get their outcomes they
don't know what kind of snow you can build an igloo out of what kind of snow
you can take your dogs through what kind of snow you can eat alright what kind of
snow you're gonna fall through so who has more intelligence who has more power
in that snowy environment the Eskimo Army which one Eskimo because they have
more sensory acuity they have more refined distinctions about what each of
these elements mean versi to see it as snow now if you took that Eskimo and you
snuck in my car in Los Angeles then we fried out maybe I have a little more
intelligence because he might try to steer the thing using the rearview
mirror right he just doesn't know so since he doesn't have that acuity he
doesn't have those distinctions you new terribly well there see some people
I can hold this up and I can say what is this and they say well that's a cylinder
other people say no no that's a blue white black cylinder someone else says
no no that's a blue color marker a few people say no no now such as the blue
color marker that is a pilot super color bright and white color marker and if you
get in your clothes they don't never come out now which through those people
has more power 1 2 3 or 4 4 because they have the largest number of distinction
so now if you know your outcome you know why you want it you got your purpose you
got your drive you got your a and oppa this is outcome purpose action you know
the mass of action you're taking action and you notice what's working what
happens if you notice it's not working you're taking action but it's not
getting you closer to outcome what's the obvious fist step but this step is
change your approach
change your approach if what you're doing your cutie says is not working
change it now what if you change approaching that's still not working
then what would you do what would you do come on what would you do change again
keep yourself in a peak state sit up in your chair some of you've gone back into
that deep hypnotic state of learning I can see and what have you tried that it
didn't work they don't want you to do what does that doesn't work what do you
do and what if that doesn't work what do you do what if that doesn't work what do
you do what is up there all that and still doesn't work what do you do and
what have you tried out and it doesn't work how many times until you find out
what works do not say to yourself I've tried everything that's bull if you
tried everything you have what you want why I've tried everything but I've tried
millions of things millions numbers them name them well maybe tens of thousands
tens of thousands name a thousand well maybe 100 name on it well maybe I did
these two things over and over again that don't work okay but when we start
saying I've tried everything we tend to incant that don't wait we make it an
incantation then we believe it and since we think we've tried everything we just
give up it's garbage not true hey let me ask you a question how long would you
give your average baby to learn how to walk you know before you shut them off
and didn't let them try anymore yeah what are you crazy
my kids gonna keep trying until he or she walks ah magic formula
you know what almost every the whole world walks okay so this is the ultimate
success form that comes down to knowing what you want why you want to take a
massive action know what's working and simply changing your approach until you
get it that's it anyone who succeeds does this they may not call it Robins
ultimate success formula but I guarantee they did it on a corny example Thomas
Edison these lights in here did this guy know his outcome yes or no yes or no
he was absolutely clear without knowing the outcome you couldn't have built that
in million years it didn't exist before he had to decide he want to create this
result without the use of candles did he know why you want to do it you
you read his writings this man had a sense of incredible purpose and drive
did he take massive action yes or no oh yes tens of thousands of experiments did
he noticed when it wasn't working and learned from it yes or no did he keep
changing his approach that's why right now in this room we don't smell camel
white right now if you know the old story of him was written about him early
in his early days he's got his best friend with them he's doing this
experiment and as he's doing he creates a small explosion which shakes the room
scares both of them very very severely and then at the end of that he gets up
and his friend is totally shaken freaked out he pulls out his journal he starts
writing and his buddy says to him what's the matter of you would saying almost
killed us so you gonna wait you have 10,000 failures for you give this stupid
idea up and Addison's response to him was I didn't have a failure there he
goes after 9090 99th failure he said no it's not he said I discovered the 9,999
way not to Amenti electrolyte bulb but I did discover how to create a small
explosion which may be useful in the future somewhere else interesting right
because he understood what this process was he did Bruce Springsteen use this do
you think you just want went out used his gravelly voice and said they may be
born to USA and everybody went yeah you're it man that what happened know
what really happened if you know his story was that all the agents of evil
went to try and book was said just playing the guitar and keep your mouth
shut your voice is gross sounding it's
gravelly it's irritating no one's gonna like the stuff keep your mouth shut and
play the guitar but he knew what he wanted he had all the drive you can
imagine knew why he wanted took massive action kept changing his approach till
he got what he wanted how about Sly Stallone Sylvester Stallone rocky rocky
story is this even right but slices to slice a good friend of mine and when I
first met him years ago he's listened to my tapes and stuff and invited me over
for dinner we started talking and I said you know I've heard your story from
other people but I really wanted to hear from the horse's mouth I don't know how
much is mythology and urban myth and how much is true so he told me the whole
story said the essence of it though was he said he knew his whole life well you
want to do she's very very young he wanted to be in
the movie business period I mean not just TV movies and yes he said why was
for him it was a chance to have people not only escape but to inspire people
and by the way that drive is what made most of his movies inspired people to
what they're capable of to overcome unbelievable obstacles because in his
own life he felt like he did that when he was born he's pulled out by the
forceps that's why he looked the way he did
it's why he talked the way he did and he said so I really want to do that and he
said I know why I want to do it I wasn't one to settle for anything else and he
said what happened was I went out to try and get jobs and it's not like I went
her dream they want you you're a star it didn't work out real well they looked at
me and said hey you're stupid look and do something else you know cos there's
no place for you in that stuff you're never gonna be a star in the movies
you're insane no one's gonna wanna listen if somebody looks Bobi and talks
out of the side of their mouth right and got no after no after no after now he
said I was thrown out more fit more than 1,500 times of agents offices in New
York I said they're only 15 minutes in New York I said I know I've been on five
six seven eight nine times he said number one guy went in there and I got
in there at four o'clock and he wouldn't see me so I stayed there and I would not
leave I stayed overnight they came back that's morning I'm still sitting there
he said that's why I got my first job the guy said plant come in here and he
sat down and he went through this and he gave my first movie I said I really have
thought Rocky was worse mom he said now this other movie I'd never heard of it
he said I said well what character your place if I was in it for about 20
seconds I was a thug and somebody beat up he said because they made me feel
like you know some of the people hate your guts you getting beat up will be a
good thing and he did like three movies like that never got anything kept going
out rejection rejection rejection so finally realized it wasn't working so he
changed his approach he said I was starving by the way he said I couldn't
pay for even they have heat in my apartment my wife was screaming at me
everyday to go get a job I said well why didn't you he said because I knew that
if I got a job he said I'd get seduced back and I'd
lose my hunger he said I knew the only way I could do
this is if it was the only choice have I burned all other bridges because if I
did a normal job pretty soon I'd be caught up in that River that's tough
when I feel okay about my life and I feel like my dream would just gradually
disappear he said I wanted to keep that hunger that hunger was the only thing I
thought was my advantage he said my wife didn't understand that at all he said
we'd have these vicious fights he said it was freezing so I was broke we had no
money and he said so I finally went to the public library one day because it
was warm said I want to read anything since I went in New York Public
Library's I was hanging out there and I sat it on this chair and somebody left a
book there and he said I looked at this book and over the poems of Edgar Allan
stories of Edgar Allan Poe and he said so I started reading it he said I got
totally in the other girl and he said I know everything about it he goes on for
another 20 minutes telling me about Aaron Paul he knows everything how he
died what it was about what really happened I said well would have told you
for you he said Poe got me out of myself he got me to think about how I could
touch other people and not worry about myself so much and he said it made me
decide to become a writer I said I'm just imagine rocky the writer right and
he said so I tried to write a bunch of screenplays nothing worked nothing to
work I were totally broke he said I didn't even have 50 bucks
he said and finally he said I sold a script it was called paradise alleys as
a movie I made many years later but I sold it he said I sold it for a hundred
bucks he said a hundred bucks was a ton of money man I was so thrilled I thought
I'm on my way but it never led to anything he said so finally he said I
kept going and going going he said finally we were so broke he said I
hocked my wife's jewelry he's a Tony there's some things in life you should
never do he said that was basically the end of our relationship she hated my
guts so much he said now we are so broke we had
nothing to food no money and he said the one thing I love most in the world was
my dog he said I love my dog because he gave me unconditional love unlike my
wife and he said so what happened was though we were so broke that's a survive
I couldn't even feed my dog so I went to a liquor store so it was the lowest day
of my life and I stood outside the liquor store trying to sell my dog to
strangers so I tried to sell my dog for 50 bucks and he said this father there's
one guy negotiating with me and bought my dog for me my best friend and ours
for $25 he said I walked away from there and I
cried he says the worst thing that ever happened my life he's a two weeks later
I'm watching a fight between Muhammad Ali and Wepner this white guy that's
getting bludgeoned but just keeps on comin even though I get the hell beat
out of it and he said I got an idea he said as soon as the fight ended I
started writing he said I wrote for 20 straight hours I did not sleep I wrote
the entire movie in 20 hours straight right then saw the fight wrote the movie
whole thing done he said I was shaking at the end I was so excited so I really
knew man I knew what I wanted I knew why I wanted he said just like it sees that
the formula he said that I said man I took the action now it's time to deliver
and so he said I went out started trying cell at the agents and they all would
read it and they'd say you know this is predictable this is stupid this is sappy
he said I wrote down all the things they said and I read them the night of the
Oscars when we won yes and it's really good the greatest revenge is massive
success they said so what happened was he said I kept going trying to sell it
trying to sell it nobody going I'm broke I'm starving he said finally I meet
these guys they read it and they believed in the script and they love it
and they offer me a hundred and twenty five thousand dollars for my script I
said oh my god you must've been out of your mind he said I was I said just one
thing though guys you got a deal based on one thing they said what's that he
said I got to star in it they went what are you talking about you're a writer so
no I'm an actor no no no you're a writer so no no I'm an actor that is my story
and I am rocky said I gotta play it you know I got to be the head person I got
me the starring role this there's no way we're not gonna pay out of $25,000 take
some no-name and stick you in that throw our money away we need a star you know
and they wanted to have Ryan O'Neal play Rocky
give you a picture can you imagine that's who they picked right and so he
said no way Ryan O'Neal's a rocky I'm Rocky we do this whole thing right
they finally he said they said well take it or leave it he said I left the room I
said if that's what you believe you don't get my script he left here's the
man with no money none totally broke offered $125,000 more
money seen his life timing walked away because he knew his real
what news real-life and why wanted he was committed to it so he said they
called him a few weeks later and they came brought it back and they offered
him a quarter of a million dollars not the star in his own movie he turned it
down $250,000 they came back their final
offers three hundred and twenty five thousand dollars they wanted this thing
he said not without me and they said no they finally compromised and they gave
him thirty five thousand dollars and points in the movie because they said if
this is gonna happen then you're gonna take the risk with us and the bottom
line is we don't think it'll work but at least we'll spend a bunch of money on
you and then they only spent a million dollars to make Rocky and it grows 200
million dollars at the time I am it was done pretty well but what's interesting
about this is here's he I said what you do I mean even 35,000 it's not a quarter
of a million I was a lot of money when you don't have 25 bucks I said what's
the first thing you did I figure you went out and partied it's not me said I
went to that liquor store for three straight days and hope that the man had
my dog frequented the store he's because I want to buy back my dog that was so
cool all right that was really cool so what happened he said third day I was
there this guy walks by and I see him and I can't believe it and there's my
dog and I looked at I said sir remember me and he said it's been about a month
and a half I found this it all come about he said
member me and I'm the guy who sold you the dog yeah yeah I love the dog he's so
look he said I was so broke I was starving he's my best friend I'm sure
you love him too but I gotta happen black please I beg of you
he said I'll pay you $100 to the dog I know you baby 25 they'll give you a
hundred the man said absolutely not no way it's
my dog now you can't buy him back right and so I said you know Tony you know
he'd say no your outcome I said yeah he said I knew it he said I kept changed my
approach so I went five hundred dollars for the dog you guys said absolutely no
way he said $1,000 for my dog guy said no
amount of money in the Earth's never gonna get this dog for you what you knew
he said I knew my outcome right because he listened his name's Kip to him he
says I take massive action he said I got my dog I just kept changing my approach
so I got it as a word of caution $15,000 and a part
in Rocky the guys in Rocky
you know that dog in Rocky Butkus that slice real dog right that's the dog you
bought him back so he put his dog in the movie and he put the guy in the movie a
paid 15 grand while he had 35,000 I'm not pretty cool pretty awesome so
there's always a way if you're committed just gotta keep changing your approach
-------------------------------------------
Drag Lingo Explained | Chicago Drag Queens Teach You Drag Lingo - Duration: 4:08.
oh, she fishy!
You can't clock my mug.
Tick-tock, tick-tock!
Hi I'm Imp Queen.
Hi I'm Discord Addams.
My name is Eva Young.
I'm The Vixen.
My name is Aurora Gozmic.
I've been doing drag for like 2 years.
5 years.
6 years now.
I've been doing drag for 9 years now.
Busted is when...
walk into the club and you see that drag queen that you hate with the really bad makeup.
You know, that bitch is busted.
The makeup is not good, the hair is not good.
Cracked, crumbling, and falling apart.
Hips are lopsided.
Girl, now you look busted.
Sickening is...
you are so gorgeous that I'm nauseous.
Those shoes are SICKENING!
Clocked!
(Tongue pop) That's a man Maury.
Or, let's be proper.
That's an assigned male at birth person, Maury.
Girl, I can see your boy hair. I clocked you.
You can't clock my mug!
Sometimes, you can say as a shade to another girl,
Tick-tock tick-tock!
A death drop...
Where you drop to the ground that it looks like you died.
I've been doing death drop since before I did drag,
because I started in the ball scene where voguing is very prominent.
Once you get it right, it is a really good trick to pull out.
Girl, if I death dropped I would not be getting off the ground.
I'm so sick of seeing death drops.
Like every drag queen thinks that
in ordered to be a drag queen, you have to go on stage,
dance your heart out, and end it with a death drop.
Carrying is a new one.
You're carrying bitch. Like, why you keep talking about this.
Like why you keep doing it. like bitch you're carrying!
Paint is makeup.
So, when you makeup is good, you are PAINTED!
Fishy just means that you're looking
particularly feminine.
Whatever that means.
She looks like a woman.
Real or unclockable.
I am not fishy, I'm clown fishy.
And butch is someone who comes off a little more masculine
even in drag.
Oh, she fishy! She thinks she's fishy!
Oh, you look a little butch right there though,
I don't know about that!
Girl, you're gonna get me talking about trade?
Trade is a widely misused term.
Now it just means like: Oh, that boy is hot.
Trade to someone that you take home from a club
Or you're just like, "Mmm, that boy is a trade."
I have been wandering my entire life where that came from
it used to mean much more specifically straight identified (men)
and was available for sex with trans feminine people or queens
for some sort of trade.
I've been in the relationship for 4 years.
I don't take home Trade.
Discord, one of the queens on the shoot, is dating another queen named Gidget.
We have sex, so kai kai is when two drag queens are getting it.
Tuck is when...
You turn your male parts into female parts.
Make it all smooth.
Pulling it back and putting it inside your butt crack.
Some girls use tape
I just smush it down with layers of tights.
Tuck is a myth.
It does not exist. it's not a real thing.
Reading is...
Playfully call somebody out.
Art form of an insult.
We don't mean it from a place of hate.
it's just kind of like pointing out their flaws.
If reads aren't funny, you're just a bitch.
Now, if I was to imply something that I knew you're insecure about
That's shade.
Shade works on the art of implication and inference.
Shade is like when you (bleep) hate that person.
I didn't say it but I made you think it.
T is the truth.
Let me tell you the situation.
You can spill the tea, which is a popular way to say.
It's like nice to have a little tea party every once in a while.
"What's the tea girl" just basically means what's up.
Drag is the art form of performing gender.
so you can do drag as any gender
and be dressed as or presenting as any gender.
Biological women can do drag, trans women can do drag, you know, straight man can do drag
You have drag kings, drag queens, bio queens, femme queens,
butch queen realness up in drag
A lot of people are acknowledging that drag is not
a man in a dress and a wig necessarily
and that there's a lot more room for it to be
sort of a queer expression of gender and beauty.
-------------------------------------------
VHDL Programming with ISE and Spartan Nexys (Udemy.com Course at $10) - Duration: 2:59.
Hello Guys! Welcome to VHDL Programmign with ISE Design Suit
and Spartan/Nexys FPGA. We are from Digitronix Nepal.
So, Do you want to learn about VHDL Programming Methodology?
Actually VHDL is a type of HDL
and it is highly preferred for the FPGA/ASIC and VLSI
Design as well as Verification purpose.
Do you want to learn about VHDL from basics? So we are
Introducing VHDL Programming from basic in this course:-
In this first section we have "Introduction and basic design
Flow with VHDL as well as FPGA.
We are going to talk/learn about VHDL Syntax, Data Types
FPGA Design Flow and
FPGA. Like we have introduced Spartan/Nexys FPGA
on this course. So, we have lab session
of Designing Basic Gate
and implementing that basic gae on FPGA. So in Section 2
we have Simulating VHDL code with Testbench.
so in the session we are going to create a simulation script
which called as "Testbench". we are going to design testbench for basic logic gate.
We are going to simulate that logic gate
and
Analyze the Waveform. In Section 3 we have conditional statement in VHDL.
Actually Conditional Statement are those statement which takes
inputs and checks the condition.
if the condition is satisfied then one statement will executed else
another statement will executed. We have If Statement, Case Statement,
we have process, with select, when else statements.
Finally we are going to have lab session on Decoder Design and
Implementation on FPGA. In Section 4 we have combinational circuit design ,
actually combinational circuits are those which can take inputs , combine inputs
and provide outputs. So we are going to have lab session of
"Half Adder" Design
and
Implementation on FPGA. So we also learn about different types of
Combinational Circuits and in Section 5 we have:
Structural Design in VHDL, in the structural design methodology
are going to "Design a
Full Adder using Half Adder". So we are going to
create a Full adder using previously created Half Adder of Section 4.
So we have
explained about that structural design methodology. And in Section 6 we have
"Sequential Circuit Design", actually sequential circuits are those circuits which is not only
dependent on the current input. It also depend on
past output. So we have" BCD Counter Design
and Implementation on the FPGA".
So in Section 7 we have State Machine Design in VHDL, Actually State Machine Design is
Implemented for Sequence Detector Design in this Lab Session.
After Completing this corse you will be able to learn
about and Explain about VHDL Syntax and Semantics.
You will be able to Create, Design and Simulate
Testbench on VHDL.
and you will be able to use conditional statements, When , Case
with select and If else statements,
as well as Case statements,
and Process Statements in VHDL. You will also ble to
use ISE Design suit and its features.
You can able to use Structural Design Methodology on VHDL.
And finally, you will be able to use State Machine Design
for Sequence Detector Design in VHDL. So Guys Sign Up
for the Course and You can learn basic of
the VHDL to Intermediate Level of VHDL Programming.
So Thanks for Watching!!! We will meet you in the course!!!
Thanks!!!
-------------------------------------------
Overview of VHDL Programming with VIVADO and Zynq FPGA (Udemy Course at $10) - Duration: 2:43.
Hello Guys welcome to Online Course
Series on VHDL programming with
Xilinx VIVADO Design Suit and Zynq FPGA
We are from Digitronix Nepal. So in this
Online Course Session we are going to
Design and Implement every our design
and Lab Session in VHDL programming
Language and we are going to implement
those design in ZedBoard FPGA
So Guys Lets go to our section overview
We have different sections, first section include of
Overview of VHDL Programming Language
VIVADO and Zynq Architecture we have
Lab Session of designing implementing
Nor Gate on ZedBoard with VIVADO IDE
And after Section 1 we have Section 2 of
Simulation of VHDL code which actually
include of different concept
of simulation and which have lab of
Simulating NAND Gate on VIVADO Simulator
In Section 3 we have
Conditional Statement with VHDL which
includes of Process Statement,
Understanding IF , CASE Statement
Overview and using those Statements for VHDL Design.
In Lab 31 we have Decoder design and
Implementation and in the Section 4 we have
Combinational Circuit Design in VHDL, which
includes of designing different
Combinational circuits like Decoder , Adder,
Multiplexer,Comparator etc.
In Section 4 we have lab of Design and
Implementation of Half Adder in VHDL targeted
for ZeddBoard in Section 5 we have the Structural
Design in VHDL. We have basics of
Structural Design and Structural Design (Example)
of Full Adder using Half Adder as Lab Session: Lab 51.
In Section 6 we have
Sequence Circuit design with VHDL
Which Includes of Sequential Circuit Components
Overview and Implementation of BCD
Counter (4 bit Counter) in VHDL for ZedBoard
And in Section 7 , we have State Machine Design
with VHDL in this State Machine
Actually we have implemented Sequence
Detectors with the State Machine
Design Methodology and Implemented that
Design ; Sequence Detector Design in ZedBoard.
So after completing this course you'll
be able to describe about the VHDL Syntax and
Semantics and you'll be able to use Fundamental
Construct of VHDL, you will be able to
Design Simulation Testbench on VHDL and
Simulate those Designs to generate the
Waveform (Timing Diagram) and you'll able to use
Conditional statements like IF, CASE
Process Statement and you'll be able to
Use VIVADO design methodology and
Structural Design Methodology in VHDL this is
Quite Important for
Designing different complex projects and
you'll be able to use State Machine
,actually State Machine is another main
important thing to know after Structural Design.
So, State Machine can be represented for
Designing Algorithm or Solutions for
different problems so we have "Sequence
Detector Design" in VHDL. So, Guys
Sign-Up for the course of VHDL programming with
Xilinx VIVADO Design Suit and Zynq FPGA and
Get the idea of VIVADO,
VHDL Design methodology, VHDL Programming and Zynq (ZeddBoard) architecture
Meet You in the course guys! Thanks for Watching!
-------------------------------------------
Metropolitan Discipline: 04/20 The Social Component (Pedro B. Ortiz) Subtítulos en español - Duration: 11:15.
Hola
Hoy vamos a ver en esta serie de conferencias sobre Disciplina Metropolitana
el Componente Social del Genoma.
Espero poder ser breve, porque este es un componente fascinante,
y hay tantos aspectos que discutir.
El componente social, como hemos visto, está generalmente en conflicto con el componente económico.
El componente físico puede sin embargo ayudar a suavizar la situación,
Pero los que están realmente a cargo de conseguir ese equilibrio son los que están en las Instituciones.
No sólo en las instituciones gubernamentales, sino también en las instituciones de la sociedad civil.
Es el diálogo de gobernanza entre el sector privado y el público en el que todos estamos.
Ese es el papel de la Gobernanza.
Al fijarnos en el Componente Social, permítanme señalar que hay principalmente
dos elementos, dos instancias, en el componente social:
los Recursos Humanos y los Recursos Sociales. Entender esto es muy importante.
Cuando yo participaba en las políticas metropolitanas de los años 90, la Unión Europea era ya consciente de esto.
Los Recursos Humanos son la suma de conocimientos que tenemos entre todos:
dos ingenieros, uno más uno, es igual a dos.
Los Recursos Sociales es la forma en que esos dos ingenieros ponen sus
conocimientos a trabajar, juntos, para lograr un resultado que será mejor o peor que esa suma de dos.
No es una suma, es un multiplicador. Dos ingenieros con recursos sociales podrán producir 2.5.
Dos ingenieros sin recursos sociales sólo podrán producir 1,5, o incluso 0,5.
Es un elemento extremadamente importante del valor de una metrópoli,
de cualquier unidad social:
los Recursos Sociales; Esa capacidad de trabajar juntos
para producir más que trabajando por separado.
Si se carece de recursos sociales, Inteligencia Colectiva, se paga un precio.
Se tendrá una metrópolis incapaz de ser competitiva.
Tenemos pues dos instancias: los Recursos Sociales y los Recursos Humanos.
Vamos a mirar primero a los Recursos Humanos, que es el capital humano de una metrópoli.
Hay que proteger y servir a ese Capital. Es una población que tiene necesidades,
todo tipo de necesidades de consumo: vivienda, alimentación, salud, educación, etc.
Necesidades básicas que deben ser proporcionadas.
Si esa población no puede acceder a esas necesidades a través del sector privado,
porque no tienen los recursos para satisfacerlas,
hay que proveerlo a través de la oferta pública.
Las políticas sociales más comunes: provisión de servicios para personas más necesitadas
con necesidades esenciales para desarrollar su vida de la mejor manera posible.
Hay que mantener ese Capital Humano.
Tiene necesidades.
Hay que conocer los requisitos de inversión para cubrir esas necesidades.
Se hace en gran medida a través del sector privado
Cuando el sector privado no puede lo puede hacer,
hay que proporcionarlas a través del consumo público.
Eso lo hace el sector público.
En ocasiones más eficiente que el privado.
No se necesita una piscina por familia. Una piscina publica compartida
por muchas familias, aún gestionada privadamente, puede ser una solución mejor.
La provisión pública de algunas necesidades puede ser más racional.
En la planificación metropolitana hay que saber encontrar ese reparto.
Veamos el otro elemento de la instancia de los Recursos Humanos: la Educación y el conocimiento
La necesidad de alimentar con conocimientos y habilidades al sistema productivo.
Para dotar de conocimientos al capital humano
se requiere una educación general.
Todo el mundo debe conocer un mínimo de cosas para poder ser incorporado al sistema productivo de la metrópoli.
ser incorporado al sistema productivo de la metrópoli.
Usted necesita también una educación superior
para aquella personas capaces de proporcionar un valor añadido al proceso productivo.
Hay que proporcionar esas dos educaciones a los recursos humanos para poder tener un buen capital humano.
Hay que saber que para una estrategia metropolitana la educación tiene que ser orientada/dirigida económicamente.
No hay que proporcionar cualquier tipo de educación a cualquier tipo de persona.
Si el objetivo es una integración con los demás componentes de la Metrópolis,
hay que concentrar el esfuerzo en una educación en aquellas áreas en las que la Metrópolis está orientándose económicamente,
tratando de estar por delante de otras metrópolis del mundo.
Cuál es el propósito de esto? Las metrópolis compiten en el mundo.
Para ser mejor hay que producir mayor valor añadido.
Se necesita un conocimiento específico para ese objetivo estratégico. El papel estratégico del sector público
es proporcionar esa educación necesaria para alcanzar esas metas, especialmente si esa población no puede acceder a esa educación por sí misma.
especialmente si esa población no puede acceder a esa educación por sí misma.
Cuanto mejor sea esa educación específica, mayor será el impacto positivo en los otros componentes.
Miremos el elemento de los Recursos Sociales. Se llama también Inteligencia Colectiva.
Nos encontramos con una doble teoría. Como en la teoría de la "luz", hay la teoría de las ondas, y está la teoría de las partículas.
Todavía no hemos encontrado la teoría inclusiva que unifique ambos conceptos de luz.
En los recursos sociales tenemos dos teorías: Tenemos una Teoría, más Empírica, de la Escuela de Chicago,
surge del enfoque mosaiquista de la percepción, ahora está siendo desarrollada por la New School de Nueva York.
Tenemos la otra Teoría, la Neoplatónica, basada en la Escuela de Viena del psicoanálisis y de la Gestalt.
La teoría empírica básica dice que los recursos sociales pueden ser construidos por un proceso técnico que requiere:
1.- Cognición: Compartir, conocer lo que los demás están haciendo y trabajando.
Saber lo que los demás están haciendo ayudará a conformar sus propias actuaciones.
That that how by by by by knowing what the others are doing then?
2.- Coordinación:
Si los demás están haciendo algo que se puede copiar,
o que le pueden copiar, hay una transferencia de conocimiento.
Se trabaja conjuntamente en una inteligencia colectiva.
Se hacen las cosas con cierta inter-alimentación.
3.- Cooperación:
Consiste en trabajar juntos en un mismo proyecto. El resultado es un efecto multiplicador
porque ese trabajo es conjunto, no sólo se están copiando los unos a los otros, o trabajando en paralelo.
Estas tres etapas son muy relevantes. Cuando tratemos con la gobernanza de la metrópolis veremos lo útiles que son.
Utilizaremos estos tres elementos para elaborar la Gobernanza metropolitana
en un sistema político de tipo confederado. Lo veremos más adelante.
La otra teoría es la teoría de la Gestalt.
Hace una analogía entre las instancias psíquicas de la mente con las instancias sociales.
Eso lo iniciaron Carl Jung y algunos otros sociólogos.
Hicieron una analogía entre las respuestas sociales y las humanas.
Este enfoque es el enfoque de Viena.
Este enfoque analiza a la sociedad como a un ser humano.
Hay dos instancias en nuestra personalidad.
1.- El Super-Ego:
Dirigido por las ambiciones, los objetivos, los principios por los que queremos gobernarnos.
2.- El Id:
Dirigido por los instintos, la instancia de los instintos, de los deseos.
Las cosas que "deseamos", nuestras necesidades mas básicas.
Hay un conflicto permanente entre lo que "queremos ser" y lo que "queremos hacer".
Este conflicto tiene que ser tratado y equilibrado por la tercera instancia: el Ego.
Eso es lo esencial del Psicoanálisis.
Cuando lo vemos desde el punto de vista de la sociología, el Id es lo que la sociedad "desea":
consumo, ocio, bienestar de una manera muy directa.
El Super-ego es lo que esa sociedad, esa metrópolis, "quiere ser" en el futuro:
las ambiciones de la metrópolis para el futuro.
Como los presupuestos son limitados hay dos capítulos: Consumo o Inversión.
O se dirige al consumo, el Id, o se dedica a la inversión, el Super-Ego
Es el Ego el que tiene que gestionar ese conflicto, esa lucha
entre lo que queremos "aquí y ahora" y lo que queremos para un "futuro mejor".
Ese es el papel de la Gobernanza.
Lo veremos en otra de estas presentaciones.
Los dos objetivos son muy diferentes.
Para mejorar el futuro, para complacer al superego, debes invertir.
Hay que tener una ética clara, la ética del esfuerzo de mejora.
Si no se tiene, si lo que está buscando es sólo el "aquí y ahora",
para pasarlo lo mejor posible, es otro tipo sistema de valores.
Una metrópolis debe ser consciente de esta dicotomía cultural.
Es muy diferente una metrópoli mirando al futuro, con inteligencia colectiva,
trabajando para un futuro mejor, que una simplemente buscando aumentar el consumo actual.
Tenemos diferentes maneras de planificar esos futuros para una metrópoli:
- Planificación estratégica. Integra todos los aspectos del Genoma:
Económico, Social, Físico y Gobernanza.
Planificación estructural (física). Desarrolla los aspectos estructurales del componente físico.
Hay diferentes metodologías.
Las veremos esto en otra de las presentaciones de esta serie.
Esperamos que el debate no haya sido demasiado complejo. Probablemente necesite ser vista una segunda vez.
En la próxima presentación veremos el componente de la Gobernabilidad.
Veremos cada uno de los aspectos del Genoma Metropolitano necesarios
para gestionar una metrópolis. Muchas gracias.
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FIRST THINGS YOU WILL NOTICE WHEN YOU COME TO THE NETHERLANDS - Duration: 11:16.
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Best Lyme Disease Supplements (Great for Parasites & Worms too) - Duration: 8:59.
What's up, dudes and dudettes. I just want to share a few trade secrets with all with
you all. I want to share some cool supplements that have really helped for
my Lyme disease. Yeah, this is really a cumulative effort. These supplements are
accumulative effort from some mentors and reading Buhner's book, Healing Lyme by
Stefan Buhner. And this is what, in my opinion, are some of the most powerful
Lyme supplements out there. So I'll just go through them for for anyone who's out
there suffering and struggling to find the best information or who has you know
maybe taken antibiotics and that hasn't worked for you, I encourage you to do
some research on these supplements and and check them out. So yeah, the first and
in my opinion, the most powerful is Biocidin. Lyposomal Biocidin and it has
bilberry and noni, milk thistle, echinacea, goldenseal, garlic and it's liposomal
right. So it's encapsulated with let's see what they use here sunflower seed
lecithin. A lot of supplements use soy lecithin. And it's encapsulated and
vibrated at a specific frequency that basically fuses the molecules together.
So it fuses the liquid of this with the fat of the sunflower seed lecithin and
basically allows the supplement to cross the blood-brain barrier. So
yes, really, really important in my opinion and you may notice some
really strong detox reactions with this one. I did for sure.
Next is teasel root. Teasel root is excellent for getting the spirochetes
out of the bones so also can cause super intense detox reactions but this is a
very common Chinese remedy for Lyme disease and also Buhner talks about it
as well. This is not really in many books or studies but I met an incredible
herbalist in Portland who runs this ashwagandha farm in Portland and he has
a heroes blend which doesn't say anything about Lyme but what he told me
is that he actually originally created it to be a Lyme remedy so Devil's Club,
knotweed and ashwagandha are three of the main ingredients. So this stuff has
been awesome. Totally love it. You can actually order it online even if you
don't live in Portland. And I don't have an affiliate, I'm not affiliated with any
of these companies so. And just so you know like whenever I do use
affiliate links, making money is like secondary because I am never going to
share a supplement or a product with you guys unless I have taken it and received
benefit and most of the time five to ten if not more clients of mine have also
received benefit. So yeah, so like you know, I'm not going to use affiliate
links for any of this stuff but whenever I do use affiliate links like on my
website, you know it's not to make money. It's 'Oh. Well I can't make money on this
as an added bonus. Why not?' But yeah, it's only if I strongly believe in the
product. So just know that. This is Douglass Labs Niacinamide which
basically thins the blood and allows the Lyme supplements to do a better job of
penetrating and cleaning the blood. You can also use regular niacin.
I actually use both. This is LymeCore Foundation Formula, which is basically
just two ingredients, two wild crafted ingredients. Knotweed and cats claw. So
Japanese knotweed which has the highest concentration of resveratrol of any like
plant or herb or anything on the planet through anything, knotweed has the
highest concentration and cat's claw is a super immune booster. And it's actually
interesting, both cats claw and artemisia which are in this formula are actually
sometimes, according to what I've researched, they have actually are
treated as toxins in the body. So there's an there's an enzyme that breaks down
the cat's claw and the artemisia because it's so intense that our body basically
look takes it and says 'Oh wow, this is too intense. We got to shut this thing
down' but if you drink grapefruit juice, about two ounces of grapefruit juice
before your dose of these two supplements, in 20 minutes to 30 minutes
before, the grapefruit juice deactivates the enzyme that deactivates cat's claw and
artemisia. So you don't this supplement is not the best because it's not really
organic.
The ingredients are great. The company is pretty good. I also use their melatonin.
But I wouldn't say this is like an amazing supplement. So I don't know. I'm
going to go through I'm going through a few bottles and seeing what it
does but yeah you can also just replace this with like Quicksilver's liposomal
Artemisinin
or even like Herb Pharm has a sweet wormwood as well. So yeah. A couple of
other supplements that I really like for Lyme and other co-infections and other
bacterias and viruses is Herb Pharm's Fungus Fighter and Herb Pharm's Andrographis.
Andrographis is especially important for Lyme. I went through
three bottles of that. So yeah a few of these supplements, I kind of just stopped
taking. But I'm still my main focus right now is on the line. So yeah, maybe one of
these days I'll film a video and take you inside and just show you what I'm
doing now. It's really not that much. I mean, I honestly, I went like 20 days
without taking any supplements whatsoever and that was great. But yeah, I
pretty much am only taking you know 10 or so supplements right now. I actually
just bought like six more all like nutrients like multivitamin and B
complex and stuff like that. So nothing too fancy or exciting but yeah for a few
months I was just taking like ten supplements. So anyway, the last
supplement here from the same company is DaVinci Labs Liposomal Melatonin which, I
could probably just make a whole video on just liposomal melatonin but Klinghardt
talks a lot about the fact that glutathione is this thing that we used
to think was super important but in reality, the most important antioxidant
for the brain is actually melatonin. And taking melatonin on its own
non liposomaly, it doesn't do anything to the brain but when you take it liposomaly,
remember the same thing i talked about with the Biocidin, it crosses
the blood-brain barrier, cleans the brain, detoxes the brain, and protects the brain,
protects the brain from spirochetes and Lyme. So super strong stuff. The dose that
Klinghardt talks about, he treats autistic children with three to thirty milligrams.
So that's like two to twenty squirts of this.
So yeah I mean I've never gone above 10 milligrams. I mean actually I think I
once I did like 12 or 14 or something but yeah, it's really strong stuff and you
wake up groggy.
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This Smart Pill Bottle Will Remind You to Take Your Meds: Josh Stein, AdhereTech NOW: #149 - Duration: 15:28.
Welcome to StartUp Health NOW. Excited to be here with Josh Stein, the CEO and co-founder
of AdhereTech and Health Transformer extraordinaire. Great to be with you. How are you? Unity,
Thanks for having me. Really excited to be here. Thanks. So, I thought we'd start by
hearing what's going on in the world of AdhereTech. Start with your mission, what you're doing,
and why you're building AdhereTech? Absolutely. So, at AdhereTech, and as you know, viewers
may not, we make smart pill bottles that track and improve medication adherence. So, even
though we produce this really robust, beautiful piece of hardware, we still kind of consider
ourselves as much more of a services company. And what I mean by that is we partner with
pharma companies. Pharma companies sponsored programs whereby patients get their medication
in our bottle for free and when they use this bottle there's a bunch of services that AdhereTech's
system provides to patients, basically to help them take their medications as prescribed.
And, basically, all of our patients are taking specialty medications. Cancer, HIV, hepatitis
C drugs. Stuff like that. So it's incredibly important for them to take their meds as scheduled,
and yeah, we provide services to them all driven by this bottle right here. So talk
a little bit about the impact for patients and, really, what your mission is. So right
now we know that adherence or compliance to people just taking their medications is really
one of the big challenges. Also a reason why people either don't get better or get sick.
What's the impact here for for people? Yeah, absolutely. So medication non-adherence, which
is the technical term, people not taking their meds, is one of the biggest problems in healthcare
today. It basically, it attributes to about 300 billion dollars in increased healthcare
costs in the US alone every year. So it's absolutely massive. And our mission at AdhereTech
is to create devices that are very seamless for patients to use. So something that fits
right into their routine. They use it just like a normal device. It even looks like a
regular pill bottle. Exactly. So we needed to make something that our average user, 70
years old, we needed to make something that not only works right out of the box and works
seamlessly, but also doesn't look intimidating. So we have it look just like a normal bottle.
Our mission is to give patients tools for free to help them take their meds. This is
the same bottle that thousands and thousands of patients across the globe currently use,
but we put special software on this guy just so we can show it off when we go to meetings
and such. But every time the bottle is opened or closed it flashes a white light just to
let the patient know, hey, this thing's alive and it's working. Now you'll see it's going
to cycle through some of the alerts that we offer. So basically, when it's time for a
patient to take a dose the bottle pulses a light blue color. And then as that dosage
time approaches the bottle will chime. You'll hear that in a few moments. And then after
that we do text messages and phone calls. Our whole design philosophy is have the lightest
touch intervention. Help the patient to take their med. What I think is really interesting
is the data is important to the individual patient, but it sounds like there's a lot
you can learn to help patients and even providers by looking at the population or looking at
a group of patients. Is that also part of the plan? Oh yeah, absolutely. So, you know,
okay. We're a hardware company. We produce hardware. But we really consider ourselves
a data and services company. So what I mean by that on the highest level, is not all types
of non-adherence are the same You know, we see some patients that will have trouble restarting
their medication regimen after a refill. We'll see others that are, you know, consistently
okay. They might take, you know, 13 out of every 14 doses. And then we'll see others
that are doing really well and then drop off a cliff in terms of adherence. So not all
these patients really do benefit from the same exact intervention. So what our system
is starting to do is we're able to parse out what types of non-adherence we see and deliver
the right type of intervention to the right patient based on, you know, the patterns that
they're showing. Who's your customer? Is it lots of different types of health and healthcare
companies, or are you focusing on a particular type of customer at this point? So our customer
in the traditional sense, the entity that like pays for our solution, is the pharma
company. The pharma company sponsors the programs. But we also consider our pharmacy partners
our customers as well. They don't pay for the solution. It's a cost-free solution for
them that just benefits them and their patients. But we consider them just as much a customer.
So really, pharma companies and pharmacies. That said, this device, it's really robust
and it really fits into the value chain anywhere a pill bottle fits in. So we've been fortunate
enough to get inquiries and actually build customer relationships with lots of different
companies across healthcare. Whether it's children's hospitals. And we work with, you
know, St. Jude and many, many others. Whether it's cancer centers like the Dana-Farber Cancer
Center, many others there too. Even the US government. We work with the VA, the NIH.
So, really, lots of different entities work with us. What's new with the business? You've
been getting extraordinary traction. I know you have a lot of exciting developments. We're
currently going nationwide in a program that's sponsored by one of the largest drug companies
on the planet. So, they are offering AdhereTech smart pill bottles and the associated services
to their patients that take their leading cancer drugs all across the US. So, we're
working with the largest specialty pharmacies. You know, household names that you see on
every corner to have AdhereTech bottles on their shelves and getting them into the hands
of cancer patients. Free for patients. Free for specialty pharmacies. Sponsored by pharma.
But, you know, helping the thousands and thousands of cancer patients each and every day. So
what does the future look like? You guys have been really at the vanguard and building for
the last few years and I think part of the, really, the pioneer wave of digital health
and really pushing the boundaries very early. Where do you see things going? Where do you
see digital health going? Where you see AdhereTech going over the coming years? Yeah. So I guess
I'll start with AdhereTech. We've been really fortunate to work with enormous leading companies
in healthcare. Part of the reason why they're willing to give AdhereTech a chance is because,
you know, when they do and they see the other companies that have as well, the results are
incredibly strong. We improve adherence by about 20% on average and then we improve time
on therapy, how long a patient stays on a treatment, about 30%. And when you're talking
about, you know, cancer medication for patients that need to take this in order to extend
and save their lives, just the the results are really staggering. So because of those
really strong results we've been really fortunate to have top pharma companies, top pharmacies,
use AdhereTech and grow in those relationships. So, the way that we see our company going,
continuing to grow in that regard. More pharmacies and more pharma companies. Where we see digital
health going is, I'd say pretty analogous to where technology is going in general. You
know, maybe 20 years ago technology was just a part of everyone's life and now it touches
every single aspect. You know, an interesting quote that we once, that I once heard and
probably going to bastardize it in some way was, you know, the human body, it gives off
billions of data points every day. And really, none of that is collected. And, you know,
when you think of the data that's collected when you, for example, go on Amazon and, like,
click through and look at different products. That is much more than what you're, what's
collected from your actual body. So, imagine if we could collect that data. Make sense
of it. And then actually provide health and health recommendations to patients based on
that. The possibilities are enormous. So, you know, we play a part in that general trend
of having technology just improve health and healthcare. So in the future, once technology
continues to improve, costs come down, does every total bottle become a smart pill bottle?
Hopefully, from AdhereTech? We think, eventually, yes. And I wouldn't even stop at the pill
bottle. I would say smart Shampoo bottles or whatever is in your refrigerator. Exactly.
I mean, the food that we eat affects us. That's not measured. I mean, putting intelligence
into different things to get that data, I think, will touch every aspect of our life.
You know, whether it's, like, topical ointments, stuff like that. So could one day this technology
from AdhereTech be on a peanut butter jar? So, we have no plans to, but yes. I mean,
basically, our IP portfolio and the technology, really, is such that any type of container
we can put these sensors into and communicate that data to, you know, an area for analysis.
And what I think is really extraordinary, we didn't talk about this earlier, is it can
measure by volume as well as, even down to the number of pills that are in, based off
of weight. Is that right? It's based off of, it's the same technology that's in your smartphone
that determines when you touch the screen. Okay. But we measure pill touch points inside
of the bottle. Okay. So we have a number of sensors in the bottle. We have like, you know,
one that measures opening and closing of the cap. Another one that measures the contents
of the bottle by volume like you mentioned. Basically, the reason why we went with that
technology as opposed to, you know, weight like you alluded to is, you know, think of
your cell phone. It has that capacitive touch technology. You drop your phone, you toss
it on the couch. It still stays so accurate. Like the iPhone, you know, measures your fingerprint.
Even if you drop your phone 100 times. So it's a really, really durable technology.
One of the many reasons why we went with it. Extraordinary. So you've been an entrepreneur
for years. You've got a very interesting background as a Health Transformer. What are some of
the lessons learned? Some of the things that, some of the wisdom you could pass on to other
entrepreneurs, other Health Transformers? Yeah. I would say number one. Be persistent
in everything you do. In any entrepreneurial journey there will be, sort of, speed bumps
you have to overcome. You know, keep your head down and work through it and solve problems.
Persistence is absolutely key. And then number two, which I guess, let me preface this piece
of advice with, I realize it's going to be a bit self-defeating when I say it, is take
every piece of advice with a grain of salt. Even what I'm saying now. I mean, we've heard
really smart people tell us you have to do A and not B. Even experts aren't always right.
Exactly. And it doesn't mean they're wrong, but they're not always right. So get, you
know, when you hear people give you advice, you know, put it through a filter. See how
it affects you and your business and your decisions and then make the right decision
for you. You said something earlier I thought it was striking about how you really worked
on your strategy to make sure your solution at AdhereTech worked within the value chain.
It worked within the flow that patients already operate within, that pharmacies already operate
within. That pharmaceutical companies also do. How important is that to work within the
workflows or the value chain that are already established? I would say it's key. And particularly,
if you're doing a healthcare company. Because healthcare is slow to change and any change
requirements that you have as a prerequisite in order to use your solution will only hinder
any adoption. So you have to understand how things work already, how you can fit into
how things work, and then improve how things work. But if you're saying, well you know,
in order to use us you got to do X Y & Z first, that's just going to slow your adoption. I
thought it was also interesting how focused you are. You've got a very clear customer.
You've got, you know, who your users are. You know who's paying. A lot of people in
healthcare at the early stage don't understand that who uses is different than who pays sometimes.
But there's a million different directions you could take AdhereTech, but you're consciously
staying very focused on this initial market, even though you could go put the technology,
you know, into peanut butter jars. Yes, completely. So, agree that, you know, focus is of the
utmost importance. And one of the reasons why we have to keep an extreme, sort of, proactive
focus on everything we do, is because when you think of adherence, it really benefits
every party in healthcare. You know, patients, better care, better outcomes, when adherence
is improved. Pharma companies, increase sales, and pharmacies too. Insurers, they now have
healthier patients to care for. They need less expensive, invasive procedures. So because
everyone benefits you really have to say ok this, the potential market is everyone, but
that's not realistic for a company. Where do I see adoption most likely? Where do I
see the most direct ROI? Wo we have to keep extreme focus. Particularly, because we help
so many different parties in the value chain. You guys have been scaling, you've been growing,
tremendous traction. Where can people go to learn more about AdhereTech, both in terms
of, maybe, potential partners and customers, but also consumers. Should consumers ask their
doctors about this? Their pharmacies? Where do people go to learn more? Yeah. I would
say in general, AdhereTech.com. That's where you can, sort of, see the high level overview
of the product. You can contact us via that same page if you have questions that we can
direct you to the right parties. And if you're a consumer that wants to know how they can
get this bottle, and again, we're always free for patients. We're sponsored by healthcare
companies, free for patients. Asking your pharmacy, particularly if it's a specialty
pharmacy, if they carry it yet. And we are carried by most of the largest specialty pharmacies,
but yeah, there may be parties out there that are eligible that just don't know it yet.
Well Josh, thank you for for doing what you're doing. You've been on the vanguard of digital
health, and really, the smart revolution, in terms of bringing data to the internet
of things and and really excited to see, both how far you guys have come over the years,
and really where you're going. I think it's extraordinary. So thank you for being here
and sharing your wisdom. Yeah. Thank you as well. And honestly, StartUp Health has been
a huge, sort of, rocket booster for us. So, I mean, thank you to the whole team and you
specifically, but everyone at StartUp Health. Thank you so much.
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Top 10 Famous Bollywood Celebrities Who Died in 2017 - Duration: 4:27.
Top 10 Famous Bollywood Celebrities who died in 2017
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Agitos Foundation | NPC Greece Refugee Project | RAJAB - Duration: 3:22.
After five months in Greece,
they came to tell me about Para sports.
Before that, I was always depressed.
I used to sit alone and remember the tragedies of the past.
I used to be sad all the time.
Now we are here at Mamalos's,
practicing powerlifting with the most courageous man.
We are living our lives through sport.
As I was training here, I've got a call from the Hellenic Paralympic Committee.
They proposed a collaboration.
It's an honour to train these boys, and make them athletes,
make them champions.
That will make them stronger, more disciplined, experienced and socially worthy.
I used to live in Iraq
in Al Anbar, Housayba city.
We don't know exactly the reason of the war.
Suddenly, our life turned upside down.
We were in the garden,
surrounded by plants and trees.
An unknown group approached us.
It was during the USA occupation in 2004.
In the beginning they hit us with three rockets
They fell near us because they couldn't see us clearly.
Then when we left to go home.
They hit us with another rocket. We were five:
two died and the other three lost their legs.
Being a refugee with vulnerabilities,
physical disabilities or other types of disabilities,
it is very important for them to actually
have an opportunity to do something better with their lives.
This is actually a ticket for doing something better with their lives.
I want you to pump with your back
Here, right here!
Not so low… here…
Since I've started feeling good and comfortable.
I keep practising sport until I win the championship.
We want to participate in competitions,
to live the life we couldn't live during the tragedies
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