This is the Ted O'Neill program, a podcast that explores the science and philosophies for performance optimization, and the elevation of the human experience with Ted O'Neill, and Jon Leon Guerrero.
0:23 Jon
Welcome to the Ted O'Neill program. Today is Thursday. You use the term of Mike just a moment ago that is fascinating to me. But it touches on what we revolve around a lot, or what we hover over a lot. And that is the biology of time travel, man.
0:35 Jon
Alright, so recently, this has been something that we've kind of been going over and I Okay, so we're going to go ahead and actually do this as an episode. Sure. Alright. So, because when you start saying things like time travel, it might, it might help our ratings, we might also get accused of certain things, or called certain things, but that's okay. Because it's still the testimonial program. That's right. All right.
0:59 Jon
So, it's not the whatever your name is our there hating it.
1:03 Ted
What would happen if I got replaced? Is it still the Ted O'Neill Program?
1:08 Jon
Let's maybe discuss that another juncture. 1000 episodes from now?
1:12 Ted
Yeah, when we sell it? Yeah. All right. So, here's the deal to the biology of time travel. Yeah. So, let's talk about what it's not. Okay. There's kind of this science fiction concept of time travel, which is kind of an interesting, compelling thing. And then it creates this,
1:30 Jon
which is a gross summary of what time travel being in the concept that we've explored. And that is that if, if we go from event to event to event, and then use that as a measurement of time, then we can begin to master the condensation as we desire it of time. However, time travel, as we see in movies, typically means that you can jump to a particular event on the timeline that we all seemingly share, which we know is a construct, anyway, yes. But it's fun for entertainment purposes, to be able to jump to someplace on that timeline,
2:09 Ted
as if these events have already happened in is fixated in linear time, and somehow be operating outside of that. So that that's clearly something that is, yeah, it's a work of science fiction. Yeah. So then what are we talking about, we say biological, or the biology of time travel. So, this is how I look at this. And you know, again, this, this kind of goes into this idea that we use with great regularity where others have done the heavy lifting for us, and determining, you know, how the human brain works, and how our body works, to where there's a certain way that we experience life. And we talked about this week, where the first seven years of life, you know, 90% of your personality is developed, etc, etc. So, this is something that began to occur to me years ago, when I would observe our athletes and our lifters having certain challenges. And we talked about like the squeeze points in the 9010, where you'll see someone go into full freak-out mode, you know, who maybe is already very accomplished. And so, what just happened for them, they're not, the reaction is not commensurate with the feedback or the moment they're actually experiencing. So, it has to come from someplace else. And so, this was always in my mind, as I did more research into various topics and various other ways of thinking. It occurred to me that when someone is displaying, say something like fear, or anxiety or input, anything that might come up in our particular little niche of the world, what tends to happen, or my observation was, they appear to them be displaying all of the fear and all of the previous anxiety, especially when it's disproportionate to the actual event. So, going farther on that concept, if we were to use certain instrumentation that might track these things, in the moment where they're getting squeezed, and having some kind of a backslide, or exhibiting some kind of what we might call, maybe like a negative state of being or a negative emotion. Yeah, they are expressing the same chemistry. They're using the same neural network in their brain. And they're probably expressing the same genes as the original moment that created the impact or the trauma or the life event that then made them see the world through that lens of fear or anxiety. So every time we get triggered back into that state, we replicate the biology of that original event. Yes. From our brains to our chemistry, we actually manufacture chemicals. Yeah, in that moment that match what happened originally. So that I would I think you could make the artifact
4:46 Jon
all the neural pathways. Yeah, all of the things that we know to be familiar because we've been there before
4:52 Ted
we re-experience or re-member. We rejoin with that initial impact. experience trauma, whatever you want to call it. Yeah. And we do it in a way that is exactly as if we are reliving it. Yes. If we're using the same brain, the same neural pathways and the same chemistry in the body. Yeah. And if you can define time as the distance between two events are the distance between two things. And that moment, we're feeling that feeling again. Yeah, no time, your biology has just connected those two points in time. Yeah. Back to the original point of impact.
5:30 Jon
Yeah. So, you've gone nowhere, right? You're still firmly tied to that.
5:33 Ted
So. this is, you know, people say time heals. It doesn't. Yeah. Because if you can re-experience it to that level, and demonstrate the exact same behavior and feelings. Yep. And have the same belief system as something that happened, then you're tied to it. Yeah. And in fact, no wounds have healed. No, you're demonstrating as if it is happening right now, for the first time.
5:56 Jon
Well, earlier this week, we talked about how when we dissect the behaviors of successful people, those people who have created whatever abundance you think somebody else has, that you don't have, and the acknowledgement that we had all works out, and it didn't work out the way that I imagined it. But here we are, reliving the emotions that all come from the way that we imagined it. Yeah, or the way that we imagined it again, because we've been there already.
6:24 Ted
Yeah. And so, this thing creates a pattern, this creates a cycle that people didn't replicate in their life. And when they get to the payoff point of that, whether it's relationship or a job, or, or something that they're experiencing, that they don't prefer, as an outcome, maybe in training, they get stuck in the same place, or maybe they keep getting dinged up with injuries, or whatever the thing is, when it hits the apex, they recognize I've been here before, yeah, I keep doing this. And so, then you need some tools to carve your way break out of those same pathways. Otherwise, you're going to continue to get in your biological time machine. And reignites this over and over and over again. And this is one of the unique things that I think comes with living in this time period, is we have sciences that have progressed and they don't all talk to each other apparently, because it's not something that we're hearing.
7:18 Jon
We definitely haven't reached consensus. Yeah,
7:20 Ted
I mean, it's not, it's not in our popular culture to be talking about these types of things where people are grasping these concepts of moving forward. So, if most of the time when we have a feeling especially negative when we're traveling back to the biology of the original event, let's think about the implications. This is where people get sick. If you're developing and replaying the hormones of stress, anxiety, fear, failure, all these things, that's how the body gets into a state of disease. And when you have enough of a biochemical overload, and you display that for a long enough period of time, then the things that match that resonant energy signature, might be different disease states, and at least this is looked at now enough even in allopathic medicine, to where doctors will say, well, stress causes all manner of disease. They're not going to quantify it for you, or tell you where that exists exactly. But it's a concept that is so obvious, that even when they can't quantify it, we now hear this. Yeah. So, what's the flip side of this? So, if we can so easily go back into the past and relive these of these events? And these experiences, the point where we're demonstrating as if it's happening to us right, then and there? Oh, boy, then what's the alternative? Right?
8:38 Jon
Why couldn't we manufacture the event, understand the energy behind the event, feel the emotion ahead of the event, and tune into it? Well, there
8:51 Ted
you go. You just gave everyone the entire shortcut. make it all work. So this is kind of an interesting thing. So, to do that, you would have to come from a place of conscious awareness. And you would have to do it in defiance of your past experiences, therefore demonstrating faith and courage, you would then have to express it totally different set of biochemicals, you would have to form new neural pathways. And you would then be expressing different gene sequences that you haven't utilized before,
9:25 Jon
in defiance of your past experience in defiance of your past experiences.
9:29 Ted
We, you know, it's something like I forget the exact number they say, like when you and I were kids, 98% of genes are was junk DNA. Yeah. And now they're saying, Oh, these are just all potentials that we don't know how this happens or what sequences these genes but they're finding more and more of these things all the time. So, it's no longer labeled as junk DNA. Now it's this is the field of potential. So, this all seems pretty consistent with our experience if we're expressing like this 2% of our genetic potential. And we see less than 1% of the light spectrum and we hear less than 1% of the sound spectrum and all these data points today, that point us having this very, very limited experience that we keep reliving over and over and over again, and habituated pre-programmed state, then what would be the way out of that? And you just outlined it. So, with this traction distraction model, this is this is exactly what this is for. It's to check in moment by moment. Because we've talked about this recently, as well, in terms of time that every moment has, has the same potentiality behind it, we just don't think that way. Because it requires one requires conscious awareness and a lot of discipline. Yeah, we tend to think outside of us in an event-based way. But if we were able to generate more intentional moments, and we were to do that by recognizing that the resonant energy signature we're on right now doesn't match this thing that we said we desired and had this pole. And this, we felt this gravitational force toward this, because this would mean something to us, if we achieved it. That's what we have to align with.
11:14 Jon
Okay, just to calibrate with our listeners, for a moment, there's a moment in practically every one of these concepts as we describe them, where I think, oh, man, that's me. That's exactly what I do. And I think, you know, as we listen to these things, we probably all feel some degree of that, oh, that's what I do. Because what I thought of, as you describe, that was all of the Million Moments that I've completely let go by, I wasted so many moments, not in my resume my resonant energy signature. Yeah. And then you know what I'm going to do, I'm going to think, Wow, I'm going to wallow in the profundity of that. And then I'm going to get in my car, and I'm going to return some phone calls. Yeah, where I completely let go of my resonant energy signature. Yeah, you can change into whatever you want to be. And so, I'm going to challenge everybody. Really, really, really let this sink in, and see if we can tune in more frequently. Set your alarms, let it go off, is it four times an hour, we're going
12:25 Ted
to cover that tomorrow. Okay, we'll cover it tomorrow. But I want to return to what you just said, because it one we got to say profundity, the second. And it was, it was a moment that had that for me, because you're not someone who's had an insignificant life change. Over the last couple of years. You've completely retooled physically, mentally, and emotionally and energetically. And you're the demonstration of all these things. And this points toward this, this message that, to me has great importance. The high achievers are not the ones who are devoid of struggle. They're the ones who make a conscious decision to enact faith and courage amidst the struggle. And then that's how you navigate that that's how you come out to their side for you to say sit there right now. And so, you had millions of these moments that are unintentional and mad, a little bit of regret, in that in that tone. Yeah. But you're not wallowing in the regret. What you're saying is I'm going to get in my car, I'm going to make these phone calls. I'm going to write these wrongs or whatever the thing is, right these wrongs Yeah, I'm going to turn this thing around and point it in the direction that I'm that I'm choosing Yes, my life I'm going to regain control and here's how