👁 1
💬 0
📄 Extracted Text (1,117 words)
To: Jeffre E stein[jeevacation©gmail.com]
From:
Sent: ur /1 13 4:23:45 AM
Subject: more
JE,
Fun to see you. Really enjoyed the Botstein.
LOVE being at 301. SO easy and LOVE that I can prepare (and bring) my lunch, food, etc.
Keeps me feeling better and better!! Thank you!
Ghislaine's talk is now pretty tight. She just needs to practice the crap out of it - I told her til it
comes out of her pores in her sleep. I love that she is diving into something that's meaningful to
her.
Korean acupuncture info at the bottom of this email (I may have sent it before). Also, just
google: Pulmotonia (my type) and it will get you to many of the sites.
I met with an interesting woman, Edie Weiner, a futurist, super smart and very diRe,eut type of
thinker. She may be interesting for you to meet. I'm back in NY (I think - around March 15 - 19
or something like that) - so maybe in that window or before. Or not. Whatever you prefer.
Here's Edie giving a talk:
http://vvww.youtube.com/watch?v=P_TjNILLtvM
She gave that talk at the TEDxMidwest conference in Chicago that I co-organize. It's May 2-3,
and if you want to come, let me know, Mr. NO More Conferences guy.
I mentioned the hair dryer story to you -- it's about selective attention, inattentional blindness and
what I call "Projective attention."
The Hair Dryer that Got Away
I'm in NY and staying at a friend's apartment. He's not there.
I've had a terrific night's sleep, a hot shower, and now, plan to dry my hair and head over to a
conference, where I'll be speaking about millenials in the workplace. After my session, several
videotaped interviews are planned. I'm figuring out what to wear.
I brought several things to choose from so I could feel comfortable in front of the cameras. I even
called my friend's assistant in advance, "Do I need to bring a hair dryer or is there one in the
apartment?" Caught without a hair dryer on a previous visit, I knew I'd need a hair dryer for
camera-ready hair. She assured me I would find one in the apartment.
I check the hall closet for a hair dryer. Then I check another closet. And another. One more.
EFTA_R1_00344741
EFTA01909329
OMG, no hair dryer!
I start catastrophizing as I imagine my fine, unruly hair without a dryer. I go through the closets
again. Every closet. Panicked, I call my friend's office. His assistant, Lesley, is helpful. Five
minutes later, there's a knock on the door. Someone in the building has a new hair dryer for me.
Relief.
I notice the box is purple and looks familiar. I return to the hall closet. The box matches a box in
the closet.
I had been looking for a hair dryer. What good is a box?
Laughing as I dry my hair, I wonder, how much is life like this every day? How many things am I
looking for with such vigilance, and such absolute certainty, that, even when they're right in front
of me, I fail to notice them.
When I don't know, it's possible to see.
I was so struck by this example of what is called inattentional blindness. We fail to notice things
in plain sight. The Chabris and Simons website includes some great video demos; you can see
how easy it is to miss what's right in front of you.
One of my favorite books on this topic is Sleights of Mind: What the Neuroscience of Magic
Reveals about Our Everyday Deceptions.
For many of us, our evolving relationship with technology in a 24/7, mobile, always-connected
world, traps us in a hyper-focus on the screen, and a blindness to the rich world around us.
THE above story happened at 301! It relates to the research and synthesis of bits I'm bringing
together on luck, attention, the physiology of technology, etc.
Here's the Korean Acupuncture info. Kelly went to the guy on Tuesday. She is apparently the
same type I am....
xoxox
Korean 8 body acpuncturc
Korean Body Type Acupuncture - 8 Constitution Medicine
EFTA_R1_00344742
EFTA01909330
Eight Constitution Medicine is a completely new medical paradigm and has cured intractable and
previously incurable diseases. It was first presented to the world in 1965 by Dowon Kuon, a world
renowned acupuncturist that is currently treating cancer patients and conducting research at Jesun
Acupuncture Clinic and Dawnting Cancer Research Institute in South Korea. His findings have stayed true
after 47 years and 1 million plus clinical cases: all human beings regardless of gender or race can be
classified into eight different human individualities or constitutions.
Each constitution has dynamic associations between internal organs. Some people are born with lungs that
are strong but with a weaker liver. Others entered this world with weak lungs yet have strong
functioning livers. Additional weak/strong pairs are: kidneys and pancreas, stomach and bladder, large
intestine and gallbladder. Dr. Kuon refers to this state as 'suitably unbalanced. Maintaining this state
optimizes the immune function of the human body. So when a person's strong internal organ becomes
overly strong or a weak one deteriorates, his body can succumb to illness.
If this person sought treatment in Eight Constitution Medicine for his illness, the state of their internal
organs at birth would dictate their treatment. It would be completely personalized from someone else
who may have the same illness because their constitutions would be totally different. By identifying the
weaker internal organs at birth, it is also that much easier to understand the cause of an illness.
The idea is currently gaining ground of focusing on the cause of a disease rather than just treating the
symptoms. While Oriental Medicine has operated under such theories for thousands of years, Eight
Constitution Medicine elegantly connects the physiology and pathology of each constitution and its
twelve internal organs (Liver, Lungs, Kidney, Large intestine, Small Intestine, Gallbladder, Stomach,
Heart, Urinary Bladder, Pancreas, Pericardium, San Jiao). It is also complete in addressing what
elements outside of the body such as the consumption of foods would optimize each constitution.
One easy to understand application of these findings is in the treatment high cholesterol. The typical one
size fits all approach is reducing red meat consumption and increasing the intake of fruits and
vegetables. However, over 90% of cholesterol is generated in the liver and so the impact of foods eaten
is actually minimal. With Eight Constitution Medicine, the focus is in balancing the internal organ
functions so that they are at optimal levels and performing appropriately for the body.
htto://cemed.org/boarcUcontent.aso?bsNo=178clng-en
http://vvww.8bodvtvoc.corn/clinic/about us.html
http://www.actimincturetorranceca.com.lcarninu.littp
Imp://www.oncarrowacuptincture.com/constmend.htm case studies and links
The Doctor I consulted:
Dr. Min Kim
EFTA_R1_00344743
EFTA01909331
ℹ️ Document Details
SHA-256
4d14f3bdcf69d6fd2d42e36d5f2e1d4a9edb05196d5ef4f1eee96b92da2bc098
Bates Number
EFTA01909329
Dataset
DataSet-10
Type
document
Pages
3
💬 Comments 0