GETTING A YOUNGER BRAIN
That’s why we’re listening to one of the greatest geniuses of modern times, Richard Feynman. One of the secrets to his genius is that, all his life, he kept the curiosity we all have as a child.
That was when, for all of us, the world was as young as we were. Remember? Everything was new, and fascinating, we were endlessly curious, we wanted to know why and asked questions about all sorts of stuff.
Remember how time went by much slower when you were young – and how you’ve noticed that the older you get, the faster time goes by?
There’s a scene in the movie On Golden Pond starring Henry Fonda and Katherine Hepburn where they are celebrating the 80th birthday of Fonda’s character. “What’s it like to be 80?” he’s asked. He answers, “I’m surprised it got here so fast!”
Let’s not do that. Let’s have time slow down, and recapture our curiosity of youth – by having our brain grow physically younger. We’ll do that in a small place in our brain that’s Greek for “seahorse.”
Yes, we’re going to talk about getting younger with hippocampal neurogenesis.
The decade-old age of fables like Russian collusion, laptop disinformation, or the pangolin/bat cause of COVID is not over; it is just hitting midstream.
[Stephen Miller is the founder of America First Legal and is currently Chief of Staff of the Trump White House.]

One of the essential qualities that makes us human is the way that we work together in groups. Understanding how to bring out our best within a group can make the difference between success or failure, personally, professionally, and financially.









