From Hippie to Stanford: Medicine, Horses & Quantum Consciousness with Dr. Beverley Kane | Ep 36

Rupert Isaacson: Thanks for joining us.

Welcome to Live Free, Ride Free.

I'm your host, Rupert Isaacson, New
York Times bestselling author of

The Horseboy and The Long Ride Home.

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So now let's jump in.

Welcome back to Live Free, ride Free.

The process of self-actualization
takes many forms and I am

happy to have Beverly Cain, Dr.

Beverly Cain from the University of
Stanford, and she's also a doctor

and she's also a equine practitioner
and she's also many things.

And she didn't start that way.

She came to California with 35 bucks in
her pocket and living on her wits and

somehow ended up a professor of medicine
at Stanford as well as other things.

So I think that is definitely
a life story we need to hear.

And then a present day, what on earth
are you up to with these amazing life

skills that have brought you this far?

So, stand by my friends for doctor.

Beverly Cain, thank you so
much for coming on the show.

Please tell us who you
are and what you do.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Thank you, Rupert.

We have a little bit of a history and
it's, it's so nice to be on your program.

So as you said, I came out with $35.

I actually hitchhiked out here.

Rupert Isaacson: Where
from, where did you start?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

I was based on the east
coast basically in New York.

I had been doing, at the time I was
doing a lot of anti-war activism that

it was the time of the Vietnam War.

So I was very active in
the effort to end that war.

And I, I hitchhiked out here.

My, my boyfriend was out here
and I had $35 and I had the

resources to stay for two weeks.

That was, I think 55
years ago, about 1972.

And what happened is while I
was out here, I got really sick

and I ended up in the hospital

Rupert Isaacson: I had gone to.

What did you stick with?

What did you get?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

I had an ovarian abscess.

I had, yeah, I was very,
I had a fever of 103.

And so how old were

Rupert Isaacson: you at this point?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

I was about 21.

Rupert Isaacson: Okay.

Really young for that.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Okay.

20 20, 21.

Yeah.

And so I went to the Berkeley
free Clinic with a temp of

103, ended up in the hospital.

And when I got out of the hospital,
I wanted to repay the kindness

of the Berkeley Free Clinic.

So I became a volunteer, and then I
was in their paramedic program, which

isn't the, as we think of paramedics,
it's more kind of a barefoot doctor.

It's not the people that
ride in ambulances and

through one thing in another.

I went back to school.

I had dropped out of, of college.

Dropped outta school.

I went to,

Rupert Isaacson: where were you
at school and what were you doing?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

I was at, when I dropped out, well,
I dropped out of Columbia University.

Okay.

Initially during that anti-war effort.

Rupert Isaacson: Okay.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

And so based on the East Coast.

And what had you

Rupert Isaacson: been studying?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Well, I.

Started out thinking about medicine,
but the chemistry, the couple that

taught chemistry were just these old
bitties that made it so uninteresting

that I, I minored in art history and
art and took Chinese, actually Chinese.

So you a poly brush painting
a little checkered past pa

polymath, both in two ways.

Get, okay.

Okay.

So you drop out of much
into history of art

Rupert Isaacson: and Chinese and, and
hitchhike to be an anti-war protestor in

Berkeley and then get sick and then get
healed at the free clinic in Berkeley so

you don't end up in hundreds of thousands
of dollars of debt which can happen.

Of course, everyone gets sick in America
as a young person with no insurance.

And then you decide you want to
volunteer for them to repay the kindness,

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

right?

And then I got.

A little bit more serious about
it and ended up in medical school.

Okay.

Just I, I was a little bit ambivalent
about going to medical school, but it,

the time had come and I was actually
interviewed by a man who went on to

win the Nobel Prize in biochemistry.

Great guy.

Who was that?

Who I did Michael Bishop.

I think he, I am not sure what
year he won the Nobel Prize.

It was probably 20 years after my, okay.

Rupert Isaacson: I'm gonna Google
him quickly while you talk.

Okay.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Yeah.

I think he's still alive.

Rupert Isaacson: Michael Bishop?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Michael Bishop.

Rupert Isaacson: Okay.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

So,

Rupert Isaacson: and
that was at which school?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

That was at UCSF,
university of California.

San Francisco.

Okay.

Yeah.

Very good school.

And I, I stayed with them.

I had done a lot of.

My medical school work, I did an,
a residency in family medicine, and

then I did a fellowship in ob, GYN.

Rupert Isaacson: Okay.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

And a fellow and a fellowship
in sports medicine in London.

At the London Hospital.

Rupert Isaacson: And why
did you go to London?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Because there were very few, if
any, sports medicine programs

for non-orthopedic surgeons.

There was a, a famous sports medicine
program at the, at Cleveland.

I, I guess that would be case Western in
Cleveland, but for orthopedic surgeons.

Okay.

But this fellowship in London
was for general practitioners

and family medicine people.

There were two people from
Australia, one from New Zealand,

one from Sudan and myself.

It was a wonderful, wonderful program.

We went all over the
UK to various clinics.

And when I came back, I went
into the practice of sports

medicine for a while and why

Rupert Isaacson: sports medicine,
if you'd started with oh, women's

medicine, ob, GYN and so on.

And that's what's the
jump across from there.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

I did the OB GYN fellowship because
I thought I was going to go up to

Alaska and deliver babies and, and
actually even do cesarean sections.

Rupert Isaacson: Okay.

And in American community, sorry,
in Native American communities.

Was that the idea?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Yeah, and I ended up living for, in
Alaska four year and doing a lot of

medicine at Native American clinics.

But I, I was in no way prepared to do
cesarean sections at that time, you

know, by myself or and I was really
at, in the dead of winter in Alaska.

I read a book that was absolutely life
changing, and it was by Michael Murphy,

who's one of the founders of the Esson
Institute here in Central California.

And it was called Jacob Abit, and it
was sort of a novel version of his later

huge book called The Future of the Body.

And it was about human
potentials in a somatic sense.

Not just the mind, but what the body
would be capable of at, at the time.

I think the, the one mile, the
limit was a four minute mile.

Mm-hmm.

By, I, I think a British guy actually.

Rupert Isaacson: Right.

And that stood for decades.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Yeah.

And I don't know that
it's been broken yet.

Roger and Roger Roger's,
somebody I think from, from UK.

And I, I had just been always very,
very athletic, very about the body.

And this will relate later, hopefully
to how I got into horses and how I

relate to, okay, so sports medicine.

So you, okay, got it.

So through that, but I'm
just looking at Michael

Rupert Isaacson: Bishop.

That is amazing.

He's best known for his Nobel winning
work on retroviral basically oncology.

He was the first bloke to find out
how malignant tumors are formed from

changes in the normal genes of a cell.

And it's funny, we take that
for granted now, don't we?

But I guess back in the eighties
that wasn't so well known, so.

Lucky you have someone like
that to mentor you, so you Well,

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

yeah.

He, he, he actually didn't mentor me.

He interviewed me for medical school
admission and he was the greatest guy.

I remember our conversation like
it was yesterday and it was 1974.

Rupert Isaacson: What did he say?

What stands out in the memory?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

So he told me that one has to be really
careful how we look at announcements of

medical breakthroughs and whether they're
made in the public press in the news.

He was very good friends with the
science writer for the San Francisco

Chronicle at the time, and that
that name escapes me and that I know

that person has since passed away.

But.

If you're looking at medical breakthroughs
that are announced by the people who

made them the researchers, you have
to be take it with a grain of salt

because they're going to inflate
their findings and their importance.

Yeah.

And one should trust more the reporting
in the scientific press for accuracy

and context of any medical breakthrough.

I don't think that's an issue now
with everything we're getting on the

internet, but in the pre-internet days,
there was a lot of self-aggrandizement

by medical researchers in.

Even the medical journals,
but, but also, yeah, now it's

Rupert Isaacson: almost flipped and
it's like one, one is skeptical of

what one sees in the medical journals
because half of what's more than

half of what's in there was funded
by the pharmaceutical industry.

So, you know, but that, that's seems
to have, you know, crept up on us a

little bit in the last 20, 25 years.

Yeah,

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

well there's a lot of fraud now.

Yeah.

And just this week in my newsfeed
there was an article about fraudulent

reporting in medicine and AI coming up
with falsified data and inaccurate data.

So yeah, it's a real problem.

Rupert Isaacson: What have I,

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

so yeah,

Rupert Isaacson: snake oil salesman
and yeah, use an expression

even in the virtual world.

Okay, so you end up in London?

No,

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

I ended up in London and I had a
wonderful, wonderful year there.

Just fantastic going down to.

Where is it that the, the Royal
Navy is doing The 30 meter, 33 meter

breath hold dives as an exhibition?

Just amazing the, the Royal Navy
came back to San Francisco and went

into a sports medicine practice.

I always say I was the token yuppie woman.

Doctor in a kind of, she she
practice in downtown San Francisco.

Okay.

And that was run by an
anesthesiologist who had no clue

how to manage the financial and
administrative aspects of a clinic.

So that clinic tanked, and I worked
a couple of other places, and then I

went to Stanford, taking the place of a
guy who went off to do his fellowship.

So I ended up at Stanford.

In the, technically the division of
cardiology, but it was the Stanford

Center for Research in Disease Prevention.

And a good part of my sports
medicine fellowship was preventative

medicine, was exercise physiology.

So it was about a third orthopedics,
about a third exercise physiology, and

a third of an assortment of different
topics in sports medicine, like the

Chief Medical Officer of British Airways
coming to lecture us on team, team flight

medicine, medicine for team flights.

So at Stanford, I worked on some studies
in preventive medicine that there was

a very well known study called Mr.

Fit, multiple Risk Factor intervention
Trials where we had people quit

smoking or their intake of cholesterol,
start exercising stress management.

Which I'm very involved with
now was a big part of that also.

Rupert Isaacson: Would that
have been in the eighties?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

That was 87 I started there.

Rupert Isaacson: Okay.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

And about a few years later.

Yes.

When,

Rupert Isaacson: yes.

Stress management was barely
talked about back then.

It's true.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Well, it's interesting because in the
uk, one of our, that miscellaneous third

that wasn't orthopedics or exercise
physiology, it was sports psychology.

There was a, a fairly big section on
sports psychology and dealing with stress

and performance anxiety in athletes.

Rupert Isaacson: Yeah.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

And especially top athletes.

I, I mean we worked with the,
the British Olympic team when the

Russian Olympic team came there.

So, so when those grants work.

Ran out.

We, we were funded by grants, and
when the grants ran out, I went

over and worked at Apple Computer.

Apple Computer was, had worked
with us on, in some of our studies.

Rupert Isaacson: What had they
done with you at that point?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

They, and

Rupert Isaacson: were
they looking at stress?

Stress for their workers?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

They looked at stress, exercise.

It wasn't mostly stress, it
was mostly aerobic exercise.

Aerobic and anaerobic.

So were, were they already

Rupert Isaacson: aware at
that point, apple of people

sitting too long at computers?

Why were they, why were they into it?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

It was some of that, some of that
was ergonomics and I, I ended up.

Making ergonomic house calls on some of
the PE people in the cubicles in Apple

computer, which was kind of interesting.

They were interested because
corporate fitness was just taking off.

Then the leader and pioneer in
that area was Johnson and Johnson,

and Apple wasn't too far behind
in building fitness centers.

My job there was to do a multiphasic
physical on any employee was eligible

to have a, an annual multiphasic
physical with, so they just

Rupert Isaacson: basically
wanted fit healthy employees,

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

right?

Rupert Isaacson: Yeah.

Right.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Because there's, there was
data on productivity in healthy

employees, productivity in
employees who were less stressed.

Lower blood pressure,
fewer medical problems.

Big.

There was a big quit smoking program, one.

One, one story that stands out in my mind
and my heart is there was a person there,

then he was then a guy who was very well
known in the Pascal programming world,

and then he transitioned to a, she he
had been a, was a two pack a day smoker.

And in transitioning he needed to go
on hormones and the doctors wouldn't

prescribe hormones to somebody who smoked
because there was a much higher risk

of stroke with estrogens and smoking.

And so he was highly motivated to quit.

And annually, every, every year
in November, we had this event

called the Great American Smokeout.

It's a national event where smokers.

Take a non-smoker as a partner and
the non-smoker gives up something

and the smoker gives up cigarettes.

Okay.

And so I became this person's, this,
this person had been my patient

in the, in the clinic for annual
physicals and a couple of other things.

And so I became this person's partner and
he, she very successfully gave up smoking,

got their hormones, and ended up with
long blonde hair and painted fingernails

and miniskirts and things like that.

Quite a fun story.

Rupert Isaacson: What did you give up?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Oh gosh.

Probably sugar.

Maybe sweets.

I don't remember.

I don't have a huge sweet tooth.

How long

Rupert Isaacson: were you
supposed to give it up for?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

I think it was six weeks,
30 days, six weeks.

Okay.

So not that it's still going on,
although, yeah, the Great American

Smokeout is still going on.

So I'm not sure how long, how long
the commitment is, but yeah, that

was, that was, that was really sweet.

Yeah, so I worked at Apple for almost
10 years and was, had become very

interested in medical informatics, which
is the use of computers in medicine.

Rupert Isaacson: Okay.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Because to be a little tangential
and do a little back flip.

In my teenage years I had been
really interested in computers also.

I had gone to a summer program at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology,

MIT, for computer programming
with punch cards in those days.

Okay.

And so I was always interested
in computers and I was at that

time particularly interested in
artificial intelligence in medicine.

Rupert Isaacson: Okay.

Were people even talking
about it even back then?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

This is, yeah.

This is 1987 and, and people

Rupert Isaacson: were using the
word artificial intelligence.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Oh, yeah.

Sure.

Well, well, well, Alan Touring used it.

He was probably a, a
British guy in the fifties.

Yeah.

And yeah, very famous guy.

Played in the movie by I
always call him Bander Snatch.

Cummerbund.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Rupert Isaacson: Benedict.

You know

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

who I mean?

Yeah, I do.

The really good movie, he was talking
about artificial intelligence back then.

Oh, yeah, yeah.

In the war.

Yeah.

He, he was definitely, I, I
don't know who coined the term,

but it was, he was using it.

But so, so I was interested in artificial
intelligence and medicine and Apple

had just started their AI group.

And the man who was to become my
husband, I have to get this in was

the second hire in the Apple AI group,
and we came together to plan a panel

discussion on AI in medicine in Macworld
at Macworld, which is a huge annual

Macintosh conference in San Francisco.

So when I left Apple, I went to
work for Phillips Medical Systems.

Rupert Isaacson: And
why did you leave Apple?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Why did I leave Apple?

Because I got offered this
really interesting job.

I, you know, I had been doing
mostly physicals for 10 years.

We didn't have a clinic where
I actually saw sick people.

It was just physicals and
physicals and physicals.

Got it.

And I loved the group.

We recently had a big reunion, but
I really, I wanted to do something a

little bit more challenging mentally.

Rupert Isaacson: Mm-hmm.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

And at that point, the electronic
medical record was coming into the

fore and particularly the electronic
patient record, the, the patient view

into the electronic medical record.

So Philips Medical Systems had a group
out here that was developing a patient

record and a a, actually, I think,
yeah, it was a doctor and patient

record, both views into the system.

To integrate with their radiology suites.

Phillips was, and I think still is
the leader in cardiac radiology,

radiology for cardiology.

And so that, that was a great group.

And then somehow I think
Philip put the kibosh on that.

I don't exactly remember what
happened, but then I went to a

company called WebMD, which probably
a lot of people have heard of.

Yeah.

And that, that was a terrific experience
also because we, we were also working

on the patient record, the view
into patient data and designing.

Medical record, the internet

Rupert Isaacson: was alive
and well by this point.

Right.

So you are.

Yes.

We,

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

this is, this is 2000.

Okay.

Yeah.

Yeah.

The e email, everything.

It wasn't like it is now.

There wasn't, right.

But

Rupert Isaacson: it was

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

a lot of the, the degree of,
in fact, apple, apple was

just, it was the big takeoff.

It was the big, yeah, it was,

Rupert Isaacson: yeah.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

When I left Apple, so that
was, I left Apple in 97.

Rupert Isaacson: Mm-hmm.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

And Apple,

I was one of the people that
had helped form the apple,

the internet interest group.

There were two people from the
advanced technology group and and

my husband, who they had internet.

The, the, the American military had
internet in the, in the seventies it

was called Arnet and Darpanet and had.

Internal emailing systems and kind
of like what it is today at at least

technically tech technology wise.

So, yeah.

So at WebMD we had a little artist's
colony on the floor where, you

know, we were all in cubes, but we
had the facilities people unscrew

our fluorescent lights and we all
brought these beautiful lamps.

And these were the very,
very creative people from the

apple Human Interface group.

And we did designs for the medical record
and it was just a real fun place to be.

And then WebMD, who was based
mostly on the East coast, they

decided to close their Silicon
Valley office and they moved.

They wanted to divide it up and move
some to New York and some to Atlanta.

Rupert Isaacson: Why.

Why, why get out?

That's, that's where

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

they, well, they had been based
there and I think they thought they

could do better in Silicon Valley.

Rupert Isaacson: Mm-hmm.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

And then they found they couldn't.

Okay.

You know, especially with the internet
growing up, it didn't matter where

you were and it just didn't make
sense to keep that to keep that open.

Mm-hmm.

Just, you know, again, parenthetically
that that collaboration was between a

company called Halon and, and WebMD.

And Halon was Clark Jim.

Jim Clark, I think, who was started
Netscape and then Silicon Graphics.

You've heard now.

Yeah.

Now we're talking
Netscape Silicon Graphics.

Had a, had a big ship in the Americas Cup.

I think he might even have won.

And, but, but anyway, so WebMD.

Decided to pull in its forces
and consolidate on the East

coast and I wasn't gonna go move.

And so in 2002, oh, and, and the
other thing that was happening at

that time was what's called the.com

bust, where a lot of the startups

Rupert Isaacson: Right.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Went down.

Rupert Isaacson: Right.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

And that, so that was the.com

bust.

And so that economically wasn't
a good time for Silicon Valley.

And I think that was another
factor in WebMD deciding to move

its move, its playing pieces.

And I did not want to
go to the East coast.

They gave us a humongous
severance package.

Nobody, you know, I didn't really
need to to work right away.

But I was a little bit nervous
about not working and 'cause

I always have to be working

Rupert Isaacson: Yeah.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Doing something and.

I, I remember this conversation
in my backyard with my best

friend who's actually a, also
a doctor and a yoga teacher.

And she said, cool.

It just, just cool it.

Sit back and think, what do you
really want to do now that you have

all this free time and resources?

And I said, well, you know, I've
always wanted to ride horses.

Rupert Isaacson: And you
never had until that point.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Sorry?

Rupert Isaacson: You never
had until that point?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

No, you know, I, I had the
odd dude ride in Yosemite.

Okay.

But no, I had, I grew up on an island.

I had no consciousness of horses
except perhaps for the sort of

Hoi Toi National Velvet set.

And there was harness racing
just outside of Boston.

But no, I, I, which, which

Rupert Isaacson: island were
you, were you brought up on?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

It's called Winthrop.

It's like 355 degrees water and
there's a causeway out to Boston.

Rupert Isaacson: Okay.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

And so we were all about swimming
and boats and surfing and Right.

The beach.

Yeah.

Rupert Isaacson: But you always
had a hankering foot, the boats.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Well, I watched all the
cowboy movies of the fifties.

Yeah.

Boy Rogers and have Gun Will
Travel and Wagon Train and Bonanza.

Bonanza wasn't the fifties, but
no, I used to watch the westerns

and get on my bed and make a
horse out of my pillow and a belt.

Rupert Isaacson: Yeah.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Giddy up on the edge of the bed.

And put my pajamas over my
head with the legs hanging down

so I could be Annie Oakley.

Okay.

So, so that was horses.

It was cowboys and,

Rupert Isaacson: and cowgirls

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

and cowgirls and western fantasies.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Rupert Isaacson: Yeah.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

So, so fast forward to 2002 and
I always wanted to, I can't say

I always wanted to ride horses,
but late lately, in those years,

'cause I was, I was 52 at that time.

Rupert Isaacson: Mm-hmm.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

So, and I had once run a
marathon, two half marathons.

I used to swim a mile a day and
my body was kind of getting not

so able to do those things right.

I thought, well, you know, if
I get on a horse, I will be

strong again and fast again and
graceful again and tireless again.

So that was my fantasy at that point.

And so I started taking writing lessons.

Rupert Isaacson: It's surprising
though that it took you that

long because have you been out
in Silicon Valley all that time?

And Silicon Valley's actually,
people often don't realize this, but

it's a very horsey place and people
think of Silicon Valley as like a

valley of silicon, and it isn't.

It's like one of the most
beautifully forested, you know,

rural, semi-rural parts of, you
know, California and lots of horses.

So I'm surprised that within that
culture you hadn't found your way

there, and until this point you'd
always have to try to avoid it.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Well, it's not so obvious I commute

Rupert Isaacson: Especi at Stanford.

'cause Stanford has a big
equestrian presence, right?

There's even Fox hunting
going on on that campus.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

It was on, it was on
a whole other side of.

Of campus from us.

So I, I really had no
consciousness of the, the Stanford

Red Barn Equestrian Center

Rupert Isaacson: right

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

as it is.

And you can't really see
horses from the road.

I commuted for years from San Francisco
down through Silicon Valley to Sunnyvale

and Santa Clara for, you know, for WebMD.

And I never saw horses from that.

It's funny though.

Rupert Isaacson: I've driven that same
road so many times, and I remember when

I used to live in Berkeley for a bit
and I drove that road the first time,

the first thing that hit my eye in the
fences around snap of work coops, you

know, the jumps that fox hunters put
in the, in the wire fences that they

can jump over when they're following
hands and think, I was thinking, oh,

someone's hunting here, you know?

So it's so interesting, isn't it?

If you're conditioned to see those
things that leapt out at me from

the highway, you would drove past
that a bazillion times and I guess

different conditioning, different.

Well,

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

and now I'm on a 300 acre ranch that.

Starts a hundred yards from the highway.

And I never knew there were horses there.

Right.

It just, you, you're right.

You, you've gotta be
conditioned to see it.

It has to.

Rupert Isaacson: Yeah.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

There has to be something in your mind
that gets triggered when, when it happens.

And I, you know, I always thought
horses were beautiful animals.

But, but, so there I was in 2002
and I started taking writing lessons

and it, it, I, I really
loved my instructor.

I, I kind of have her to this day.

Rupert Isaacson: Mm-hmm.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

But writing at that point for me, and
I don't fault my instructors, but it's

just kind, sort of the kind of person
that I am, a little bit perfectionist.

So it was all about doing
things right, being correct.

It wasn't even at that point so much
the relationship with the horse,

although I love animals and you know,
I feel very connected emotionally and

spiritually to animals and horses.

But at that point, riding was about being
correct and I went to my lessons every

week for years with knots in my stomach,

afraid of how I was gonna mess up.

Rupert Isaacson: Yeah.

I think, I think that's the
story so many people have.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Right.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

So then fortuitously, what happened
was a few years later, I think in

2004, six, something like that, I,
no, it was later than that, but I

got bucked off a table in my kitchen.

Okay.

Naughty table.

Yeah, I was naughty table.

Very just.

I think

and I got a broken
foot, a dislocated elbow

Rupert Isaacson: and a How does
one get bucked off a table?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

I was putting wine glasses away on a high
shelf and I was, it, it was a small table.

It wasn't really made as a step stool and
it was on spindly legs and it, I just,

my, my foot placement was such that it
flipped out under me just, and I ended up

on the kitchen floor and synchronistically
and symbolically there was, in our

living room, a guy sitting there who was
an adjuster from the insurance company

'cause we had had flooding in our garage.

So he was sitting there with
his little laptop adjusting and.

That, that became very symbolic
because that accident was this

huge adjustment in my life.

'Cause I went, the, the orthopedic
surgeon that tended my foot

said, we can't ride anymore.

You, you can't ride right?

You, you bone heal.

Right?

And I said, well, you know,

I could, I was perfectly, it was
my right foot that was fractured.

And so I was perfectly capable of
mounting, you know, with my left

foot in the stir and swinging over.

But I, I got a little bit scared,
I guess, or a little bit caught.

He, he instilled caution in me, a
caution that isn't usually there.

But I said, okay, so what I did
is I enrolled as a client in.

The Therapeutic Riding Center,
our local then Path Premier

Therapeutic Riding Center.

And I had been volunteering there for a
couple years with, with children mostly.

Rupert Isaacson: And why,
what did join you to do that?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Because I wanted to learn everything
I could about horses because I

admired the work that they were doing.

Rupert Isaacson: Mm-hmm.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

I learned so much about
horses in that program.

Mm-hmm.

Those, those horses were in some
ways very different from the lesson

horses that we had at the ranch.

Just amazing horses, a lot of them.

And and I, and I wanted to
do something of service.

Mm-hmm.

And there may have been other reasons,
but, but it, anyway, after the

accident, I became a client in that
center and I had the most fantastic.

Therapeutic riding instructor Corey
Thompson, I have to say her name into the

video in Invoke Her 'cause she actually
later became and, and still is a quite

a big part of my horsemanship life.

And for the first time it was
just playful to be on horses.

It was so liberating.

Because, you know, it was bareback.

We rode bareback and it
was a wonderful horse.

I can see him but I
can't remember his name.

And we did airplane arms and we
did around the world and we did

breathing and singing and everybody
was just so cheerful and playful.

And I thought, wow, this is,
this is what I really want.

Have for, for my horsemanship and there
was a somatic aspect of feeling my body,

feeling my breathing in, in a playful way,
not in a way that was meant to put myself

in the correct ear, hip axis position.

Rupert Isaacson: Right.

Or, or, or run your marathon correctly or
all the other things you've been trying

to do correctly with your body, I presume
as well, which wasn't Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Had probably lack play, you know, had
high achievement, but perhaps not quite

so not as we'd say in the UK or Ireland.

Not much crack.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Yeah.

Well, you know, I could
swim before I could walk.

Yeah.

Almost.

Well, not quite, but two years
old I was swimming in the ocean.

Mm-hmm.

And swimming wasn't about being perfect.

Rupert Isaacson: Right.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Or about, I, I mean, I did take
swimming lessons and teach swimming

and learn technique and there's
something to it, but it was always fun.

Yeah.

And, and horse riding
lessons just weren't fun.

Right.

'cause you didn't get to grow

Rupert Isaacson: up on the back.

Right.

Just messing about like we did.

Yeah.

So I always associated it with fun.

Yeah.

Later when we Yeah, yeah.

Went to refine my technique.

Okay, fine.

But yeah, the, the base was always
fun, but it it's so true, isn't

it, with a lot of these things
that we start as adults mm-hmm.

We often come in, no matter what it is,
with a such a desire to do it right.

That we don't come in with the same
play, playful laity that children

come in, including learning by
the way and studying, you know?

Mm-hmm.

So we want to be successful, we
want to be diligent, we want to be

rigorous, we want to be all these
things, and it's just no crack at all.

And no wonder everybody
burns out and gets depressed.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Well, you know, we're just winding
down our summer camp season, so

for 22 years at this ranch, we've
had summer camps, Uhhuh, and the,

the kids start at seven years old.

And I see how, how they approach it in,
in the ways that I never got to do as

a child or as a perfectionist adult.

And it's just fun for them.

Rupert Isaacson: Mm-hmm.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

It's just a lot of fun.

So, alright,

Rupert Isaacson: so, so
back up just a little bit.

So you end up though, at
Stanford again, isn't that right?

Or how do you,

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

okay.

So that's your, your, your

Rupert Isaacson: academic thing
seems to kick off at the same

time that you get this whole
therapeutic equestrian thing going.

Just, just how do these
things happen in parallel?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

It's, it's a little more sequential.

So, so that, that accident
put me back in my fun body.

Mm.

With Corey and I, she, I eventually
worked for her in a veteran's program

at that therapeutic writing center.

I'm, I'm a little hazy on the.

On the timeline here, so I'll just

Rupert Isaacson: kind of lay

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

it out.

It's, it's a little bit of a mosaic now.

Rupert Isaacson: Yeah.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

So I had always been interested in
psychology and, and actually spirituality.

Rupert Isaacson: Mm-hmm.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

From, from my mother was very
interested in dreams and very

interested in extrasensory perception.

Rupert Isaacson: Was your mother Jung?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

No, she wasn't a psychologist.

She had a geology professor at Tufts
University that I think was also

interested in extrasensory perception.

My mother was a very hardheaded woman.

Very logical.

Sure.

Very.

Rupert Isaacson: It's funny how
one always feels the desire to say

this as soon as one says anything
spiritual, as if being hardheaded

and scientific can't exist in direct
parallel with the ex, you know, the.

The esoteric it's, it's
so interesting, isn't it?

We almost find ourselves apologizing
for the esoteric side of our as.

But, but you know, really, really, I'm,
I'm a real rigorous scientist as well.

It's like, yeah, yeah, sure.

Absolutely.

But again, life without the
esoteric is also no life at all.

And, well, we also, physics now is,
you know, well, its way back to the

esoteric, but I can hear what you mean.

It's it.

Okay.

So, so, so your, your mother.

Okay.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Wait, I've gotta get a
little tangential here.

What you just said is what brought me
to work Schiller, from your podcast.

Ah, and my, my life's work now is
bridging the scientific and the spiritual

through horses, through quantum physics.

Quantum theory.

So that, that's, maybe we'll
get to the thing we want.

Now you're gonna have
to bring us to quantum.

Now we're back in, right now
we're back in like 2005, I think.

Okay.

So I became familiar somehow
with the field of equine assisted

learning and psychotherapy.

My family medicine residency emphasized
psychotherapy and the, the psychological,

and that was always an interest of mine.

Hmm.

And so I was going to go to a clinic
with Barbara Rector, who will be known

to some of the people listening here.

She's quite well known in
equine assisted learning, kind

of spirituality cycles circle.

Okay.

I'm gonna

Rupert Isaacson: look her up
as you, as you talk, Barbara.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Yeah.

Adventures in awareness.

She's out of Tucson, Arizona.

Rupert Isaacson: Okay.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

And I was supposed to go to a clinic of
hers down by San Diego in California.

Rupert Isaacson: Mm-hmm.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

And the clinic got canceled.

And in the cancellation email, there
was an invitation to do the five

day version of her clinic in Tucson.

And I thought, well, do I really
wanna commit to that amount of time?

And, and the, the
resources and everything.

And, and at that point, as I was deciding,
I had what Carl and calls a great dream.

Rupert Isaacson: Okay.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

We had this magnificent
technicolor dream of red.

Mustangs stallions dancing in the desert.

Okay.

And this dream was complete with a Native
American shaman riding over the hill.

And I had no connection with deserts,
and the horses were dancing in the dream.

They were dancing.

And I said, okay, I'm supposed to go
to the desert and do this workshop,

which I did.

And Walter Zele was there.

Rupert Isaacson: Oh, I knew
Walter Zele a little bit.

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Those, for those listeners who
didn't, he was a, a very, very Al

Austrian classical dressage dude.

Yeah.

What was he doing there out of, well, he

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

was doing a dressage clinic.

Rupert Isaacson: Okay.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

We got to watch a little bit.

Rupert Isaacson: Okay, cool.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Amazing guy.

He's since over the
Rainbow Bridge, but yeah,

Rupert Isaacson: yeah, yeah.

I have his book on the
bookshelf behind me there.

Yeah.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.

So in Barbara's.

Syllabus.

She, she had a big three
ring binder for us.

There was an article in the EG gala
magazine about Alan Hamilton who was egal

Rupert Isaacson: again, for listeners
who don't know what that is, was

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Oh, I'm sorry.

Yeah,

Rupert Isaacson: yeah.

One of the first models of equine
facilitated psychotherapy effectively.

Yeah, yeah.

Okay.

Yeah.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Equine assisted Growth
in Learning Association.

Right, right.

So, there was an article from
their magazine in Barbara

Rector's three ring binder

Rupert Isaacson: mm-hmm.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

On Alan Hamilton, who was then
the chief, and, and may still be

actually the chief of neurosurgery
at the University of Arizona.

And, and he was a horseman with a
ranch, and he had developed a program

called Medicine and Horsemanship.

Where he taught workshops for
medical students with his horses in

communication, teamwork basically
that, and when I saw that, just this

light bulb went off in my head and I
thought, this is what I want to do.

Hmm.

I can, I can work with horses and
medical students and doctors and

nurses to improve communication because

doctor communication issues were,
are, we're, and are a sore spot in.

In medical practice.

It's

Rupert Isaacson: so true.

Bedside manner, you know,
people underestimate it.

But doc, there's doctors that kill their
parents, parents, patients who Yeah.

And vice versa, just by being
unpleasant and others who didn't

do so well in their degree.

All of these patients seem to
get better just because the

doctor is more empathetic.

Yeah,

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

yeah, exactly.

And, you know, I would, I would
always hear horror stories about how

badly people were treated by their
doctors and Dismissed, misunderstood.

Mm-hmm.

And so with Alan, under Alan's
mentorship, I established

that same program at Stanford.

Rupert Isaacson: As you know, if
you followed any of my work, I'm

an autism dad and we have a whole
career before this podcast in helping

people with neurodivergence, either
who are professionals in the field.

Are you a therapist?

Are you a caregiver?

Are you a parent?

Or are you somebody with neurodivergence?

When my son, Rowan, was
diagnosed with autism in 2004,

I really didn't know what to do.

So I reached out for mentorship, and
I found it through an amazing adult

autistic woman who's very famous, Dr.

Temple Grandin.

And she told me what to do.

And it's been working so
amazingly for the last 20 years.

That not only is my son basically
independent, but we've helped

countless, countless thousands
of others reach the same goal.

Working in schools, working at
home, working in therapy settings.

If you would like to learn this
cutting edge, neuroscience backed

approach, it's called Movement Method.

You can learn it online, you
can learn it very, very simply.

It's almost laughably simple.

The important thing is to begin.

Let yourself be mentored as I was by Dr.

Grandin and see what results can follow.

Go to this website, newtrailslearning.

com Sign up as a gold member.

Take the online movement method course.

It's in 40 countries.

Let us know how it goes for you.

We really want to know.

We really want to help people like
me, people like you, out there

live their best life, to live
free, ride free, see what happens.

Now, were you already back
at Stanford at this time?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

No.

No.

So how did

Rupert Isaacson: you
establish this at Stanford?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Well first, let, let me just
back up one quarter of a step.

We, we did the first program at
the, at UCSF up in San Francisco.

And actually the clinic was two hours
north of that, and that wasn't gonna fly.

Medical students weren't gonna
drive two hours to this thing.

Okay.

And we had hoped there was supposed
to be a resurgence of horses in

Golden Gate Park in San Francisco.

And that never happened
in, in Golden Gate Park.

I

Rupert Isaacson: remember that.

Yes.

That, that beautiful stable,
that's still standing empty there.

Yeah.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Yeah.

Well, there are police horses
in the park, but the, the old

stables never got refurbished.

And the Ingo Park was right down
the hill from UCSF medical school.

Rupert Isaacson: Mm-hmm.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

It's like a five minute walk.

And, but that never happened.

And so I said, well, why don't I
try making an elective at Stanford?

So I looked around on the internet
for departments that I thought would

be amenable, you know, sympathetic
to doctor patient communic, improving

doctor patient communication.

And the chief of family medicine at
that time was a guy who had grown up

in Canada on the US border with horses.

And he was all for the program.

He, he was just very aware of the
relationship with horses and how horses

can teach us to be better people.

So he was all for it.

And but the rule was in order to create
an elective for medical students, you

had to get a medical student champion.

So we found this woman.

Who had two horses at the Stanford
Red Barn Equestrian Center, and she

had had to drop out of Stanford.

She was diagnosed with
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.

Oh.

And she had to drop out of medical
school for one or two years.

Rupert Isaacson: Mm-hmm.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

And during those one or two years,
her horses were her saviors.

Rupert Isaacson: Right.

Did she then survive?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Yes.

Oh yeah.

Yeah.

She's at Vanderbilt now.

Rupert Isaacson: Wow.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

And yeah, she did very well.

Good.

And yeah, I'm still in touch with
her, and so she became our champion.

Rupert Isaacson: Okay.

And.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

So we have the Stanford program at
the ranch at the 300 acre ranch that

I'm at, which is owned by Stanford.

Stanford owns 8,000 acres of land in the
area, many of which are ranches, some of

which they've closed down, unfortunately.

Mm-hmm.

So that, that kind of brings us up to
date except for one thing, which is the

jewel in the crown, so to speak which
is the, the medicine and horsemanship

emphasizes communication, teamwork,
leadership, which wasn't an issue

when I was in medical school, but it
is now that medical care is delivered

in corporate structures, basically.

So it's got corporate hierarchies
that demand leadership,

leadership and self-care.

At some point, I think, connected
with this accident and working with

Corey, I realized that the real
thing that I wanted to teach was the

somatic aspect of being with horses.

That just the total body connection,
which becomes a energetic connection

and a spiritual connection.

Mm-hmm.

'Cause at this point I was also
teaching Tai Chi at Stanford.

Rupert Isaacson: Of course you were

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

sorry.

Rupert Isaacson: Of course.

Of course you were.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Well, that, that happened
in a weird way too.

This I, I kind of got roped
into it, but but it worked out.

And there's another slightly gentler
martial art called Qigong, which is

more of a health practice than Taiji,
although they kind of both are.

And so that's what I'm doing now is
mainly is teaching Qigong with horses.

Rupert Isaacson: And how do you do that?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

So we learn some traditional.

Qigong forms.

There's a, a basic traditional Qigong
form called the Bad gin, which means the

eight pieces of silk, eight silk brocades.

And interestingly enough, the bad
gin is being heavily studied by the

health ministry in Beijing for its
ability to help people with cancer.

Rupert Isaacson: Okay.

So tell us about the,
these silk and brocades.

Why that, why that name
and how does it work?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

I, I've never been real clear
why it's called this, this goes

back, you know, hundreds of years.

Longer.

Longer I to be, yeah.

I mean, Qigong itself is
said to have been discovered.

We have a piece of pottery
that's about 8,000 years old that

apparently a, according to some
archeologists, shows the Woo shaman

Rupert Isaacson: mm-hmm.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

The, the shamans of those
days in a Qigong pose.

And they are said to have learned Qigong
by watching animals heal themselves.

Rupert Isaacson: Okay.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Yeah.

So, so Qigong works with energy mostly
Qi, but I also work with Reiki, which

I experience was different from Qi.

And so the, the name of the course is
Equanimity Stress Reduction and Emotional

Self-Regulation in the Company of Horses.

Rupert Isaacson: What, just quickly
back to Beijing, why, why are, why

is the health ministry there looking
at this particular Qigong practice?

What's it finding that it does for cancer?

This is interesting.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

So there's some survival data.

Largely what it does
is it eases depression.

It promotes mm-hmm.

Appetite.

'cause people with cancer tend
to be really isolated, and so

it's a very social activity.

Rupert Isaacson: Mm-hmm.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

And there, there may be other
factors that, that we're looking at

in terms of the energy shifts that
are salutatory for, for cancer.

They, they're actually looking at
three different forms of Qigong.

One is the Bawan gin, the, the
eight Silicon and Brocades.

Mm-hmm.

One is called Five Animals Qigong.

And the other is this practice
called Guin, walking after

Guin, who was a cancer survivor.

She had ovarian cancer,
lived 10 more years.

And her doctor said she would,
by developing her form of Qigong,

which is now called Guian Walking.

Rupert Isaacson: Okay, I'm just
going to, just, just so that those

who've never heard of this before,
have a little bit of context.

I've just, I've just done my little
Google while you were talking.

So it says, what are the eight brick
brocades in Qigong, it says, the

eight brocades are a set of Qigong
exercises that originated in China.

I've been practiced throughout
the world for thousands of years.

Each movement focuses on a
different meridian to improve

the flow of Q through the body.

If practiced routinely, the practice
will improve your health significantly.

It is believed that after practicing
the sequence, one feels like wearing a

dress made of a very rich, exquisite,
hard to find precious soft silk fabric.

So that silk weaving the form, the
forms name refers to how it's eight

movements characterized, and in
part, a silken quality like that of

a brocade to the body and its energy.

But of course, you know, yeah.

There's been a major crossover between
allopathic and Chinese medicine and Qigong

and Tai Chi of course, for a long time.

But again, a lot of people
listening might not know that.

And so I find it very interesting
that you're, you're involved in that.

Interestingly too, just one, one little
side note one of our horse boy centers

in the uk a place called Move The Mind in
outside Bristol also takes electives from

the medical school at Bristol University,
which is, you know, our equivalent,

one of the Ivy Leagues who go out there
to do their mental health electives.

And for movement method, which
is, you know, a one-horse side.

Last year we got asked to do a
conference at Eastern Virginia

Medical School which is part of Old
Dominion University on the East coast.

A neuroscience conference
specifically about.

Our method.

So it's interesting how these
things are going from the hippie

margins now, you know, into the
mainstream of allopathic medicine.

Whereas of course, yeah.

Even I think pre COVID it, it
wasn't really so much of a, it

was, it was hovering there, but I
think COVID somehow kicked it in.

Okay.

So you are teaching, you're
teaching Qigong with horses.

How does one do that?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

So initially we learn
the forms on the ground.

Rupert Isaacson: Mm-hmm.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Each form is connected with an organ
system, which aren't like the meridian.

Right.

Well, not just a meridian.

Okay.

The meridians are connected
with the organs too.

I don't really work with the
meridians 'cause it's a, gets a

little esoteric for people, but
people can visualize their liver.

They can think of a lump of meat.

Yeah.

Renal gland.

And in Chinese medicine,
the organs aren't.

Isolated organs, the way we envision them.

Yeah, their systems.

Yeah.

And they're, you know, five elements
and five flavors and five emotions.

And it's a whole philosophical,
biological system,

Rupert Isaacson: right?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

So we learn the emotion that the
emotion connected with each of the

forms, and we learn to release the
negative emotion as we do the form.

Okay.

So for instance shooting the hawk

has to do with fear.

And so we release fear and gather
courage, and each, each move has a release

and a gather, gathering the positive.

So you

Rupert Isaacson: do this on the ground.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

So we do this on the ground first.

We do No horse, sorry.

Rupert Isaacson: No horse.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Not yet.

Not well.

We go in with the horses and we do
other activities after we do that.

And, and the last just, just lemme say
that the we call what we do, the wan

gin, you know, bomb bombing eight, eight
pieces of brocade and ours is the woo.

'cause there are three forms in the
bad gin that you can't do on horseback,

like bend over and touch your toes.

And they're

Rupert Isaacson: just, when you say the
woo does woo mean five, we woo is five.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

So we do the five.

So someone says woo woo, that's five five.

Interesting.

Different, yeah, sure.

Different, different woos.

'Cause Chinese has tones.

So we do, each week we learn
one of the, the five and we do

an activity with the horses.

You know, the first is
just a meet and greet.

'cause most of these people have
never been around horses ever.

And.

We learned the five forms.

And then the last class of equanimity
and medicine and horsemanship as this

has come together is a meditation
ride to music, bareback to music.

We use Nawa kgs, Tibetan flute.

It's a, it's an album
called Music as Medicine.

Rupert Isaacson: Mm-hmm.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Appropriately enough.

And there are three tracks where
he's actually in duet with a

very wonderful Native American
flute player, art Carlos Naka.

And so we sit at a, at a halt and
do the forms that we've learned.

And then we do a little walkabout.

Mm-hmm.

And, and we, we do this in,
teams of four, where we use a

therapeutic riding configuration.

So we have one rider, two sidewalks,
one or one or two sidewalks,

and somebody leading the horse.

So yeah, it's very, it's,
it's really, really nice.

Rupert Isaacson: And what
results do you see with this?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Well, we're not very results oriented.

People give us, so what results do

Rupert Isaacson: you see?

Because you do, you're gonna
see something, you're gonna see

change, so what do you think?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Well, you know, people get up there and
cry and people write on their evaluations.

What a wonderful course it is.

And is it

Rupert Isaacson: about emotional release?

Is it about,

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

it's about emotional and release, but,
you know, we don't do any testing.

I have never been in to do
research on my courses, honestly.

I think as, as Warwick said in
your, your podcast with him,

the, you don't need the science.

It's a phenomenon.

Logical.

Experience.

No,

Rupert Isaacson: I couldn't agree more.

Yeah.

You only need the science if you're having
to fund, you know, through organizations

what you do for mental health or whatever.

But nonetheless, I'm just curious to
see, you know, what kind of people come

in and what changes do they experience?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Well, what I notice is that
people's stress levels go way down.

We have mm-hmm.

Let me just show you.

So we do a check-in every week with
the Native American talking stick.

Mm-hmm.

Which is also our stress ome.

So people are asked to tell us what
their stress level is from, you know,

down on the belly button, which is zero
to shoulder level, which is 10, and

then some people are off the charts.

Mm-hmm.

And what we notice as the
weeks go by is that people's.

Baseline stress level goes way down.

And they'll say that they were
able to do some of the breathing

exercises and cope better.

'cause they're all Stanford employees.

Almost all we do.

Rupert Isaacson: So this is
something that's done internally

within Stanford University?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

It is.

It's open, it's done through
the Healthy Living program.

Okay.

And it's open to community members.

It feels very quickly and
we have a waiting list.

And it seems that Stanford employee,
I bet you do got the jump again.

Yeah.

Yeah.

How

Rupert Isaacson: many weeks
does the program go over?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Four.

It's just.

Rupert Isaacson: Okay, so, so
employees from within Stanford

who are stressed out mm-hmm.

Come to you.

You are, you are at, you know, at
Stanford, at the stable that Stanford has.

So it's all internal.

Are you still teaching at Stanford?

Are you still practicing medicine as well?

Alongside?

I'm not

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

practicing medicine, no.

Rupert Isaacson: When, when did you
quit practicing medicine in that way?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Oh, boy.

Probably 30 years ago.

Okay.

I was actually seeing patients like that.

Yeah.

And I just went on a retired license,
medical license, I think four years ago.

Three, four years ago.

Okay.

So, and

Rupert Isaacson: teaching at Stanford, so,

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

so I teach the Tai Chi, I teach on campus.

Rupert Isaacson: Mm-hmm.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

And it's called Medical Tai
Chi, or actually it's called

Medical Tai Chi, which isn't.

Particularly accurate, but it,
medical Thai chi, it's called

medical because for the first half
hour we have a journal club mm-hmm.

That looks at the peer reviewed
journal articles on the health

benefits of TT Chi and Chi Kong.

And as part of that, I teach scientific
methodology, what is the gold standard

for scientific research and why things
like Taiji fall outside that gold

standard methodology that they're not,
you can't really apply the gold standard.

And that's true of, of studies.

And with horses too, there
are too many variables.

It's very, very hard to study.

Anything with horses because
you have different instructors,

different horses, different Yeah.

Clients or patients.

Very, very hard to study Mom and the horse

Rupert Isaacson: itself can't
fill into, into questionnaire.

Yeah, yeah.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

It's exactly, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

So, but, but it's important, especially
now where scientific reasoning and

scientific, the philosophy of science is
just being turned on its ear by certain

events going on in the United States.

It's important for people to understand
how to judge traditional science

and how to say, we don't gotta
show you no stinking badges when it

comes to proving that what we do.

Is valuable.

I mean, I, I don't know.

It's great that the

Rupert Isaacson: university values it on
that, you know, because you think that the

university would have to justify through
some sort of standardized model, you know?

I guess, but I guess it can fund
what it wants to fund, right?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Right.

Well, the, the equanimity is
funded through the, the each,

every Stanford employee has a
continuing education allowance.

Rupert Isaacson: Okay.

I think

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

it's.

I don't know, 800, $900 a year.

And so they use that for equanimity and
people from the community can just pay

whatever the, you know, the tuition is.

Yeah.

So it's,

Rupert Isaacson: and are you,
you are offering this through one

of the departments or schools or
faculties at Stanford and Right.

If so, which one?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

This is the Healthy Living Program, which
used to be part of the medical school.

Rupert Isaacson: Mm-hmm.

And

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

it's now somehow part of Human Resources,

Rupert Isaacson: but Okay.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Yeah.

But it's the same program.

Rupert Isaacson: Okay.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Yeah.

I'm very fortunate to be
able so it's like you're a

Rupert Isaacson: tenured professor
without having to go through the

hassle of being a tenured professor in
terms of publishing and grant writing.

You, you can be, you, you get to
play with ponies in a meaningful way.

Well

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

actually I'm an adjunct
clinical professor.

Rupert Isaacson: Right.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

So, assistant professor actually.

And so we don't, we're not the
tenure academic tenure track we're, I

Rupert Isaacson: understand,
but it's, yeah, its a bit like

being, ones a whole different

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

set of Yeah.

It's like the benefits

Rupert Isaacson: of it in a funny
way without the, the, the schlep.

It's good.

Exactly.

Yeah.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Yeah.

I I, I've really benefited from being
at Stanford, going through Stanford

Rupert Isaacson: yeah.

And Stanford, you know, has, has
led the way in so many things.

It's, it's so interesting.

I think that many of us in.

Other parts of the Western world don't
know really how much of our modern life is

affected by what has gone on at Stanford
University in the last, you know, 60, 70

years, you know, from the counterculture
to, you know, the studies into compassion,

to the, you know, studies in computer
science to birthing Silicon Valley,

which basically birthed out of Stanford.

It sort of is Stanford really.

It's just, yeah.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Fairchild, Stanford,

Rupert Isaacson: all boys club, you
know, and it's, it's very, I I, I think

Stanford University has shaped modern
thinking in a way that's disproportionate

in the way that say Oxford or Cambridge
probably did in previous generations.

Mm-hmm.

Now, let me with, with
that, bring something that.

Bring us back to something that
you said just a few minutes ago.

You said that recent events in science in
the USA has turned scientific philosophy

on its head, and my ears pricked
up and went, Ooh, that sounds good.

Let's talk about that.

What do you mean by that?

Tell us about it.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Well, I really don't want to
get into politics, but you know,

what's happened is that the Centers
for Disease Control has been

Rupert Isaacson: the CDC.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

So the CDC, the National
Institutes of Health have been,

there've been huge cutbacks.

Rupert Isaacson: Mm.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Huge changes.

A lot of people who don't have medical
or scientific backgrounds have been

installed in positions of leadership.

Rupert Isaacson: I think in, in other
countries they call those commissars.

Yeah.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Yeah.

Yeah, yeah.

So it's just, it's thrown everything
into disruption in terms of

what we thought we knew about.

You know, vaccines and there's been a, a
huge resurgence of measles outbreaks in

the United States, especially in Texas.

Mm.

As the anti-vaxxers have
risen to ascendancy in the

national health institutions.

So it's just, you know, it, it, it's
like a co I I, I look at it as co

capelli, you know, the trickster making
us sit back and think about, well,

what do we really know about science?

What do we really believe?

What's really true?

Sh you know, how do we prove things
to ourselves and to the scientific

community and to the public health Popul?

How do you think,

Rupert Isaacson: I mean, I, I think we
could, we, we can certainly know what

the problems might be at this point, but.

And you know, it's easy to understand
how the anti-vax thing got going

because you know, when big pharma
just keeps throwing more and more

of them at you it's, you, it, it's
going to create a counter movement.

It just is, you know?

And they should have seen
that one coming, I think.

But if philosophy of science has been
turned on its head, that also means

that must be, it must be happening in
some really good, positive ways too.

What do you.

In the words of the Great Lou
Reed it's easy enough to tell

what is wrong, but that's not what
I want to hear all night long.

Let's talk about and take some

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

heroin in.

Rupert Isaacson: That's right.

I'm, I'm a, I'm, I'm the eternal optimist
and I, I, I think a lot of what's

going on is, is actually very positive.

I'm also very optimistic about ai, you
know, which a lot of people are not.

'Cause I feel that a lot of the
really horrific things that have

been done that we're afraid that AI
would do, we're sort of forgetting.

No, that's, that's us that do that.

When we've done about 10,000
years of genocide and atrocity.

So if, if AI is going to just do that
again, that's actually business as usual.

That's no different.

But it might do something
different, I feel, because we are

also a very loving species that's
always forgotten and that we.

The people writing those programs
are not, or are not evil.

There may be people who are evil who
are trying to control them, but it's

rather like the horse, you can use it
to commit a genocide and many genocides

have been committed on the backs of
horses, or you can use it to heal the

horse will lend you its power either way.

But we seem to have arrived at a point
where fewer genocides are being committed

on the backs of horses and more people are
using, harnessing that power for healing.

Although it's taken us a few millennial
to get there perhaps AI is going to

accelerate that and other walks of life.

But in back in terms of this sort
of scientific philosophy, I'm, I'm

interested because this is all affected
by you, you, you, you've referred,

you've used the word quantum a few
times in this conversation, right?

Well, in quantum being potential.

Really?

Yeah.

So you must have thoughts
on where all that is going.

Mm-hmm.

You've been involved in computer science,
you've been involved in allopathic

medicine from various viewpoints.

You've been involved in Silicon Valley,
you've been involved in the types of

companies that were beginning to, as, as
you said, you know, the word artificial

intelligence which is deeply tied in
with the whole quantum thing has been

around, you know, since World War ii,
but of course has massively accelerated.

You've had a bit of a
front row seat of all this.

What are your thoughts?

Where are we, where's it all going?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

I'm very hopeful that
artificial intelligence will

be a, a, a positive force.

I, I think that can happen.

I think.

In the cycles of history that we've seen
in the world, we've seen, you know, horses

used for war and horses used on farms.

And now horses are mostly very beloved
animals that seem to have emerged.

They survived and they emerged in
a very positive, in a very positive

way, at least for all of us.

One important facet we haven't touched
on in my background is parapsychology.

Rupert Isaacson: Go on then.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

I have always been interested in and
somewhat active in parapsychology.

We had a group called the San Francisco
Parapsychology Research Group and.

People related to that group who
are interested in consciousness.

And when you consider the
subject of ai, you have to

consider consciousness and Okay.

And whether, okay, so

Rupert Isaacson: define
parapsychology first.

So we know the terms that
we're dealing with here.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Right.

Paras.

Oh, parapsychology is the field that
studies, and this is a little bit

of a circular reasoning, circular
definition, paranormal phenomenon

such as extrasensory perception,

telepathy animal communication.

Certainly.

Rupert Isaacson: Why did you
become interested in this?

Were you interested in this before you
got involved in horses, for example?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Oh, absolutely.

My mom was a big.

Believer in extrasensory perception.

And every time there was a synchronicity
or we arrived at the same thought, somehow

she would say that's ESP also dreams.

We would sit around the table
in the morning and talk about

our dreams every single day.

Rupert Isaacson: Okay.

So

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

there was, and there was an aspect
of dreaming that was precognitive

and there was an aspect of dreaming
that was metaphysical, spiritual.

And, and some, some just mundane.

So when you talk about ai, we
have to consider consciousness

and what all the manifestations of
consciousness are in humans and in

other animals and even plants and
even possibly rocks and trees and.

Inanimate the

Rupert Isaacson: c the
conscious universe, effectively

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

the conscious universe.

Yeah.

Ru put Dr.

Rupert Isaacson: Rupert
Shel Drake's work and that

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Rupert Sheldrake.

Yeah.

And Ahed Ka Swami.

Mm-hmm.

The has a book called the, he's
a, a quantum physicist and a Vedic

scholar who has a book called The
Self-Aware Universe, how Consciousness

Creates the Material World.

One a, a life-changing book for me.

I'm reading it for the
fourth time right now.

So, and, and it's interesting because
Alan Touring, who was one of the fathers

of artificial intelligence, he wrote a
paper in 1952, I believe it was that.

Countered all the objections to
artificial intelligence being real.

You know, at the time people were
dismissing the idea that machines

could be intelligent or that could
show any form of intelligence.

And he countered all the
objections except one.

And the, the objection that he couldn't
counter was the objection from ESP,

it, it's called the ninth objection.

'cause it was the ninth one he dealt with.

And that was the idea that computers
could demonstrate psychic abilities.

So, so that's, that's
a question that I have.

I think you know, will they ever be able
to communicate psychically with horses?

You know, will they ever be
successful animal communicators?

Which I heartily believe in.

I've had wonderful experiences
with animal communicators and.

Computers are now quantum systems.

And Quantum Theory offers models,
and I, I wanna emphasize that

they're models, they're not proofs
of how paranormal phenomena might

exist outside of space and time.

Because, you know, classical
yeah, I, I won't get into a

technical discussion of all this.

Please do, but, okay.

So, so classical physics, that the
Newtonian physics is based on the

idea that everything's predictable.

That the, the world
functions like a machine.

If you know the initial conditions
of a planet or a car or a ball,

then you can predict its behavior.

So, so, classical physics is deterministic
in that way, and materialistic in that

it believes that everything is matter.

Quantum physics is not deterministic
because due to certain principles

such as the the uncertainty principle,
you can never know for sure the

initial conditions of a system.

So you can never predict
where it's going to go.

And mathematically, at least,
and functionally with subatomic

particles in experimental physics,
time goes forward and backward.

There are quantum leaps
between states with no,

Rupert Isaacson: interim process.

Yeah.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

No, no.

Pro, yeah, no intermediate states.

You don't know the electrons here and
then it's there and you don't know

where it's been, and you only have
probabilities of where things are.

So it's a very probabilistic

Rupert Isaacson: What is
the uncertainty principle?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

The uncertainty principle says
that you can determine with great

accuracy either the position
or the momentum of a particle.

If you know a lot about the
momentum, the position becomes

almost unknowable and vice versa.

So you can know one or
the other, but not both.

Rupert Isaacson: Okay.

Interesting.

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Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

So, so you cannot determine
the initial conditions.

And in quantum mechanics, every,
everything kind of exists outside of

space time, that especially Gus Swami's.

The thesis is that matter is
not the primary substance.

Consciousness is.

Right.

And there's, there's a, a mystical,
well, no, I, I wouldn't say mystical, but

there's a, a whole body of information
called the Seth material where Seth,

who is a channeled entity that I believe
has a high degree of accuracy from his

channeler says he kind of the same thing,
that every, everything is conscious.

Everything is a consciousness unit.

Rupert Isaacson: There's a right and
there's a growing body of physicists.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Yeah, yeah.

Rupert Isaacson: And computer people
subscribing to this view, it seems.

That's what I was hoping we'd get to
when you said philosophy's being turned

on its head because the political
climate is something historical.

Those things ebb and flow,
you know, what can you say?

But the f philosophical
movements predict the future.

One could argue that Newton
was not deterministic.

That, that there was a side of him
that was very interested in determinism

and apples falling from trees.

And so he, but being a good
polymath, you know, he was interested

in lots of other things too.

And it's often conveniently
overlooked that the, there's a

vast body of his work on alchemy.

And of course, by the time, and
some people would say he was

primarily an Al Al Alchemist.

I, I know certain scholars and
historians who would say just based on

what he published, that he published
more on that than he did on the other.

He was also deeply religious.

But he, so the esoteric and, and the
scientific together were clearly no.

Mismatch for, for him.

And it's interesting that we now interpret
with the kind of fundamentalism people

like him like it's, it's forgotten
that, you know, all the people that

hate evolution, the, the Christian
conservatives or, or forget that Darwin

was a very, very, very devout Christian.

You know, and you know, it's,
it's very interesting what

people choose to, to dwell on.

That of course is political.

And of course with alchemy, by the
time the chemical wedding, et cetera,

by, by the time Newton was writing
about that sort of thing, it was

partly still looking for transation
of led into gold and, and you know,

the philosopher stone and all that.

But it was, it had, it had already
taken a leap in the decades before

that into a spiritual, psychological
purification analogy that people like.

Newton, even as they fooled around with
the experiments, trying to see if it

was possible to ub substantiate, were
actually seemed primarily interested

in the philosophical side of it.

And went on to do determinism sort
of in their spare time almost.

And and now the deterministic thing
is, is what we remember them as.

But I think if he was sitting here in
this room, he'd say, no, listen, you know,

I, I was interested in loads of things,
you know, look, look at all that stuff

I published on all that woo woo stuff.

So I I I is it now though that we
suddenly are able to somehow observe

and measure within the university peer
review scientific context, this idea of

consciousness within machines and within
micro states of matter, like neutrinos,

like things that we can't quite.

Grab, they're too small, but they seem to
bend the laws or physics and exist between

them, or go from one state of being to
another without, as you say, a sort of

in observable, interim, intermediate,
think they disappear and disappear.

And that appears to be, they used
to be a word for that, didn't there?

It used to be magic.

Mm-hmm.

And I guess there's, there's
also this sort of old adage

that pseudoscience is just time.

That's my, there's the future coming
into the room there and the and

you know, because everything is
pseudoscience until someone comes

along and gets it accepted as science.

Right.

And every good scientist has been
laughed at ridiculed as I'm being now.

And but.

I do think, do you not think that we
have suddenly arrived at a point where

the determination purists, who would
be like the scientific equivalent today

of the Spanish Inquisition in the past?

It's the new fundamentalism, isn't it?

Sciences is, as opposed to re
religion are now finding their pers

shaken in the same way that the old
church dudes were finding it, theirs

shaken around the time of Newton.

You know?

And Newton might say, well, it's
the same old thing, you know, so

you have, you, you talk about this
principle of uncertainty, right?

And then you've talked about states
of matter that behave in, in ways

that are so unpredictable that and
that they seem indistinguishable from.

Things that are indeterminate,
like consciousness.

Mm-hmm.

Where are we going with all that?

How's this going to, how, how's this,
what gonna, how's Stanford gonna

produce this tangibly in our, in
our lives in the next 10, 20 years?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

I don't know.

There's certainly a lot written
about consciousness now that

AI is being hyped so much.

Or not, not a lot.

There was an article I read just yesterday
that I had high hopes for about whether,

you know, it asks that, the headline, that
the title is, can Ai Ever Be Conscious?

And then you read the article and
it's talking about experiments with.

People who have strokes or who are
under anesthesia and they're looking at

consciousness as a function of the brain.

They're looking at magnetic resonance.

And they're looking at EEGs, and
I'm like, no, you can't look at

consciousness using machines that way.

Rupert Isaacson: Well, that's
the old approach, isn't it?

Saying that consciousness is a product
of the mind rather than the mind

being a product of consciousness.

Yeah,

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

right.

There are two kinds of people in this
world, the epiphenomenon, that say that

consciousness is an epiphenomenon or
a product of the biochemical brain.

And people like Amit Sami, who are
the consciousness primary people of

whom I'm one two, which is saying
that consciousness is primary

and may even have created somehow
through energetic manipulation.

All the things that we consider material.

Rupert Isaacson: Hmm.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

I I think that one, one really exciting
development, which isn't all that recent,

was the Allen aspect an aspect Frenchman
who basically is the father of quantum

entanglement, which is the phenomenon
whereby two electrons that are once

together and then they're separated.

When you make a measurement on one
electron, it changes the second one in

a way that's fa, where the, it's faster
than light, and the speed of light

was the einsteinian limit on any kind
of signaling or information transfer.

And so that limit has been violated and
that's what I'm personally most excited

about because it would seem to explain.

Telepathy precognition you
know, there were experiments.

The, one of the, the moonshots had
an ES a a telepathy or a parent

A ESP experiment award, and it's

Rupert Isaacson: been shown.

What are the moonshots?

What's that?

The,

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

the, the space, space vehicles
that went to the moon.

Rupert Isaacson: Okay.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

They had, they had, as one of their
experiments an ESP experiment that showed

that even as far away as the moon is, the
ESP signal doesn't deteriorate the way,

say a magnetic field would deteriorate.

Rupert Isaacson: How do
you measure the ESP signal?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Well, it's not a signal,
it's just the phenomenon.

Can, can.

There were targets.

It's a, it's a a little bit complex
to explain, but there are, there are

targets in, in the most simple form.

I'm in the spaceship.

I take a picture of a horse and I
get to the moon and I look at the

picture and somebody on the earth is
trying to see, see what I'm seeing.

And,

Rupert Isaacson: ah, you're
talking about remote viewing?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Remote viewing, yeah.

Okay.

Okay.

So just a little

Rupert Isaacson: aside for people
who dunno what that is, right?

You heard of a little old organization
called the CI or just mm-hmm.

Yeah.

The

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

CIA was involved Project

Rupert Isaacson: Gateway.

Right.

They, they put a lot of effort into this
in the over, well probably still are but

only what we has been published Project
Gateway where they were doing remote

viewing not only over large spaces of.

Space, but over time, and they seem to
have been doing it quite successfully.

Of course.

Doing it for intelligence, that that's
what you're talking about, right.

More or less, right?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Yeah.

I don't think the moon experiment
was the CIA experiment.

'cause that person Russell Tar is
right here, a couple of towns over

in Palo Alto, and that was done
through the SRI, which was also

known as Stanford Research Institute.

But really, I don't think
anything to do with Stanford.

But

Rupert Isaacson: how did they, how
did they manage to remote view or,

or confirm, say whether they were
remote viewing at the Stanford?

Well,

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

as I say, it's a, it's a little
more complex because they, the

target is generated by a random
number generator in a computer.

Mm-hmm.

And then there's a, a.

The, the, there's the, the target
person, which is the person on the moon

and the viewer, which is the person on
earth, and the viewer will draw what

she sees from the person on the moon.

And then that drawing is given
to a separate panel of judges.

I'm just

Rupert Isaacson: wondering what the
person on the moon is seeing, you know,

other than like, well, whatever the

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

target, whatever the, the and I,
this is the, that's the the protocol

for the remote being experiments
that Russell Targ did on earth.

I don't.

No, exactly what the protocol
was for the ESP experiment

on the moon, but in general.

Rupert Isaacson: Okay.

The

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

remote viewing experiments, which
is described, which are described

in a book called mind Reach and
Mind Raise by target and put off

Russell Targe and Hal put off

Rupert Isaacson: Hal Poff.

Mm-hmm.

That's a great name.

Yeah.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Hog and put off.

Okay.

Yeah.

And Russell's still very, very
active in in Parapsychology locally.

Rupert Isaacson: Okay.

So you, you are still involved
in parapsychology, te te.

Tell us what your involvement is there.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

I'm not really anymore.

I'm not doing experiments or participating
in experiments, but it's just kind

of having email discussions with my
old buddies from the Parapsychology

research group and kind of tuning in.

But you

Rupert Isaacson: were part of the
parapsychology research group at Stanford.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

You're this, this wasn't at Stanford.

This was an independent organization.

Okay.

In San Francisco, the
parapsychology research group

had nothing to do with Stanford.

Rupert Isaacson: Okay.

Okay.

So when, when you say you're
not doing experiments anymore,

does that mean that you were

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

I participated in some experiments
way back when, where they put me in

a Faraday cage and had me hold copper
cylinders and things like that.

I did funny things like that.

Can you

Rupert Isaacson: tell us a little
bit more, that sounds ing No, I don't

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

remember.

They, they, for one thing, they didn't
tell me what I was doing at the time,

but, but one thing that's interesting,
a Faraday cage is a wire construct that

filters out all electromagnetic signals.

So.

Whatever happens in a, in a Faraday
cage and gets transmitted to the

outside world, is assumed not to be
based on electromagnetic transmission.

And 'cause for a long time people thought
ESP was a, an electromagnetic phenomenon.

Okay.

But the experiments in the Faraday
cages proved that that wasn't so

that ESP happened from here to
the moon and within Faraday cages.

So, so when the

Rupert Isaacson: so is ESP,
in fact quantum entanglement

just on a human level?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

I don't know.

I mean, it could be, that's what
exciting to me about the theories.

Right now, quantum entanglement has only
been demonstrated in a laboratory for.

Subatomic particles, macro systems have
not been shown to be quantum entangled.

So even though we feel quantum
entangled with our spouses and

our horses and our cats, there's,
there's no way to prove that.

Rupert Isaacson: Right.

But, but if, if microparticles
have been shown Measured, yeah.

We of course are composed
of microparticles.

Right, right.

A macro system is, many tiny things
come together to make a big thing.

So there must be bits of us that
are entangling here and there.

No,

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

well, it could be, I mean, a lot of
parapsychologists who, who I think are

sort of materialistic in nature and,
and epiphenomenal is it's say that the,

that the quantum reactions happen in
the microtubules of our brain cells.

Right.

Rupert Isaacson: This is what I
was hoping you were gonna get to

these, these recent studies that
were published last year and Yeah.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

The

Rupert Isaacson: work of, of Penrose,
you know, 40 years ago, right here.

Yeah.

What, so tell us about this.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

I haven't studied it too much because
on the surface it, it doesn't, I'm

not really interested in the material
basis for paranormal phenomena.

Rupert Isaacson: Mm-hmm.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

I don't, I don't see that empirically,
it improves what we do because the idea

with all this is to get better at it.

Anybody can do it.

Anybody can do animal communication
up to a point, just like anybody

can, you know, walk a mile.

But not everybody's going
to win the Boston Marathon.

Anybody can, can learn to do animal
communication and other, other

forms of paranormal activities.

It's something that we have in us.

It's, it's our, it's our birthright

Rupert Isaacson: right Now.

Some people would say, you know, it's
very interesting, this one that, that

was born of indigenous communities
especially working with psychotropic

plants that put you into an alter set
of consciousness that allow you to have.

These trans dimensional relationships
with the consciousness of

animals and plants and so on.

What's interesting for me is I,
all my experiences with indigenous

people talking to animals and
plants, were in the Kalahari

where no psychotropic stuff grows.

It's just not there.

So there is no ayahuasca, there
is no magic mushroom, there is

no peyote, there is no fly arick.

It is not there.

There's no DMT.

So it's very interesting that these
cultures without any drug also very,

very effectively seem to be able to
figure out things like if you take this

particular lava of this particular form
of beetle, when it's living under this

particular form of wild coffee tree.

And you heat it so that it's mucus
melts into the shaft of your arrow.

Anything that you hit with that
arrow will die, including a

giraffe, including your friend.

If you accidentally you know
him, or if you put, you know,

if you absent accidentally
rub your eye, you'll go blind.

But if you hit that animal with
that poison, all you have to do to

neutralize the poison is cook the meat.

How now you couldn't get to there by a
process of trial and error physically,

because everybody who failed it would die.

Like, and in those old, you know, people
think, oh, there, you know, millions

and millions of people that, you know,
they could have gone, no, there weren't,

you know, you're talking about places
with handfuls of people by our standards

where if they were to engage in that
sort of trial and error stuff with highly

toxic substances, they, not enough of
them would live to tell the tale that,

that, you know, so it just, you know,
so clearly there were other processes

going on and you know, of course I,
like anyone who spent any time in

these parts of the world have seen many
things where you just have to say, I'm

comfortable saying, I truly don't know
how that happened, but I did see it.

Right.

Yeah.

Even away from the prosaic
stuff, like just, you know,

punting technology like that.

Shapeshifting and all of
these things that actually,

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

yeah, shapeshifting,

Rupert Isaacson: you know, one, I've been
lucky enough to kind of be exposed to it.

And you, you, you begin to see why
people do it and how they do it and

how they, but you, you know, they,
they, they couldn't have come to these

conclusions through experimentally.

No, no.

There had to be somewhere
bypassing that process.

And that's my question
about quantum entanglement.

When you, when you look it up on Google,
you can't find anything about alright,

then, you know, how'd you, how'd you, you
know, entangle a, an electron then, you

know, or you know, if I'm having a, in
the pub, you know, I've got is an electron

look, I've got an electron, there it is.

You've got an electron,
let's entangle them in it.

And of course you can't, you know,
and of course there's trillions of

electrons buzzing about in you and in me.

Why are they not all entangled?

How do we entangle one or
two and not the trillion?

Others like,

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

well, there's your Nobel Prize, Rupert.

Rupert Isaacson: Oh yeah.

It'll be, it'll be me that proves that.

Right.

But I mean, so are there
insights into that?

Like when, when they observe
the quantum entanglement, did

they see how they got entangled?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

No.

NN no.

I mean, so far it's, like I say,
it's just subatomic particles

and, and it's a big mystery.

But did

Rupert Isaacson: they see, was
there any mechanical process

whereby they got entangle?

Did they trip over each other?

Did they bash into each
other in a particular way?

What did they do?

The

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

inner workings are not known.

They, it, they just, it's been,

Rupert Isaacson: they
just observed it permit

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

experimentally, which was
a huge, huge discovery.

Alan aspect did win the Nobel Prize
for, for quantum entanglement.

Yeah.

But no, we don't know how it happens.

It, we, we believe, or we.

I'm, I'm not a physicist, but they
believe it happens outside of space time.

Rupert Isaacson: Mm-hmm.

That,

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

you know, you violated the einsteinian
limit of the speed of light.

And so it's gotta be
outside of space time.

It's some kind of geometric phenomenon.

See, geometric structure.

Why is it geometric

Rupert Isaacson: if it's violating

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

space time?

Rupert Isaacson: We think that,
well that Yeah, that's true.

Becomes geometric

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

true.

Well I think there are geometries
that don't involve space and time.

I, I, I don't know a better word.

'cause geometry implies
dimensionality space time.

Right.

So something outside of space time.

And I think there are probably
consciousnesses in the

universe that aren't melded.

That aren't seated in, in
bodies and brains that function

like this all the time.

Yep.

And we're just, you know,
think of where this is gonna

be a thousand years from now.

We're just at the very dawn of
understanding that this happens,

but we know that it happens
because of the aspect experiment.

Rupert Isaacson: So that answered the
question that I was asking earlier,

which is where do you think the shifts
in scientific philosophy are going?

And you know, you having had a bit
of a front row seat of, of that in

Northern California over these years.

I think you just answered that,
which is that, as you say, we're at

the dawn of understanding that the
system that we live in is at once much

more complex and on another level.

Much simpler Yeah.

Than we ever could have imagined in
that, when I say simpler, that we

can access these states and perhaps.

We'll realize that we always have been,
and that many aspects of day-to-day

life actually are those, but that
perhaps we could, rather than stumbling

over them inadvertently or not so much
intentionally, we could more and more

make that a focus of attention and
then do things which appear magical.

Now that, of course, you know, it
is hilarious because, you know, any

self-respecting Native American or
Kalahari healer would say, well, I

do that every or every day, mate.

Yeah, yeah.

As have my ancestors for the, but you
lot us put all those people to the

stake for, you know, a thousand years.

And so you regard it as this huge deal.

But I think that what the difference
is between that indigenous way of

doing it on a very effective way
and training people in a spiritual

technology that accesses that c,
marrying that with the deterministic.

M mechanically physical sciences, I think
makes it accessible to the modern mind

and computing is the way that I think
people can accept it best because we

are used to com computers doing magic.

I mean, if, if you, you and I sitting here
on this zoom looking at each other, you

know, if that had been presented, that
would've been something we would've seen

in like a Star Wars movie in 1977, right?

Yeah.

They'd have done something like that
and we've gone, woo, you know, maybe

we'll be there in a thousand years.

I don't think we'd have quite thought
we'd be here so casually in 40.

Right.

But it it is magical, isn't it?

I mean, I, we're effectively
entangled here, aren't we?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Well, right, and quantum entanglement
has moral implications too, because if

we understand that everybody is part
of one consciousness outside of space

and time, you can't hate somebody.

You can't hate other people
and kill other people.

Rupert Isaacson: Hmm.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Make war on other people.

It's, well, perhaps you still can,
because you can just blind yourself.

Yeah.

The physics, sorry.

Rupert Isaacson: Perhaps you still can,
because you can just blind yourself to it.

I mean,

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

well, that's what, yeah, it that, that,
that part might take a thousand years

too, because, you know, all our, all
our sci-fi movies like Star Wars and

Star Trek, they're still about evil
forces all those years, conquest.

But, you know, quantum physics is the
physics of love and the entanglement

as a philosophy is about that.

It's about connection.

Rupert Isaacson: Interesting that
you say that because any, any healer

I've ever spoken to, whether it's
been in the Kalahari where I know

them best, or other places where
I've participated in those sorts of.

Things like little bits in the
Australian rainforest, little bits on

the Navajo reservation, little bits
in certain other areas of the world.

Whenever I've asked them the healer,
you know, well, what is this force

that you're using this energy?

It's back to your Qigong thing, whether
it's they say, oh, it's cheap, or

you know, the life force or whatever.

Yeah.

Or it's electricity, or it's what the
bushman called norm, which is one of the

norm, which is one of those untranslatable
words, but it it somewhere between life

force energy and wisdom and strength.

It sort of encompasses all those things.

But again, they all, they also, it's
a sexual energy that lives at the

base of the spine and you can do
things with it when you, when you ask

them, well, okay then what is norm?

What is key?

What is Kundalini?

You always get the same answer, which is.

What I've always gotten is, oh,
well, Rupert, that's quite simple.

It's just love.

It's just that with a, with
a certain training process,

you can learn to direct it.

Yeah.

So is is, is the quantum mechanics
and quantum stuff like that

merely our post agricultural,
post indigenous life culture.

Just coming back to the same conclusion
that we actually had 300,000 years

ago and still did, which is that we
can do things quite effectively in

dimensions outside of time and space
as well as dimensions inside time and

space, and that these things are not
so, you know, are not contradictory.

And it's interesting isn't it, that
those early cultures who, which

are still around, don't make war as
you say that they, they don't hate.

They don't.

And they're totally human.

They're not saints.

They just don't do that stuff.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Yeah.

We can hope, you know, we were
all indigenous at one point

and then we kinda lost it.

But you know, there
were, well, all children

Rupert Isaacson: are planet Earth, so
we are still indigenous, even if we've

displaced others and being displaced.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

And the mystical traditions of our,
particularly our three most common

religions, you know, Christian
mystical Christianity, Sufism and

Kabbalah within, somewhat within
the structure of traditional

religions, have that, that spiritual
yearning toward love and connection.

Rupert Isaacson: Yeah.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

And, and are open to mystical experiences
that we would call paranormal.

Rupert Isaacson: Right.

It does, and it does seem that that's
always nature's direction that.

Hmm.

No matter how much you mess it
up, it will go back to harmony.

If you cut your skin, it will heal.

You can abuse your liver massively.

I know I have in the past, and it
will still reconstitute itself.

You know, the, the it nature wants to go.

It seems always in that direction
of, for want of a better word, love.

I mean, your body loves you, right.

Your immune system loves you.

It, it behaves in a loving way.

It doesn't, that's why an autoimmune
disease is such a, an anomaly when there's

a disruption like that because, well, even

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

that, it's trying to
protect you with love.

Indeed.

Rupert Isaacson: Yeah.

Inflammation is just a
protection maker in guided, but

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

that's, you know, that's a
condition of consciousness too.

Rupert Isaacson: Absolutely.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

But you know, you think of the, the
trees that need forest fires to open up

their cones and regenerate the forest.

Mm.

Nature healing.

Rupert Isaacson: Absolutely.

So what's next for you?

You've got a nice equine therapy
practice going there at or therapeutic

practice there going at Stanford.

And I'm gonna have you on the other
podcast, so don't worry listeners,

don't stop jumping up and down.

We are going to ask her in much more
detail about that over on Equine Assisted

World, and we'll do that in a few weeks.

So we will do that interview.

But where are you going now with
your scientific life and your sort of

general, what, what's next for you?

You've led such an interesting
self-determined climate so far.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

The, well, a big part of my joy
is teaching college students

everything we've talked about.

Medical Tai Chi starts
next month and I just love.

Love teaching the college students
about, you know, in the context

Stanford University teaching.

You know, on one hand we, sorry.

Rupert Isaacson: I love that you're
at Stanford University teaching

medical Tai Chi that just makes
it feel like the hippies won.

And I I love that.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Yeah.

Well I used to be a hippie
card carrying, yeah,

Rupert Isaacson: I still am mate.

Still am card carrying, flag waving.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Yeah.

Yeah, I see you get the ponytail.

Rupert Isaacson: Proud to be, yeah.

Well there's lots of people who
aren't hip ponytails, but Yeah.

Yeah, so,

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

so what I've beco over the years
you know, I'll be 76 in two weeks

I've become way more open about
who I am and what I believe.

Rupert Isaacson: Hmm.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

So, you know, it's nice that the first
half hour of medical tai chi is hardcore

science and scientific methodology and
scientific reasoning and scientific logic.

'cause then I get to talk
about how Tai Chi is.

Basically quantum somatics,
I've come to call it.

Rupert Isaacson: Mm.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

It's how that, when we cultivate those
energies, then we relate to the cosmos,

we see our place in the universe, and
I've become, I've refined how I teach that

and how open I am about expressing that.

So that's always a work in progress, is
how to teach that, how to express it,

how to make it more real and more fun.

Rupert Isaacson: I'm not at Stanford,
but can I come and attend that course?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Oh, please.

Yeah.

Well, you should.

You should come and do equanimity
and do our meditation ride bareback.

I would love

Rupert Isaacson: to.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Well,

Rupert Isaacson: you know,
we have a really, really good

horse boy practice very close
to you there in in Half Moon Bay

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

with Joel.

Yes.

Yeah,

Rupert Isaacson: Joel, the,
the Square Peg Foundation.

And we were just together in Ireland
a couple of days ago for our big

conference that we have there.

So she's doing amazing work.

She's, you know, mental health
provider now for San Mateo

County, which is Silicon Valley.

Yeah.

So, yeah, I've got lots of reasons to go.

So let's, let's do that.

I'd love to come attend
and see it in more detail.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

That'll be in the spring.

Next class is in the spring, okay.

Okay.

Rupert Isaacson: Okay.

Yeah.

Super.

Alright, well I look forward to more.

And in the meantime you've got books.

So if people want to read a little bit
about your work and what you do, can you

tell people where the books are, what
they're about and how they find them?

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

So they're all on Amazon.

The latest one is actually on
Etsy as a downloadable PDF, the.

Book that I wrote for general people
who aren't necessarily horse people

and aren't necessarily meditation
people is just called equanimity,

stress reduction and emotional
self-regulation in the company of Horses.

That's a paperback.

And it's also an ebook on Amazon and Etsy.

Just tell us the title again

Rupert Isaacson: a bit more slowly in
case people have got their pens out.

Oh,

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

equanimity.

E-Q-U-I-N, een.

Imit, I-M-I-T-Y.

So you're

Rupert Isaacson: playing with
the word e equine E playing with

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

equanimity, which is EQUA.

Yeah.

N-I-M-I-T-Y.

Okay.

And subtitle.

So that's, that's the general
Stress Reduction and Emotional

Self-Regulation in the Company of Horses.

Okay.

And that's for the general readership.

And there's a manual to go
with that called The Manual of

Somatic Horsemanship, which is an
instructor's guide to equanimity.

And that's on, I had written a book
called The Manual of Medicine and

Horsemanship, which teaches other people
to replicate our Stanford program.

Mm-hmm.

And I was very gratified that about
20 other programs came out of that

all around the US and, and actually
one in Belgium and Costa Rica.

So I'm hoping the same thing will
happen with the Equanimity manual.

Rupert Isaacson: Super.

Well, we have our, you know,
for those listeners who are

listening, this is August, 2025.

Next year, about the same time,
September 26th, we'll be doing our

next neuroscience conference at,
at Eastern Virginia Medical School.

So I think you need to
come and be a speaker.

Be Beverly.

I think that'd be great.

Dr. Beverley Kane MD:

Yeah.

Yeah, that would be West Virginia
was one of the places that did

medicine and horsemanship too, so.

Ah, there you go.

Rupert Isaacson: Yeah.

Alright.

Well, I think I, I think
this is to be continued yeah.

Many threads to pick up, and we will
go into your equanimity program in more

detail over there on the next podcast,
but I, I'm so glad we got to look at what

has formed this and how you've gone from

hitchhiking with 35 bucks in your
pocket to protest the Vietnam War,

to becoming a, a doctor, to becoming
a professor, to becoming a computer

scientist, to becoming a corporate person
there in Silicon Valley to eventually

the con the physics of consciousness.

I, I love it.

With horses thrown in the mix.

It's, I think it's fair to say
you've, you are still living a

very, very self-actualized life and
many of us are benefiting from it.

So thank you so much for coming on the
show and I look forward to the next one.

Same.

Thank you, Rubert.

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 From Hippie to Stanford: Medicine, Horses & Quantum Consciousness with Dr. Beverley Kane | Ep 36
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