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Something You Should Know

How You CAN Change Other People & Some Interesting Science Explained

Thu, 19 Dec 2024

Description

Listening to music with air pods or headphones can damage your hearing. To prevent this, you need to understand the common causes of hearing loss. This episode begins with an explanation so you can avoid the problem while still enjoying your favorite music. https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/hearing-loss/symptoms-causes/syc-20373072 How many times have you heard people say, “You can’t change other people!” Well, that’s not exactly true according to my guest, Peter Bregman. Peter is a well-known consultant, coach and author who believes you CAN get other people to change if you do it right. While his method may not work all the time, it can increase your chances of helping other people make important, positive changes. Peter Bregman is author of the several books including You Can Change Other People (https://amzn.to/3GGpgUh).  Science can explain a lot. And as you listen to this episode, you are going to hear scientific explanations regarding everyday things in your life like plastics, old book smell and what makes a food a superfood. It’s interesting stuff from my guest Dr. Joe Schwarcz. Joe is director of McGill University’s Office for Science and Society and the author of several books. His latest is, Superfoods, Silkworms, and Spandex: Science and Pseudoscience in Everyday Life (https://amzn.to/3Zoc3ei). You have likely heard reports that people who have pets are healthier and live longer. But what’s the connection? How does having a pet do that? Listen as I explain the several ways pets are beneficial and how having a dog could save your life as well as improve your child’s social skills. https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/326609#Dogs-an-important-factor-in-rehabilitation? PLEASE SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS!!! INDEED:  Get a $75 SPONSORED JOB CREDIT to get your jobs more visibility at https://Indeed.com/SOMETHING  Support our show by saying you heard about Indeed on this podcast.  Terms & conditions apply. AURA: Save on the perfect gift by visiting https://AuraFrames.com to get $35-off Aura’s best-selling Carver Mat frames by using promo code SOMETHING at checkout! SHOPIFY:  Sign up for a $1 per-month trial period at https://Shopify.com/sysk . Go to SHOPIFY.com/sysk to grow your business – no matter what stage you’re in! MINT MOBILE: Cut your wireless bill to $15 a month at https://MintMobile.com/something! $45 upfront payment required (equivalent to $15/mo.).  New customers on first 3 month plan only. Additional taxes, fees, & restrictions apply. HERS: Hers is changing women's healthcare by providing access to GLP-1 weekly injections with the same active ingredient as Ozempic and Wegovy, as well as oral medication kits. Start your free online visit today at https://forhers.com/sysk DELL: It's your last chance to snag Dell Technologies’ lowest prices of the year before the holidays! If you've been waiting for an AI-ready PC, this is their biggest sale of the year! Shop now at https://Dell.com/deals PROGRESSIVE: The Name Your Price tool from Progressive can help you save on car insurance! You just tell Progressive what you want to pay and get options within your budget. Try it today at https://Progressive.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Transcription

0.109 - 1.335

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33.467 - 46.429 Mike Carruthers

Today on Something You Should Know, the problem with listening to music with headphones and how to solve it. Then, can you really change other people? Sometimes, if you know the process.

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47.03 - 60.172 Peter Bregman

There is no point in this process where I am telling her what to do or giving her advice. I'm engaging with her in thinking about it and asking certain questions that always keep her in control.

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60.792 - 73.141 Mike Carruthers

Also, you've heard that having a pet is good for your health. So how does that work exactly? And some everyday science explained on things like plastics, old book smell, and superfoods.

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73.822 - 89.793 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

No food really merits being labeled as an angel or a devil because it's possible to eat blueberries every day. At this point, I think it's just become common practice that if you have a business and you sell online, Shopify is the way to go. Shopify is the global commerce platform that helps you sell at every stage of your business.

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107.523 - 130.593 Mike Carruthers

Whether you're selling holiday gifts or auto parts or gourmet food, it doesn't matter. Shopify is there to help you grow from the launch your online shop stage to the first real life store stage all the way up to the did we just hit a million order stage? Here's what I love about Shopify. It's not just a platform. They have these great tools that help you sell more.

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130.994 - 150.828 Mike Carruthers

For example, they have the Internet's best converting checkout, 36% better on average compared to other leading commerce platforms. They have this thing, it's the Shopify Bundles app, where you can create and sell product bundles with ease. So you sell more. They also have something called the Shopify Collective.

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You can curate products to sell from other brands, brands you love, giving your customers more variety and your business more sales. Come on, it's time to check out Shopify. Sign up for a $1 per month trial period at Shopify.com slash S-Y-S-K, all lowercase. Go to Shopify.com slash S-Y-S-K now to grow your business, no matter what stage you're in. Shopify.com slash S-Y-S-K.

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184.241 - 195.831

Something you should know. Fascinating intel. The world's top experts. And practical advice you can use in your life. Today, Something You Should Know with Mike Carruthers.

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197.512 - 220.381 Mike Carruthers

Hey there. Welcome to Something You Should Know. When you listen to music, there's a pretty good chance that you listen on headphones or earbuds. I think I, whenever I listen to music, practically, I'm listening on headphones or earbuds. And the question is, does listening to music on headphones or earbuds cause hearing loss? Well, it does for a lot of people.

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221.101 - 236.691 Mike Carruthers

You see, according to experts at Harvard, regardless of the source of the sound, hearing loss is the result of three factors. Volume of sound, the duration of the sound, and how far away the source of the sound is from your ears.

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237.847 - 260.513 Mike Carruthers

Well, if you're listening to music on headphones, the volume can be pretty loud, the duration can be pretty long, and it would be hard to be any closer to your ear than headphones get. So you see the problem. There's an additional issue. Portable music devices have updated over the years to adapt to higher qualities of digital sound.

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261.173 - 280.528 Mike Carruthers

With old audio devices, when the sound got too loud, the music didn't sound right. The bass would often distort and it would just sound horrible in your ear, so you would naturally lower the volume. But now, with digital sound, you can turn up the volume and it doesn't distort, so there's a tendency to turn up the volume.

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281.48 - 306.907 Mike Carruthers

Just be aware that listening to loud music for long periods of time on headphones or earbuds will take a toll on your hearing. It pretty much has to. And that is something you should know. I'm sure you've heard the common wisdom that you cannot change other people. That generally people don't change. And if they do change, they have to change themselves.

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307.327 - 333.186 Mike Carruthers

That trying to change other people is a waste of time. Well, meet someone who disagrees with that. Peter Bregman. Peter is a well-respected consultant and coach who has authored several books, one of which is called You Can Change Other People. And as he'll explain, it's not about manipulating people. And, well, I'll let him explain it. Hi, Peter. Welcome to Something You Should Know.

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333.727 - 335.807 Peter Bregman

Thanks so much for having me, Michael. It's great to be here.

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336.385 - 347.757 Mike Carruthers

So since there is this common belief that you cannot change other people, explain why you can and why you would and why you'd want to, and what's the point of all of this?

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348.664 - 371.758 Peter Bregman

You can change other people. It's just that the way we try to change other people doesn't work because we're doing and saying the wrong things. And we're actually creating resistance. People don't resist change. They resist being changed. And so I change all the time. But if you try to change me, forget it. I'm going to fight because that's my loss of control.

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372.399 - 377.362 Peter Bregman

So we have to change people in ways that doesn't elicit the kind of resistance we end up fighting against.

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378.166 - 391.136 Mike Carruthers

It also seems though that one of the reasons people don't change is that when you try to change somebody, you're trying to change them to fit your needs and wants and desires. It may have nothing to do with them. You want them to do what you want to do.

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392.02 - 413.262 Peter Bregman

Exactly, and this process is not a magic manipulative process where I'm gonna give you three words to say and people will instantly hypnotically change. It does drastically increase your hit rate in helping people change, but it is ultimately about them. So most often we want people to change, right? Because there's something we're frustrated about.

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413.783 - 430.127 Peter Bregman

But that frustration is coming out of a place of care. Usually when you're frustrated or angry about something, it's because you care deeply about something. And almost always the thing you care about is in your mutual interest as well as their individual interest.

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430.487 - 439.009 Peter Bregman

But it's not being framed that way at all because you're coming off as sort of a critic of their behavior as opposed to an ally working with them.

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440.362 - 449.926 Mike Carruthers

And so we've been talking so far in kind of the abstract. Can you give me an example of how you would change somebody so I get a better sense of what you're talking about?

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451.527 - 469.175 Peter Bregman

Sure. And you know what I'll do? I'll give you an example that fits your category of something where I want someone to change, but they don't necessarily want to change. And I'll up the ante and I'll make it my daughter who's 19, right? So now I want to change one of my kids.

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470.214 - 489.937 Peter Bregman

One day I went downstairs in the morning and I found her eating a chocolate chip cookie for breakfast and she looked up at me with this guilty expression and she said, yeah, this is the last one. I stayed up till four o'clock in the morning and baked a plate, baked a sheet of chocolate chip cookies and ate them all.

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491.648 - 509.118 Peter Bregman

And, you know, my instinct is to immediately criticize, like to be like, what are you thinking? Like, you don't want, you know, you told me you want to lose a little bit of weight and you're, this is how you're doing it. And like, seriously, chocolate chip cookies, is this what I've taught you? Chocolate chip cookies in the morning for breakfast?

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509.918 - 534.027 Peter Bregman

But I immediately shortcut that process because I knew that that would instigate a resistance, denial. When we criticize someone, we come at them, or even when we give feedback to someone, we're eliciting their shame. We're telling them there's something you're doing that I'm pointing out that's bad. And people will do almost anything to avoid shame. So what do we do?

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534.128 - 548.453 Peter Bregman

We go into either denial or defensiveness because those are the easiest ways to avoid, which is to say, I'm not doing it or I don't even know what you're talking about. And then that's a non-starter conversation because now we're in a conflict. I don't want to be in a conflict. I'm her ally, right?

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548.953 - 573.997 Peter Bregman

And so what I said instead, I followed the first step in the four-step process is to shift from critic to ally. And we have a formula for doing that, which is three steps, which is empathize, which is express confidence and ask permission because it always has to be up to them. So I said, hey, I totally get it. You eating a plate full of cookies at 4 a.m.

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574.077 - 588.161 Peter Bregman

when you're exhausted and especially your cookies are awesome. Like there's no way I wouldn't have eaten, but I would have just joined you. I'm glad I wasn't up at four o'clock in the morning. So I totally get it. And I also can see the guilt in your face and how frustrating that must feel.

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588.702 - 606.289 Peter Bregman

I also know that you can make different decisions and do it differently if you want, because I've seen you do that in the past also. And do you want to think about this together? Do you want to think this through together? And so it's express empathy, express confidence, and then ask permission to engage in the conversation. That's the first step.

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607.25 - 613.795 Mike Carruthers

And so it would seem that if the answer is no, if permission is not granted, that's pretty much the end of that.

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614.735 - 635.213 Peter Bregman

And in the case of my daughter, which is why I brought this particular example up, in the case of my daughter, she said, no, I don't want to talk about it. And this is what's really important. That's her call. So I said, okay, no problem. And then I said, if you ever want to talk about it, I'm happy to talk about it with you. But I gave her the power.

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636.304 - 659.802 Peter Bregman

Later that afternoon, she came back to me with the confidence that it was up to her to say, hey, and a little distance from the situation and from her own shame around it and said, hey, can we talk about it? I kind of do want to talk about it with you, but I want to stop. Whenever I want to stop, you have to stop. And I said, that's fine. You're totally in control of this. This is for you.

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660.663 - 679.955 Peter Bregman

The second step is to identify an energizing outcome. So when there's a problem, when we're giving someone feedback, when we're telling them we want them to change, it's often de-energizing. We're basically telling them this thing they're doing is bad. People don't like to sink into problems. People get very narrow-minded around problems. Their energy gets sucked out.

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680.675 - 705.766 Peter Bregman

So the first thing you do is you say, what is the outcome you want that would actually be exciting to you? So that's step two. The negation of the problem, meaning if the outcome were just, I don't want this problem, it's I don't want to eat so much sugar, right? That's not very inspiring. So my next question is, for the sake of what? Like, what do you hope not eating sugar will give you?

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706.346 - 729.245 Peter Bregman

The answer became... I'm an athlete and I want to think and act like an athlete. I'm a skier. I'm an ice skater. I want to do a double axle. I need the right strength to weight ratio to do that. So think about how much more inspiring it is to have an outcome that says, I want to act and be an athlete as opposed to I want to stop eating sugar.

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729.805 - 754.026 Peter Bregman

One is just depressing and the other is sort of exciting. Okay, so now that's step two. So we've got this energizing outcome. So step three is what is the opportunity that's hidden in the problem? Because we still have a problem. It's great that you want to be an athlete, but you still have this problem of eating too much sugar. So then the question is, what's the opportunity there?

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754.506 - 758.028 Peter Bregman

And after asking certain questions, we get to the point that

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758.949 - 781.979 Peter Bregman

actually the reason i'm eating that sugar is because i'm exhausted and it's you know in this particular case it was four in the morning and i was exhausted but in general i work myself too hard i push myself so hard and sugar gives me this burst of energy well all right that's interesting so the opportunity that you find hidden in the problem of eating too much sugar is rest

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783.217 - 801.702 Peter Bregman

is like, I need to rest. And by the way, an athlete, like probably the most important thing that you can do for yourself as an athlete is to rest. So now we've got this outcome of an athlete and we've got the opportunity, which is I need to find more rest when I am yearning for sugar.

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802.362 - 810.425 Peter Bregman

That is a sign that I'm overtired and that I need to rest and I need to build rest into my life and I need to build rest into my schedule.

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811.445 - 839.6 Peter Bregman

and then that once we figure that out now we're up to the fourth step which is to plan specifically what am i going to do by when how am i going to do it and that plan is an experiment so it doesn't have to be perfect it doesn't have to be right we don't necessarily need to know that you will solve this 100 this week but we want to know that you can choose some action that you can do that will reflect movement towards the solution towards the outcome that you want to achieve

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840.615 - 864.654 Mike Carruthers

So clearly in a situation like that, the person you're trying to change has to value what you have to say. In this case, your daughter obviously is going to value what her father has to say, but that isn't always the case. People have varying feelings about the people in their life who are trying to change them and may not respect what they have to say or advice they have to offer.

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865.39 - 882.873 Peter Bregman

So here's the thing. There is no point in this process where I am telling her what to do or giving her advice. I'm engaging with her in thinking about it and asking certain questions that always keep her in control. It's her change. It's her choice.

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883.993 - 892.855 Mike Carruthers

What about the momentum of this? It seems like you could have this conversation with your daughter, but a week later, there might be another plate of cookies again.

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894.073 - 912.906 Peter Bregman

Exactly. So it's a great point, Michael. And that's why step four is the plan that says, I'm confident that I'm going to follow through on this, but it's not necessarily going to solve the whole thing. It's an experiment. I don't know if it's going to work or not. I just care that you're going to follow through on something that looks a little different.

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913.506 - 929.417 Peter Bregman

Let's get together again in a week and see how it's going. No shame with failure. That's just part of the process. We're scientists here. We're experimenting. We don't know what the solution is. about how to get better as opposed to just, you know, where we started, which was me criticizing you.

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930.657 - 950.09 Mike Carruthers

What about though, when you're in a situation with someone and let's just change the nature of the conversation, you walk in your daughter's eating the last cookie of this plate of cookies that she's been up till, till four in the morning and she doesn't see a problem with it. Why don't you just get off her back?

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950.868 - 973.903 Peter Bregman

So I think that that is absolutely her choice in a sense. This will not work with everybody in every situation because in order for people to change, they need four things. They need ownership, they need independent capability, they need emotional courage, and they need resilience, future-proofing when it gets hard. They need those four things.

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973.943 - 995.824 Peter Bregman

Emotional courage is the willingness to feel hard things. We could build all of those things. But if ultimately she says, I don't care. I'm happy with eating those cookies. I don't really care what my weight is. I'm not so interested in being an athlete. I don't really care. I'm good. So you have to realize that when you want other people to change and you want to help them change,

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996.974 - 1017.937 Peter Bregman

You show up as an ally to support them, but it's not going to be a, and you could predispose them to it. You can open them to the possibility of making the change. You could support them in making the change. You could give them ideas and ways of approaching it. But ultimately, it's going to be their call if they decide they don't want to.

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1018.7 - 1041.38 Mike Carruthers

I'm speaking with Peter Bregman, and we're talking about how to change other people. Peter is a well-respected consultant and coach and author, and the name of his book is You Can Change Other People. If I asked you what's one thing you'd like to do right now to improve yourself, your health, your well-being, I suspect near the top of that list is drop some weight.

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1041.94 - 1066.172 Mike Carruthers

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1066.932 - 1094.365 Mike Carruthers

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That's F-O-R-H-E-R-S dot com slash S-Y-S-K for your personalized weight loss treatment options. ForHERS dot com slash S-Y-S-K. HERS weight loss is not available everywhere. Compounded products are not FDA approved or verified for safety, effectiveness, or quality. Prescription required. Restrictions apply. Wegovi and Ozempic are not compounded. How much do you spend on wireless service?

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1206.451 - 1230.196 Mike Carruthers

Additional taxes, fees, and restrictions apply. See Mint Mobile for details. So, Peter, so far we've used this example of you and your daughter, but that kind of relationship is a very close relationship, and as your daughter, she respects you and cares about what you think, I imagine. So, what about, though, in a work situation where you've got somebody who needs to change?

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1230.276 - 1242.303 Mike Carruthers

Maybe they're a member of the team, and... But they don't see a problem. They're hard to align with and be an ally for to solve a problem if they don't see the problem.

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1243.084 - 1269.912 Peter Bregman

So change is one thing. Boundaries and consequences for how you operate as a team is another. So Alan Mulally, who was the CEO of Ford for the turnaround in 2008, and before then he was the CEO of Boeing during September 11th. I mean, he's an unbelievable leader. And he was amazing at this. Whereas what he would do is he would say, these are the standards.

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1270.213 - 1290.517 Peter Bregman

And by the way, when he, just to give you an example, when he turned around Ford, Ford was losing billions and he turned it around so they were making billions. And this was during the recession when everybody else was taking bailouts. And he made that turnaround with essentially exactly the same team. There was a turnover of one person.

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1291.017 - 1316.703 Peter Bregman

But otherwise, the same 16 people who were driving Ford into the ground rescued Ford, right? So he changed them. He changed what they were doing. And he had a view of creating a certain set of boundaries. This is how we act on the team. These are my expectations. If someone wasn't fulfilling their expectations, he would say to them, that's okay. That's really your call.

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1317.043 - 1337.972 Peter Bregman

It's your choice whether you do this or not. There's nothing wrong with you for deciding to act differently than I'm stating that we're going to act. But you just can't do that here. I will help you leave well. It's your call. The one person who left, he had this conversation with and they left. Another person he had this conversation with and they decided to stay and change.

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1338.973 - 1359.143 Peter Bregman

But when you're working in a system, when you're working in a team, it is completely valid to set up clear standards of how we operate and hold people to it and then support them in changing if they want to. And if they don't change, then that's okay too, but there may not be a place for them on the team.

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1360.443 - 1375.087 Mike Carruthers

I wonder what it is that if people want to change online, why they need somebody else to help them change, why they need that ally? What happens there that people just don't do it on their own?

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1375.947 - 1392.18 Peter Bregman

I love that you asked that question. The clients that I work with are not remedial. I'm working with the top CEOs in the top companies. They are incredibly successful people. They're not people with tons of problems. Then the question is, well, why do they need me?

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1393.206 - 1409.831 Peter Bregman

And the answer is when you are stuck in a problem or stuck in a rut or stuck in a problem or a habit or a challenge that you're not getting over, you cannot think your way out of it with your current capability because you're in it.

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1410.251 - 1429.14 Peter Bregman

You need, you know, if you're struggling in water, think of if you're like drowning in water and you can't swim, like you still need an arm to reach out and pull you out of the water. That arm is really important. So you don't have to be a brilliant person with all of the solutions already to help people.

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1429.56 - 1438.865 Peter Bregman

You just have to help them through a process where a different mind is thinking about their problem with them and helps them to see things they can't see otherwise.

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1439.892 - 1451.003 Mike Carruthers

Yeah, well, that makes perfect sense that, you know, you're too close to the problem. It's your problem. It's always easier to help other people. It's always easier to solve somebody else's problem than your own.

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1451.852 - 1466.739 Peter Bregman

A hundred percent. And that's true for me. I've honed this process over 30 years of doing this, and I still need someone to think through the problems with me. I can't think, even though I know the process better than anybody, I still need someone to help me through it.

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1467.479 - 1476.283 Mike Carruthers

How do you start this process? How do you approach someone who you would like to see change and get them to buy into this?

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1477.458 - 1502.667 Peter Bregman

So the most important step, the sort of turning the light on step is that first step of shifting from a critic to an ally. So when you really shift from this sense of, I care about you and I care about this and I'm not coming at this from anger or frustration, but I'm coming at this as someone who wants to help if it's helpful to you. If it's not helpful to you, it's not a problem either.

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1503.547 - 1529.162 Peter Bregman

that that approach as a as an ally versus a critic is the thing that switches you know kind of switches the light to say yeah i would i i have the control and i'd be willing to talk about it it certainly puts your defenses down i guess because if if you know if somebody comes to you as a critic you get defensive and you know off we go but this way there's nothing to be defensive over Yeah.

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1529.302 - 1549.23 Peter Bregman

And if they say no, they don't want to talk about it with you. Your acceptance of that no reinforces that they have the control. And what they realize, what they know, and what often happens is they will then come back to you, like I described with my daughter, because you're not threatening to them anymore. Like something has changed and they know, well, you know what?

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1549.351 - 1557.374 Peter Bregman

I really do want to get better at this. And actually, here's someone who is willing to talk to me about it. They're probably my best bet. And I didn't feel judged by them.

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1557.944 - 1575.342 Mike Carruthers

Well, yeah, that's a kind of a good way to feather the nest there and make it so that that conversation goes so much better. But I think you have to be very careful not to slip back into critic once the conversation starts. Seems like that would be very easy to do if you're not careful.

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1576.666 - 1593.497 Peter Bregman

100%, 100%. It is very, very tempting. You really have to keep reminding yourself, I'm here in support of them. It's not about me. I'm here in support of them. And yeah, that's really critical.

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1594.638 - 1603.164 Mike Carruthers

But it does get back to the idea that you can't change people who don't want to be changed. You can't solve a problem that the person doesn't think exists.

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1604.386 - 1621.589 Peter Bregman

Yeah, and I think the real focus then is to sort of say, what is that outcome that we're trying to go to? So when you shift to the outcome and you're no longer talking about the problem, then you're in a more interesting, positive, engaged conversation.

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1622.009 - 1641.984 Peter Bregman

It's actually one of the things I always suggest to leaders that I'm coaching, which is if you're disappointed with someone's behavior and they've made a big mistake, if you go back and say, what were you thinking? What were you thinking in this when you decided to do this? That is a setup for a disaster of a conversation. And the reason...

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1642.845 - 1653.596 Peter Bregman

is because they're going to tell you what they were thinking. It obviously wasn't smart thinking, but they're going to tell you what they were thinking. They're going to answer your question. And that's going to sound defensive. And you're going to see the holes in it because it obviously didn't work.

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1653.656 - 1675.158 Peter Bregman

And then you're going to get mad and then they're going to get defensive and it's just going to go back. And instead, I always suggest you say, instead of saying, you know, what, what were you thinking or what you say, what would you do differently next time? So now you've gone from a defensive, shameful conversation to one of hope and opportunity and energy.

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1675.638 - 1700.598 Mike Carruthers

When I think about trying to get someone else to change, I've always thought of it more of as a, you know, I'm right, you're wrong conversation. kind of problem, that you need to do this because I said so. And what you're talking about is a very different approach that aligns the parties and probably has a lot better chance of success. Peter Bregman has been my guest.

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1700.618 - 1712.125 Mike Carruthers

He is a consultant and coach and author. The name of his book is You Can Change Other People, and you can find a link to his book at Amazon in the show notes. Thank you, Peter. Appreciate the insight.

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1712.842 - 1714.683 Peter Bregman

Excellent. A lot of fun, Michael. Thanks so much.

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1873.086 - 1891.715 Mike Carruthers

How often have you heard people make a claim about something and say, but it's scientifically proven. There's real science here. Often it involves food, nutrition, or some other health claim that must be true because of the science. Well, not so fast.

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1892.486 - 1920.164 Mike Carruthers

Here to give us all a better understanding about what is and isn't science, and how that word science gets misused in order to mislead, is Dr. Joe Schwartz. He's director of McGill University's Office for Science and Society. He's the author of several books. He's been a guest here before, and his latest book is called Superfoods, Silkworms, and Spandex, Science and Pseudoscience in Everyday Life.

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1920.545 - 1935.484 Mike Carruthers

Hey Joe, welcome back. Merry Christmas. Hi, Michael. So let's start with superfoods, because I hear that expression a lot that, you know, blueberries are a superfood or, you know, pick your food, but that a lot of foods are labeled superfoods.

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1936.085 - 1970.285 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

What is a superfood? an expression that i dislike even though i used it in the title of the book and i don't like it because no food really merits being labeled as an angel or a devil you know as a superfood because it suggests that it has some sort of health quality and usually there's a lot of hype in in there now Obviously, food is very, very important in terms of health.

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1970.305 - 1994.738 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

There's no question about that. We are constructed of the food that we eat, right? I mean, food is the only raw material that ever goes into our body. So we are indeed made of the food that we eat. And, you know, Hippocrates supposedly 2,000 years ago said, let thy food be thy medicine. Although, frankly, I've never found any concrete evidence that he ever said that, but he could have.

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1994.878 - 2025.727 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

It's much reported in the literature. So diet is certainly important. And go back to the Ebers Papyrus that was written 1500 BC, suggested already that half an onion and a froth of beer is a delightful remedy against death. Well, that's an overstatement. But of course, since that time, we've had many, many allegations of, you know, there being foods that were deemed to be especially healthy.

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2026.267 - 2051.031 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

Sylvester Graham gave us the Graham cracker, you know, high fiber food. Kellogg regaled us with stories about the health benefits of yogurt. Today, of course, there's a whole collage of foods that are labeled in the popular press as superfoods, ranging from olive oil to blueberries. What I point out,

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2052.006 - 2063.494 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

is that while certainly there are diets that are healthy and diets that are unhealthy, it is a mistake to label any single food as that.

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2064.214 - 2081.426 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

And that's why, you know, whenever students or members of the public ask me to kind of have a look at their diet and evaluate it, I say the only way we can do that is if they keep a diary in which they write down everything that they eat, including amounts that they eat for several weeks, then we can have a look.

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2082.226 - 2108.987 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

Because, you know, it's possible to eat blueberries every day, which actually I do try to do. It's possible to do that and still have a terrible diet. And it's possible to never eat blueberries and still have a good diet. So it's the overall components of the diet that will determine whether it is healthy or less than healthy. And that's why I don't like the idea of superfoods.

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2109.467 - 2114.571 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

So I use it in the title so, you know, I can discuss all of these nuances.

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2115.112 - 2127.001 Mike Carruthers

So talk about this term biobase. We hear this a lot about fuels like, oh, we need more biobased fuels because that's better for the environment and we're going to run out of fossil fuels. What about that?

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2127.757 - 2152.827 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

Right. Well, we will run out of fossil fuels. That's a given because the earth is of a finite size and, you know, we only have so much in terms of raw materials. I don't think we have to worry about running out of fossil fuels within our lifetime, but eventually it is going to happen. So there is a search for alternatives. Bio, of course, comes from the Greek word meaning life.

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2153.728 - 2178.036 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

So we're looking for substances that are replaceable, usually because they are isolated from crops that can be grown. We cannot manufacture any petroleum, right? I mean, that's a given amount that we have in the earth. which is really the end result of the degradation of vegetable matter and animal matter over millennia.

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2178.596 - 2209.919 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

So we're not going to replenish petroleum, but we can grow crops from which we can isolate useful components. So we can grow corn, we can grow canola from where we can extract oils, and those oils can be used as fuel. Those would then be termed as bio-based. That is certainly a legitimate endeavor. For example, we are already doing that to some extent.

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2210.78 - 2237.322 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

As you may know, gasoline can have up to 10% ethanol content. And that ethanol can come from corn because the glucose in corn can be fermented to produce alcohol. So that would be biofuel. And then, of course, we also talk about biodegradable substances. And that is also a very important concept in terms of environmentalism.

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2238.163 - 2263.835 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

because we don't want substances building up in the environment that will stay there forever. We would like them to decompose into innocuous substances. So there's a lot of work on that as well, especially when it comes to plastics. Plastics have been demonized recently. And there's, of course, some legitimacy to that.

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2263.915 - 2292.988 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

We don't like to see plastic bags fluttering in the breeze or hanging in trees. We don't want to hear about this giant plastic garbage patch in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. We don't want to hear about nanoplastics, which are the end product of the badgering by sunlight and waves of plastics that get into the ocean and which eventually end up in our body, right?

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2293.188 - 2325.31 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

We don't want micro nanoplastics ending up in our body. So the question is to produce substances that are biodegradable, meaning that they will break down. And we can do that with certain plastics. Polylactic acid, for example, is made from corn, and it is biodegradable. However, there's a but. There always is a but in science. We tend to give with one arm and take away with the other.

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2326.011 - 2344.921 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

So it would be great to have the one-armed scientist who only gives us good things. The fact is that these biodegradable plastics are biodegradable under ideal conditions, which usually means some sort of industrial, commercial composting facility.

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2346.042 - 2364.323 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

And I can tell you that I've done an experiment where I have one of these plastic cups, the polylactic acid cups that are biodegradable, and I've left it out in my backyard and now for two years. And I can tell you that it has not degraded at all. It looks the same as it looked then.

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2365.477 - 2377.063 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

But if it were present in a compost pile that is constantly being turned all the time and where the microbes are monitored, where the temperature is monitored, then it would degrade.

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2378.003 - 2393.51 Mike Carruthers

Talk about the science of old book smell. Anybody who has opened an old book, maybe in a library or something that hasn't been opened in a long time, there's a very distinctive old book smell. And you talk about that.

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2393.79 - 2424.958 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

What is that smell? If you've ever opened an old book, I mean, we're talking at least decades old, probably a book that has not been stored very well, that has been exposed to mold or fungi, mostly humidity, you can develop a variety of smells. And that originates from the breakdown of the cellulose, which of course is the fundamental building block of paper. and also from the infusion of fungi.

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2425.258 - 2449.666 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

Fungi are everywhere. They're present in the air. They're microscopic, so you don't see them. But when they get into a book and especially aided and abetted by moisture, they will start to use the cellophane or the cellulose that is the essential part of paper as food. And when they digest that, they crank out some pretty smelly compounds.

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2450.799 - 2454.28 Mike Carruthers

What's the science behind duct tape or the science about duct tape?

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2455.441 - 2484.914 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

Duct tape is fascinating, of course, in many ways. First of all, the name. It actually comes from a Dutch word, and it has nothing to do with ducks. It has nothing to do with D-U-C-K. And it turns out that... During the Second World War, ammunition boxes were sealed with a type of paper tape, but that paper tape would tear very easily.

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2485.314 - 2508.844 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

So when soldiers in the heat of the battle had to open these ammunition boxes, the tape would tear and they wouldn't be able to open the box. And that precipitated a search to find a tape that would be hardy, but that would easily be removed without tearing. And that's what gave birth to what we now call the duct tape.

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2509.424 - 2535.505 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

Now, one interesting connection there is that that tape originally was made with a backing of a rubber adhesive and some polyethylene that made it waterproof. And in between those was a sandwich, the type of fabric that was referred to as cotton duck. That was the name of a type of fabric. So that also is one of the reasons that people have used the word duck tape, D-U-C-K.

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2538.027 - 2565.222 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

And there are all kinds of uses, you know, as you can imagine for duct tape. It saved the lives of the Apollo 13 astronauts where a catastrophe was averted because the astronauts were able to rig up a contraption to remove carbon dioxide from the air that they exhale. And they used duct tape in order to do that.

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2566.109 - 2577.037 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

You know, it's been said that WD-40 is what you need to make things go, and duct tape is what you need to make things stop. We hear a lot today about PFAS.

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2577.437 - 2590.087 Mike Carruthers

I mean, I get press releases all the time about, you know, this is the end of the world kind of thing. And I think people don't really know much about it or really know how big a concern it is. So clear that up.

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2591.488 - 2625.528 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

PFAS stands for perfluoroalkyl substances. which are really a family of compounds that have some very interesting properties that are commercially useful because they make substances water-resistant and oil-resistant. So PFAS would be used, for example, in the making of rain gear. It is used in firefighting foams because it can very effectively blanket a fire and seal out oxygen.

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2627.234 - 2653.32 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

It is used in the manufacture of Teflon. It has a myriad of uses. Your pizza box in which your pizza is delivered. You don't want that box to be greasy or wet. So it is treated with these chemicals. Now, the problem is that whatever makes these so useful also creates a problem.

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2654.434 - 2678.533 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

The carbon-fluorine bond is a very, very strong bond, and it is responsible for all the beneficial properties of these compounds, but it also means that they are very difficult to break down. So these are not biodegradable. These substances build up in the environment. Now, of course, then the question comes up, so what?

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2679.571 - 2700.361 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

Well, once we find that they build up in the environment, we start looking for them everywhere, including in our urine and including in our blood. And it turns out that they are there. It is, however, always important to point out that the presence of a chemical cannot be equated to the presence of risk. That's a different question.

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2701.022 - 2720.349 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

So just because they're present in our urine and our blood doesn't mean that they're creating some sort of havoc in our body, but it does mean that it requires further exploration. And that further exploration has been done. And it turns out that there are links to elevated blood pressure,

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2721.129 - 2750.542 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

to greater risk of kidney disease, to greater risk of diabetes when there is an excessive amount of these chemicals in the bloodstream, which unfortunately can happen because they are so widely used in so many commercial items. However, the real problem is that they get into the environment not from the products that we tend to use on a daily basis, but from their manufacture.

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2751.463 - 2773.964 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

So it's not the pizza box from which we eat the pizza that has transferred some trace amount of PFAS into the pizza that gets it into our body. That's not the major problem. The major problem that these chemicals are manufactured on a gigantic scale around the globe because they are so much in demand.

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2774.764 - 2797.771 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

And when you're manufacturing things on such a large scale, it's impossible to prevent their entry into the environment. So they get into the water, they get into the air, they get into the soil. And from there, they get into our body because we drink water, we eat food, we breathe air. So really the only way to try to battle this problem is

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2799.671 - 2828.844 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

is to cut down on the overall production of these substances. But that means that you've got to find replacements. And right now, there are no substances that can do the job as well as these PFAS. However, I think in this context, it also needs to be mentioned that we are exposed to literally millions of compounds on a daily basis.

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2829.505 - 2852.738 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

Chemical abstracts, which is a service that basically lists all known chemicals, there are over 160 million compounds. chemicals that are now listed. Now, of course, we're not going to encounter all of those regularly, but we certainly encounter thousands of chemicals on a daily basis.

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2853.198 - 2882.109 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

Just to give you an example, when you drink a cup of coffee, you're consuming over a thousand compounds, over a thousand compounds, including some like caffeic acid or furfural, which are known carcinogens. Now, if we label something as a carcinogen, it means that we know that at some dose in some animal or in some laboratory trial, it causes cancer. It does not mean that it does so in humans.

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2882.149 - 2897.934 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

That's a common misconception that people make. They think that if something is labeled as a carcinogen, it means that it causes cancer in humans. No, it just means that it has the potential to cause cancer. Now, we know that coffee does not cause cancer. We know this.

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2898.534 - 2924.708 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

If coffee did cause cancer, we would know because there's enough coffee consumed by enough people around the world that this would reveal itself epidemiologically. So here we have a situation where we have known carcinogens present in the coffee, but of course the whole coffee as an entity doesn't cause cancer. Why? Because the amounts of the carcinogens in there are in very, very small doses.

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2925.188 - 2929.611 Dr. Joe Schwarcz

And coffee also contains some compounds like antioxidants, which can mitigate cancer.

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2930.233 - 2954.503 Mike Carruthers

Well, great, Joe. It's always a pleasure to have you on. I enjoy listening to your scientific explanations because they're unique and they make you think. I've been speaking with Dr. Joe Schwartz. He is director of McGill University's Office for Science and Society. He's the author of several books. His latest is called Superfoods, Silkworms and Spandex, Science and Pseudoscience in Everyday Life.

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2955.083 - 2980.055 Mike Carruthers

And there's a link to that book at Amazon in the show notes if you would like to buy it. Thank you for coming on again, Joe. Always a pleasure. I appreciate that very much. Thank you. You've probably heard the theory that having a pet dog is somehow good for your health. And you may have wondered, well, how? Like, how does that work? Well, here's one way it works.

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2980.716 - 3005.316 Mike Carruthers

Scientists took a look at 421 heart attack victims, some dog owners, some not dog owners. They found the dog owners were far more likely to survive the heart attack than the non-dog owners. Dog owners are less obese and more active physically and socially. Another study found that pet owners have to go to the doctor less often than people with no pet.

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3006.097 - 3028.607 Mike Carruthers

The study looked at kids, too, and those kids with pets had stronger comforting and empathy skills and a better sense of overall well-being. So those are just some examples of how having a pet dog is good for your health. And that is something you should know. I assume you've enjoyed this podcast since you made it all the way to the end of the episode.

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3029.227 - 3048.703 Mike Carruthers

And so since you did enjoy it, perhaps you could tell someone you know and ask them to give a listen and help us grow our audience. I'm Micah Brothers. Thanks for listening today to Something You Should Know. There is a fascinating and unique podcast I'd like you to check out, as I have. It's called Only One in the Room.

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3049.324 - 3072.806 Mike Carruthers

A few years back, Laura Cathcart Robbins attended a writer's retreat where out of 600 attendees, she was the only black one. So later she wrote about her experience and the article went viral because people understand what it feels like to be the only one in the room. Only one in the room is for anyone who has ever felt alone in a room full of people. I bet you've had that feeling.

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3073.55 - 3094.313 Mike Carruthers

Listen and you'll hear guests like Hilary Phelps, sister of Olympian Michael Phelps, sharing her story of her secret addiction. Former Fox News reporter Christine O'Donnell, who was fired after one of her social media posts was taken out of context. Only One in the Room was named a top podcast by Reader's Digest, The Manual, and Bustle Magazines.

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3094.954 - 3107.181 Mike Carruthers

Every week, Laura and her co-host Scott Slaughter invite you to join them for an hour and lose yourself in someone's only one story. Check out Only One in the Room wherever you get your podcasts.

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3108.001 - 3120.786 Eric Peterson

Merry Christmas, everybody. My name is Eric Peterson. I'm here with my good buddy. Danny Jordan. And we are the co-hosts of the Christmas... Let me try that again. I... Merry Christmas, everybody. My name is Eric Peterson. I'm here with my good buddy.

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3120.987 - 3137.392 Danny Jordan

Danny Jordan. And we are the hosts of Christmas Countdown Show. We're so thrilled to be bringing the merriment to you all this holiday season. It's going to be awesome. It's going to be massively merry, gigantically jolly, fantastically festive. As some people might say, Eric, we are all about alliterations and we are all about Christmas spirit.

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3137.432 - 3153.475 Danny Jordan

On Christmas Countdown, we love to count down our top 10 favorite things related to the holiday season. That could be food, movies, music, everything that we all love about this massively merry good time. So wherever you get your podcasts, make sure you click that subscribe button. Eric, are you ready? I am ready. And we hope that you are too.

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3153.815 - 3159.836 Eric Peterson

Merry Christmas, everybody. Let's go. It should be like, let's go. Ho, ho, ho. Yeah, it should be. Yeah.

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