LDS psychology of belief
Monday, February 16, 2026
planted vs cut flower civilization
Wednesday, February 11, 2026
What makes kids successful
https://x.com/mindsetmachine/status/2021699126577037523?s=20
Here's the transcript from the video in the X post:
"Do you know what the strongest predictor that a child will succeed as an adult is?
A 75-year Harvard study that tracked people from childhood into their 80s found one specific thing predicted a successful life that holds together when the road gets rough.
What they found wasn't on anyone's parenting checklist, it wasn't grades, it wasn't IQ or talent and it wasn't activities. Most parents are doing the exact opposite. We pile on activities sign them up for tutoring and then we lie awake wondering we're not doing enough.
The study found that kids doing chores by preschool were 12 times more likely to be financially stable by their mid-20s.
Chores build executive function, the brain's ability to plan start and finish even when motivation is gone.
Here's why that matters. Achievement teaches kids perform while someone else evaluates them. Contribution teaches them to function when no one is watching. What happened because of them, capability lived in their body not just heads. It builds someone who fixes problems when they see it. Someone can handle hard. Builds agency.
You want kids to see the overflowing trash and take out without being asked.
Create a culture where contribution is norm.
Signal that trash is full or groceries are in the car. State problem but don't assign task and let connect problem with action.
Small acts of ownership practiced daily compound into a lifetime of taking initiative.
And that's the difference between someone who waits to be managed and someone who takes ownership of the world."
Fractionation, social media shorts, and level of suggestibility
Fractionation is a well-established technique in hypnosis used primarily as a powerful way to deepen trance (the relaxed, focused hypnotic state) and increase suggestibility.
Core Definition and How It Works
Fractionation involves repeatedly guiding a person into a hypnotic state (or a state of deep relaxation/focus), then briefly bringing them out of it, and immediately putting them back in again. Each cycle typically makes the subsequent trance:
- Deeper
- Faster to achieve
- More profound
This happens because the brain learns the pattern through repetition—it's a form of conditioning or "rote learning" for entering trance. The contrast between the "up" (alert/waking) and "down" (trance/relaxed) states strengthens the neurological pathway, so the subject drops in more easily and deeply each time.
The simplest classic method:
- Induce trance (e.g., via progressive relaxation, eye fixation, or any induction).
- Bring the person out (e.g., "Open your eyes, wide awake now").
- Immediately re-induce (e.g., "And now close your eyes and go even deeper").
- Repeat 3–6+ times, often suggesting "twice as deep" or "deeper than before" each re-entry.
Many hypnotists (like Mike Mandel, Igor Ledochowski, or stage performers) use this as one of the most reliable deepeners because it works quickly and reliably for most people.
Why It Works (Psychological/Neurological Basis)
- Contrast and conditioning — The brain notices the shift between states and gets better at making the transition.
- Habit formation — Repeated entry/exit trains the nervous system to access trance more efficiently (similar to building a muscle memory).
- Increased suggestibility — Deeper trance states generally make a person more open to suggestions, and fractionation amplifies this effect dramatically after just a few cycles.
Modern/Non-Clinical Applications (e.g., Social Media)
In recent discussions (especially around influence and behavioral psychology), people have drawn parallels between classic fractionation and how platforms like TikTok, Instagram Reels, or YouTube Shorts operate:
- Content alternates rapidly between emotional "highs" (cute animals, heartwarming stories → dopamine/positive emotion) and "lows" (shocking news, fights, drama, anxiety-provoking clips → stress/cortisol).
- This creates an emotional rollercoaster: up → down → up → down.
- After several cycles (often 4–5), users enter a heightened state of suggestibility or reduced critical thinking—exactly when ads or sponsored content appear.
This isn't literal clinical hypnosis (no consent, no formal induction), but the emotional fractionation mimics the pattern, making the feed addictive and increasing vulnerability to influence or impulse buys. Experts like Chase Hughes have highlighted this as a reason short-form video can feel "brainwashing"-like or terrifying in its effectiveness.
In summary, fractionation is a straightforward yet extremely potent hypnosis tool for deepening trance through repeated state-shifting. In therapeutic or stage hypnosis, it's used intentionally and ethically. When applied analogously to media consumption, it explains part of why doomscrolling or endless swiping feels so hard to stop.
_____
X post:
My wife has the passcode to unlock whatever it's called—screen time, the iPhone screen. I'm a brainwashing expert and am personally terrified of short-form social media like
https://x.com/TheLizVariant/status/2021415530893291687?s=20
Here's the transcript of the video from the X post. I've compiled it from the extracted subtitles for clarity, maintaining the original spoken words as closely as possible. There are two speakers: the primary one (appearing to be Chase Hughes, based on the context) and occasional interjections from another person (likely the interviewer). I've noted approximate timestamps and distinguished speakers where evident.
[0:00] Primary Speaker: They use a hypnosis technique—not just TikTok, this is everybody—called fractionation, which is where you bring somebody up and... like, so like you'll see one of those videos about grandpa holding his grandbaby, you know, that makes you almost cry. Have you ever cried watching a 60-second Instagram reel?
[0:19] Interviewer: Yeah, I have too, man.
[0:21] Primary Speaker: And I feel stupid, I'm by myself, yeah, watching a 60-second video. But... but like, they'll pull you down into that, then they'll punch you back up. Like two videos later, and you'll start to notice this—two videos later, it will be a riot, someone robbing a store, fist fight, a car going way too fast flipping off the road, an airplane almost crashing. So they get you up and down, and up and down. The more I can do that—this is proven...
[0:56] ...this in the 1960s—that increases your level of suggestibility like tenfold. The more I can get you up and down, up and down. And what happens after you get like four or five cycles of up-and-down? You get an ad.
[1:16] And it's so reliable. And I didn't realize it was happening until my wife said, "Why are you buying stuff off Instagram, like once a week now?" And then stuff that was on Instagram ads... And then I finally set time limits on those apps.
[1:39] Interviewer: You set time limits? Yes, yes.
[1:42] Primary Speaker: My wife has the passcode to unlock whatever it's called—screen time, the iPhone screen. I'm a brainwashing expert and am personally terrified of short-form social media like...
The video ends abruptly there (around 1:59). Note that the subtitles include some text overlays (e.g., "THEY," "GRANDBABY," "RIOT") which emphasize key words but aren't part of the spoken dialogue.
Tuesday, February 10, 2026
Life is unfair—get used to it.
Different brain areas are genetically identical to one parent
https://x.com/newstart_2024/status/2020969622095151462?s=20
Transcript from the X Video (Andrew Huberman on Modern Wisdom podcast with Chris Williamson)
Andrew Huberman: You're still gonna get — absolutely. You're still gonna get genomic DNA from mom, right? Those 23 chromosomes.
You're gonna get genomic DNA from mom and from dad. What's really a mind-bender (no pun intended) is there's a woman whose laboratory is at Harvard named Catherine Dulac, who is a luminary in the field of neuroscience.
She did some beautiful experiments showing that different brain areas are genetically identical to mom or to dad — even in you and me.
You have entire brain areas that are 100% the genes from dad... and 100% from mom in other areas.
It's a myth that every cell is a 50-50 mix of genes from mom (independent of the mitochondrial DNA piece — we're talking genomic DNA here).
They did marking studies where they color-code cells from mom or dad, but the more convincing evidence comes from Y-chromosome genes or disease mutations. You see cases where one brain area carries the mutation and another doesn't — even though it came through the dad on the Y chromosome. It should be everywhere, but it's not.
There are these little territories/domains that are essentially purely mom or purely dad.
And they correspond to entire brain structures that control things like hypothalamic function — there's a condition called hyperphagia (kids who can't stop eating and become severely obese) that shows up because specific hypothalamic regions are 100% from one parent.
Human genetics is way more complicated than basic Mendelian stuff. You get hypomorphs (reduced gene expression) layered on top.
So when people say "you clearly got that from your mom" or "that's all dad" — it might literally be true for specific brain functions, because entire regions can be 100% one parent.
Chris Williamson (interjecting toward the end): Yeah... much more like their dad in certain ways... much more like their mom in certain ways...
Huberman: Exactly — because we're never gonna know, but the brain is actually separated out into these parental territories.
(Video duration: ~2:21 — this is the full cleaned transcript from the clip's audio/subtitles with minor corrections for clarity; obvious OCR errors like "Duloc" → Dulac, "wide chromosome" → Y chromosome, etc. were fixed.)
planted vs cut flower civilization
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