Gregg Braden
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
The first thing he said, he goes, why can't you stick with one topic like everybody else? And I thought it was a joke. I thought it was kidding. And I said, excuse me? He said, man, he said, you're all over the map. Are you talking about planetary magnetics? You're talking about ancient civilizations, DNA, you know, geomagnetic anomalies. What are you talking about? Then I knew he was serious.
The first thing he said, he goes, why can't you stick with one topic like everybody else? And I thought it was a joke. I thought it was kidding. And I said, excuse me? He said, man, he said, you're all over the map. Are you talking about planetary magnetics? You're talking about ancient civilizations, DNA, you know, geomagnetic anomalies. What are you talking about? Then I knew he was serious.
And I said, well. I said, we do cover a lot of ground, but if you look closely, every one of those facets is just that, is a piece, one piece of a single picture. And it's a story of us. It's us and our relationship to our bodies in the world. So in a very real sense, I am sticking with one topic. It's just a big topic. And he said, let's go to station break. And he never came back. What?
And I said, well. I said, we do cover a lot of ground, but if you look closely, every one of those facets is just that, is a piece, one piece of a single picture. And it's a story of us. It's us and our relationship to our bodies in the world. So in a very real sense, I am sticking with one topic. It's just a big topic. And he said, let's go to station break. And he never came back. What?
And I said, well. I said, we do cover a lot of ground, but if you look closely, every one of those facets is just that, is a piece, one piece of a single picture. And it's a story of us. It's us and our relationship to our bodies in the world. So in a very real sense, I am sticking with one topic. It's just a big topic. And he said, let's go to station break. And he never came back. What?
That was the end. When was this? It was a couple of years ago. Wow. It was before COVID. That's wild. Yeah, it was wild. So for a lot of people, we tend to zero in on one facet of our relationship to the world. Sometimes you get really hung up in that one facet. Because we're trained to think that way, Danny. We're trained to compartmentalize our world.
That was the end. When was this? It was a couple of years ago. Wow. It was before COVID. That's wild. Yeah, it was wild. So for a lot of people, we tend to zero in on one facet of our relationship to the world. Sometimes you get really hung up in that one facet. Because we're trained to think that way, Danny. We're trained to compartmentalize our world.
That was the end. When was this? It was a couple of years ago. Wow. It was before COVID. That's wild. Yeah, it was wild. So for a lot of people, we tend to zero in on one facet of our relationship to the world. Sometimes you get really hung up in that one facet. Because we're trained to think that way, Danny. We're trained to compartmentalize our world.
We break the world down in the world of science. I'm trained as a scientist, and I was trained to think in terms of geology and biology and chemistry and physics and Yeah, we do that to make it comfortable for us to study the world. But the truth is the world doesn't know about those boundaries.
We break the world down in the world of science. I'm trained as a scientist, and I was trained to think in terms of geology and biology and chemistry and physics and Yeah, we do that to make it comfortable for us to study the world. But the truth is the world doesn't know about those boundaries.
We break the world down in the world of science. I'm trained as a scientist, and I was trained to think in terms of geology and biology and chemistry and physics and Yeah, we do that to make it comfortable for us to study the world. But the truth is the world doesn't know about those boundaries.
And where you really, really begin to take a deep dive and a deeper understanding of what this world is about is when you cross those traditional boundaries that have separated the sciences in the past. I've lost a lot of credibility doing that. The minute that I started talking about spiritual traditions as a scientist, my credibility went right out the door. And, you know, it's okay.
And where you really, really begin to take a deep dive and a deeper understanding of what this world is about is when you cross those traditional boundaries that have separated the sciences in the past. I've lost a lot of credibility doing that. The minute that I started talking about spiritual traditions as a scientist, my credibility went right out the door. And, you know, it's okay.
And where you really, really begin to take a deep dive and a deeper understanding of what this world is about is when you cross those traditional boundaries that have separated the sciences in the past. I've lost a lot of credibility doing that. The minute that I started talking about spiritual traditions as a scientist, my credibility went right out the door. And, you know, it's okay.
I'm not concerned about that because I'm not working in the corporations any longer. I don't need that kind of validation from my peers. Whatever time I have in this world, I think it's a healthy thing for us to do, to understand who we are and... our potential, what it means to be a human in this world, because we are now on the cusp, on the precipice of giving our humanness away to technology.
I'm not concerned about that because I'm not working in the corporations any longer. I don't need that kind of validation from my peers. Whatever time I have in this world, I think it's a healthy thing for us to do, to understand who we are and... our potential, what it means to be a human in this world, because we are now on the cusp, on the precipice of giving our humanness away to technology.
I'm not concerned about that because I'm not working in the corporations any longer. I don't need that kind of validation from my peers. Whatever time I have in this world, I think it's a healthy thing for us to do, to understand who we are and... our potential, what it means to be a human in this world, because we are now on the cusp, on the precipice of giving our humanness away to technology.
And that's what the new book's all about. And I think that's where we're going to go today. But We do cover a lot of ground to make that point, but it's really one topic, one conversation, and it's about us. It's because we're absolutely not what we've been told, and we're so, so much more than we've ever been led to believe.
And that's what the new book's all about. And I think that's where we're going to go today. But We do cover a lot of ground to make that point, but it's really one topic, one conversation, and it's about us. It's because we're absolutely not what we've been told, and we're so, so much more than we've ever been led to believe.
And that's what the new book's all about. And I think that's where we're going to go today. But We do cover a lot of ground to make that point, but it's really one topic, one conversation, and it's about us. It's because we're absolutely not what we've been told, and we're so, so much more than we've ever been led to believe.