1 00:00:00,240 --> 00:00:03,400 Speaker 1: Nothing's better than feeling comfortable in your own shoes. Maybe 2 00:00:03,400 --> 00:00:05,760 Speaker 1: you're a parent raising a little rock star, or a 3 00:00:05,880 --> 00:00:08,560 Speaker 1: tech nomad working from anywhere. All Birds wants you to 4 00:00:08,560 --> 00:00:12,520 Speaker 1: be comfortable in your actual shoes too. They're wool runners, pipers, 5 00:00:12,640 --> 00:00:15,720 Speaker 1: and loungers are so cozy you might forget you're wearing them, 6 00:00:15,760 --> 00:00:18,599 Speaker 1: and they're crafted from natural materials that tread lightly on 7 00:00:18,640 --> 00:00:21,759 Speaker 1: our planet. So get comfortable in your shoes. Get to 8 00:00:21,840 --> 00:00:25,800 Speaker 1: know the wool runners, pipers and loungers at Alberts dot com. 9 00:00:25,800 --> 00:00:37,800 Speaker 1: That's ALLLBI rds dot com. Welcome to un Explained Extra 10 00:00:38,040 --> 00:00:41,320 Speaker 1: with me Richard McClean smith, where for the weeks in 11 00:00:41,360 --> 00:00:44,239 Speaker 1: between episodes, we look at stories and ideas that, for 12 00:00:44,280 --> 00:00:47,280 Speaker 1: one reason or other, didn't make it into the previous show. 13 00:00:47,960 --> 00:00:52,120 Speaker 1: In last week's episode, The Creeping esther Cox, a young 14 00:00:52,159 --> 00:00:55,600 Speaker 1: woman living in the town of Amherst, Nova Scotia, found 15 00:00:55,600 --> 00:00:58,120 Speaker 1: herself at the center of a series of peculiar and 16 00:00:58,240 --> 00:01:03,280 Speaker 1: terrifying events. For some, these events, which would collectively become 17 00:01:03,360 --> 00:01:06,720 Speaker 1: known as the Great Amherst Mystery, are among the most 18 00:01:06,760 --> 00:01:12,480 Speaker 1: convincing examples of a poltergeist haunting ever recorded. For many others. 19 00:01:12,520 --> 00:01:16,120 Speaker 1: These strange events, despite apparently being witnessed by a number 20 00:01:16,120 --> 00:01:20,080 Speaker 1: of credible individuals, had merely been concocted by Esther and 21 00:01:20,240 --> 00:01:24,760 Speaker 1: possibly others in her family. As many will know, one 22 00:01:24,800 --> 00:01:28,920 Speaker 1: interpretation of the apparent poltergeist phenomenon is to consider such 23 00:01:28,959 --> 00:01:32,959 Speaker 1: things as excitable, often malicious entities with an agency of 24 00:01:33,000 --> 00:01:37,600 Speaker 1: their own. Esther Cox herself claimed that the moving objects, 25 00:01:38,000 --> 00:01:41,200 Speaker 1: loud bangs, and fires that broke out around her were 26 00:01:41,240 --> 00:01:46,240 Speaker 1: caused by ghosts. Another interpretation of the apparent poltergeist, however, 27 00:01:46,800 --> 00:01:50,120 Speaker 1: is the belief that its supposed manifestations are in fact 28 00:01:50,280 --> 00:01:54,880 Speaker 1: the result of psychokinetic power. As the lover of science 29 00:01:54,880 --> 00:01:59,000 Speaker 1: fiction in particular bran to Palmer's thrilling nineteen seventy eight 30 00:01:59,000 --> 00:02:02,840 Speaker 1: classic The Few, it is this interpretation that I find 31 00:02:02,920 --> 00:02:08,120 Speaker 1: personally most interesting. The notion of psychokinetic powers, or having 32 00:02:08,160 --> 00:02:11,160 Speaker 1: the ability to effect objects and systems with the power 33 00:02:11,160 --> 00:02:14,040 Speaker 1: of the mind alone, has been around for many years. 34 00:02:14,880 --> 00:02:18,480 Speaker 1: Even as far back as four hundred BC. Shakuni, a 35 00:02:18,600 --> 00:02:23,320 Speaker 1: character from the Sanskrit epic Maha Barreter, was depicted manipulating 36 00:02:23,360 --> 00:02:27,399 Speaker 1: dice using only his will to do so. More recently, 37 00:02:27,720 --> 00:02:31,800 Speaker 1: characters in stories that possess psychokinetic powers similar to those 38 00:02:31,840 --> 00:02:36,480 Speaker 1: supposedly displayed by esther Cox have often been, though not exclusively, 39 00:02:36,880 --> 00:02:41,160 Speaker 1: young women or teenage girls, from Jean Gray in X 40 00:02:41,200 --> 00:02:45,080 Speaker 1: Men to Stephen King's Carry, and more recently the character 41 00:02:45,160 --> 00:02:48,960 Speaker 1: Eleven in Stranger Things. This trope is often laden with 42 00:02:49,000 --> 00:02:54,120 Speaker 1: the variety of complex and stereotypical implications, from being pejorative 43 00:02:54,160 --> 00:02:58,400 Speaker 1: depictions of women as hysterical and unable to control their emotions, 44 00:02:58,919 --> 00:03:02,080 Speaker 1: to being expression of a male fear of powerful and 45 00:03:02,240 --> 00:03:07,240 Speaker 1: vengeful girls and women. Such sexist underpinnings are also often 46 00:03:07,320 --> 00:03:11,080 Speaker 1: found in the literature of psychical research, where adherence to 47 00:03:11,120 --> 00:03:15,240 Speaker 1: the idea that poltergeists are indeed the result of psychokinesis 48 00:03:15,560 --> 00:03:18,639 Speaker 1: have tended to favor the view that adolescent girls were 49 00:03:18,639 --> 00:03:24,200 Speaker 1: the most likely culprits with parapsychology. Like most industries being 50 00:03:24,280 --> 00:03:29,960 Speaker 1: largely male dominated, such a perspective is unsurprising. That said, 51 00:03:30,360 --> 00:03:33,400 Speaker 1: if such powers were to manifest as the consequence of 52 00:03:33,480 --> 00:03:37,200 Speaker 1: years of trauma, or, as in Estercox's case, as a 53 00:03:37,280 --> 00:03:40,840 Speaker 1: reaction to a horrific assault, it wouldn't be surprising that 54 00:03:40,920 --> 00:03:43,400 Speaker 1: women and girls would be the more likely of the 55 00:03:43,480 --> 00:03:48,360 Speaker 1: cis genders to develop them. In any case, whether you 56 00:03:48,440 --> 00:03:51,400 Speaker 1: believe in the possibility of such powers or not, the 57 00:03:51,520 --> 00:03:55,240 Speaker 1: idea that humans could have the potential to exert psychokinesis 58 00:03:55,640 --> 00:03:59,640 Speaker 1: remains a potent one. Incredibly, it is also one that 59 00:03:59,720 --> 00:04:10,480 Speaker 1: has not only been confined to art and parapsychology. It 60 00:04:10,520 --> 00:04:13,120 Speaker 1: was back in the early autumn of nineteen seventy seven 61 00:04:13,880 --> 00:04:17,760 Speaker 1: that a student approached Professor Robert John, then dean of 62 00:04:17,800 --> 00:04:21,800 Speaker 1: America's Princeton School of Engineering and Applied Science, with an 63 00:04:21,839 --> 00:04:26,839 Speaker 1: unusual request. A few days earlier, John had informed his 64 00:04:26,920 --> 00:04:29,920 Speaker 1: students that a large part of that year's grade would 65 00:04:29,960 --> 00:04:33,800 Speaker 1: be apportioned to a project of their own devising. While 66 00:04:33,839 --> 00:04:37,159 Speaker 1: most students had no trouble getting their projects accepted, the 67 00:04:37,200 --> 00:04:39,960 Speaker 1: student in question had approached a number of professors to 68 00:04:40,000 --> 00:04:44,039 Speaker 1: supervise her, but all had refused, declaring her idea to 69 00:04:44,080 --> 00:04:48,560 Speaker 1: be nothing but pseudoscience. The idea was to attempt a 70 00:04:48,640 --> 00:04:53,600 Speaker 1: replication of an infamous psychokinesis experiment first devised by German 71 00:04:53,640 --> 00:04:59,320 Speaker 1: physicist and parapsychologist Helmut Schmidt in the nineteen sixties. Schmidt 72 00:04:59,400 --> 00:05:02,280 Speaker 1: had come to Prominance with the outlandish claim that he'd 73 00:05:02,279 --> 00:05:05,600 Speaker 1: found evidence of the mind's power to manipulate the outcome 74 00:05:05,760 --> 00:05:10,720 Speaker 1: of a random event generator, although they come in many guises, 75 00:05:11,160 --> 00:05:15,480 Speaker 1: a random event generator or random number generator is, as 76 00:05:15,480 --> 00:05:19,080 Speaker 1: the name suggests, a machine designed to generate a random 77 00:05:19,160 --> 00:05:22,680 Speaker 1: series of events or numbers in order to create results 78 00:05:22,680 --> 00:05:26,480 Speaker 1: that cannot be predicted. A basic version of this would 79 00:05:26,480 --> 00:05:29,280 Speaker 1: be the rolling of a dice, for example, or tossing 80 00:05:29,279 --> 00:05:32,920 Speaker 1: of a coin. Such machines are invaluable in the study 81 00:05:32,920 --> 00:05:38,080 Speaker 1: of statistics, among many other applications. Schmidt, however, was the 82 00:05:38,160 --> 00:05:41,599 Speaker 1: first to use the machines to test for signs of psychokinesis. 83 00:05:42,720 --> 00:05:45,640 Speaker 1: In one of his more famous experiments, Schmidt used a 84 00:05:45,680 --> 00:05:48,520 Speaker 1: device that omitted one red and one green light in 85 00:05:48,520 --> 00:05:52,640 Speaker 1: a random sequence. Participants were examined to see if they 86 00:05:52,640 --> 00:05:55,200 Speaker 1: were able to use their minds alone to make one 87 00:05:55,279 --> 00:05:59,680 Speaker 1: light up more times than the other. According to Schmidt, 88 00:06:00,240 --> 00:06:03,640 Speaker 1: it was found that, on average, participants were able to 89 00:06:03,680 --> 00:06:07,480 Speaker 1: influence results to the minute but noticeable degree of two 90 00:06:07,520 --> 00:06:13,360 Speaker 1: percent deviation from chance. However, Schmidt's apparent results had never 91 00:06:13,400 --> 00:06:18,440 Speaker 1: been replicated, a vital necessity for something to be accepted scientifically. 92 00:06:19,600 --> 00:06:23,039 Speaker 1: John's student wanted to see if they could replicate it. 93 00:06:24,279 --> 00:06:27,320 Speaker 1: Seeing no reason to prevent them, provided they approached the 94 00:06:27,360 --> 00:06:30,920 Speaker 1: experiment with all the rigor of any other experiment, John 95 00:06:31,120 --> 00:06:36,080 Speaker 1: granted them permission to do it. After all, a negative result, 96 00:06:36,320 --> 00:06:39,560 Speaker 1: as he expected the outcome to be, would be as valuable, 97 00:06:39,680 --> 00:06:43,120 Speaker 1: if not quite as earth shattering as finding a positive result. 98 00:06:44,480 --> 00:06:48,360 Speaker 1: So it was with some surprise that John's student claimed 99 00:06:48,360 --> 00:06:53,400 Speaker 1: to have replicated Schmidt's original findings. John was, in fact 100 00:06:53,520 --> 00:06:56,719 Speaker 1: so impressed by the results he decided to set up 101 00:06:56,760 --> 00:07:01,919 Speaker 1: an entire lab dedicated to similar investigations, and so, in 102 00:07:02,040 --> 00:07:05,680 Speaker 1: nineteen seventy nine, in a small, cramped basement room of 103 00:07:05,760 --> 00:07:11,160 Speaker 1: Princeton's Engineering Building, the Princeton Engineering Anomaly's Research Lab, or 104 00:07:11,280 --> 00:07:20,320 Speaker 1: Pair for short, was created. Are you always taking care 105 00:07:20,360 --> 00:07:22,840 Speaker 1: of your family? Do you often take care of others 106 00:07:22,880 --> 00:07:26,240 Speaker 1: and not yourself? Now it's time to take care of yourself. 107 00:07:26,640 --> 00:07:30,120 Speaker 1: To make time for you. You deserve it. Tele Adoc 108 00:07:30,200 --> 00:07:32,960 Speaker 1: gives you access to a licensed therapist to help you 109 00:07:33,000 --> 00:07:36,440 Speaker 1: get back to feeling your best to feeling like yourself again. 110 00:07:37,120 --> 00:07:40,360 Speaker 1: With teledoc, you can speak to a licensed therapist by 111 00:07:40,360 --> 00:07:44,040 Speaker 1: phone or video. Therapy Appointments are available seven days a 112 00:07:44,040 --> 00:07:47,600 Speaker 1: week from seven am to nine pm local time. If 113 00:07:47,640 --> 00:07:51,960 Speaker 1: you feel overwhelmed sometimes maybe you feel stressed or anxious, 114 00:07:52,280 --> 00:07:55,280 Speaker 1: depressed or lonely, or you might be struggling with a 115 00:07:55,320 --> 00:07:59,960 Speaker 1: personal or family issue, teledoc can help. Teledoc is committed 116 00:08:00,120 --> 00:08:03,760 Speaker 1: to facilitating great therapeutic matches, so they make it easy 117 00:08:03,800 --> 00:08:08,160 Speaker 1: to change counselors if needed. For free. Teledoc therapy is 118 00:08:08,200 --> 00:08:12,360 Speaker 1: available through most insurance or employers. Download the app or 119 00:08:12,440 --> 00:08:16,800 Speaker 1: visit teledoc dot com forward slash Unexplained podcast today to 120 00:08:16,840 --> 00:08:27,119 Speaker 1: get started. That's teladoc dot com slash Unexplained podcast. Robert 121 00:08:27,200 --> 00:08:30,920 Speaker 1: John had first attended Princeton as a student, completing first 122 00:08:30,920 --> 00:08:34,200 Speaker 1: a degree in engineering physics in nineteen fifty one and 123 00:08:34,280 --> 00:08:38,520 Speaker 1: then his physics PhD in nineteen fifty five. John would 124 00:08:38,520 --> 00:08:41,240 Speaker 1: go on to join the faculty in nineteen sixty two. 125 00:08:42,120 --> 00:08:45,320 Speaker 1: It was soon after that the John established the Electric 126 00:08:45,360 --> 00:08:49,080 Speaker 1: Propulsion and Plasma Dynamics Laboratory, with which he oversaw a 127 00:08:49,200 --> 00:08:54,080 Speaker 1: number of major research programs developing aerospace propulsion systems in 128 00:08:54,160 --> 00:08:58,520 Speaker 1: cooperation with NASA and the US Air Force. In fact, 129 00:08:58,679 --> 00:09:02,760 Speaker 1: much of what John helped develop continues to power spacecraft today. 130 00:09:03,960 --> 00:09:08,560 Speaker 1: But what Charm was most interested in was consciousness. Though 131 00:09:08,600 --> 00:09:12,319 Speaker 1: well aware that studying the potential for psychokinesis was at 132 00:09:12,360 --> 00:09:16,760 Speaker 1: best of fringe science and at worst utter nonsense, since 133 00:09:16,800 --> 00:09:19,360 Speaker 1: the existence of it would break a number of accepted 134 00:09:19,440 --> 00:09:22,400 Speaker 1: laws of the universe, he reasoned that if such a 135 00:09:22,440 --> 00:09:25,520 Speaker 1: thing were to be investigated, he could at least provide 136 00:09:25,600 --> 00:09:29,800 Speaker 1: the best of laboratory conditions to do it. For almost 137 00:09:29,840 --> 00:09:33,600 Speaker 1: thirty years under the guidance of lab manager Brenda Dunne, 138 00:09:34,000 --> 00:09:39,840 Speaker 1: the pair laboratory investigative primarily mind machine interactions and precognitive 139 00:09:39,960 --> 00:09:44,960 Speaker 1: remote viewing. A typical experiment for psychokinesis would involve a 140 00:09:45,000 --> 00:09:48,160 Speaker 1: participant being asked to stare at a random number generator 141 00:09:48,640 --> 00:09:51,520 Speaker 1: and to think high or low to influence the result. 142 00:09:52,679 --> 00:09:55,920 Speaker 1: For remote viewing, participants might be sent to a remote 143 00:09:55,920 --> 00:09:59,679 Speaker 1: but distinct location and told to think about the characteristics 144 00:09:59,679 --> 00:10:03,240 Speaker 1: of the place, while another participant in a different location 145 00:10:03,880 --> 00:10:06,360 Speaker 1: was tested to see if they could pick up anything 146 00:10:06,440 --> 00:10:16,600 Speaker 1: about where this other person was situated. In investigating the 147 00:10:16,640 --> 00:10:20,880 Speaker 1: possibility of psychokinesis, the researchers would look constantly to see 148 00:10:20,880 --> 00:10:25,520 Speaker 1: if their results were non Gaussian. A Gaussian curve, named 149 00:10:25,520 --> 00:10:30,280 Speaker 1: after mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss details the average distribution of 150 00:10:30,320 --> 00:10:34,080 Speaker 1: statistical information that you would ordinarily expect to find in 151 00:10:34,160 --> 00:10:38,920 Speaker 1: any given experiment. Anything contravening that would suggest that something 152 00:10:39,040 --> 00:10:44,400 Speaker 1: unusual was actively affecting the result. Often, according to Jan 153 00:10:44,600 --> 00:10:48,719 Speaker 1: and others at the Pair Laboratory, their experiments did exactly that, 154 00:10:49,400 --> 00:10:53,800 Speaker 1: supposedly revealing that thoughts alone could physically alter the results 155 00:10:54,040 --> 00:10:58,520 Speaker 1: of the random event generators. Critics, however, have pointed out 156 00:10:58,600 --> 00:11:01,720 Speaker 1: that their results would often only deviate from the norm 157 00:11:02,040 --> 00:11:05,680 Speaker 1: by a few percent, sometimes as little as nought point 158 00:11:05,760 --> 00:11:10,800 Speaker 1: nought two percent. Such results would fall significantly below the 159 00:11:10,920 --> 00:11:14,880 Speaker 1: usual margin of error demanded in similar experiments in order 160 00:11:14,920 --> 00:11:19,600 Speaker 1: to be certain that they weren't just statistical flukes. As 161 00:11:19,640 --> 00:11:22,280 Speaker 1: others have pointed out, it may also be the case 162 00:11:22,440 --> 00:11:24,920 Speaker 1: that there is no such thing as a truly random 163 00:11:24,960 --> 00:11:30,600 Speaker 1: event generator. But more fundamentally, even their most seemingly impressive 164 00:11:30,640 --> 00:11:35,400 Speaker 1: findings failed to be replicated elsewhere, and as such none 165 00:11:35,400 --> 00:11:39,120 Speaker 1: of their results achieved peer review, since most considered the 166 00:11:39,160 --> 00:11:42,319 Speaker 1: sheer notion of the peer lab's work to be inconsistent 167 00:11:42,440 --> 00:11:45,560 Speaker 1: with what are widely considered to be firmly established laws 168 00:11:47,280 --> 00:11:50,840 Speaker 1: for most science labs. Successful negotiating of the peer review 169 00:11:50,920 --> 00:11:55,400 Speaker 1: process is what maintains their funding. The Peer Lab was 170 00:11:55,440 --> 00:11:59,920 Speaker 1: funded by private investment. It is also worth noting that 171 00:12:00,040 --> 00:12:03,960 Speaker 1: despite containing the word Princeton, the Pair Lab was only 172 00:12:04,040 --> 00:12:08,480 Speaker 1: nominally associated with the university, who, along with most of 173 00:12:08,480 --> 00:12:12,200 Speaker 1: their affiliated scientists, are thought to have been deeply embarrassed 174 00:12:12,280 --> 00:12:16,400 Speaker 1: by the connection. In two thousand and seven, with funds 175 00:12:16,480 --> 00:12:19,520 Speaker 1: dwindling and their state of the art equipment no longer 176 00:12:19,600 --> 00:12:22,880 Speaker 1: quite what it used to be, the Peer Lab closed 177 00:12:22,880 --> 00:12:27,320 Speaker 1: its doors for good. Professor Jan who died in two 178 00:12:27,600 --> 00:12:38,720 Speaker 1: and seventeen, stood by everything they claimed to have discovered. Often, 179 00:12:39,000 --> 00:12:42,320 Speaker 1: when we think of the idea of psychokinetic power, we 180 00:12:42,400 --> 00:12:46,480 Speaker 1: imagine some kind of force being generated by our minds, 181 00:12:46,520 --> 00:12:51,319 Speaker 1: something that can manipulate gravitational or electromagnetic fields, perhaps that 182 00:12:51,480 --> 00:12:54,439 Speaker 1: can then in turn interact with the atoms or molecules 183 00:12:54,440 --> 00:12:58,200 Speaker 1: of the space around us. Many are seduced into the 184 00:12:58,200 --> 00:13:01,400 Speaker 1: prospect of it by the oft repeated myth that we 185 00:13:01,520 --> 00:13:05,480 Speaker 1: only use ten percent of our brains, the implication being 186 00:13:05,559 --> 00:13:08,199 Speaker 1: that if only we could exploit the other ninety percent, 187 00:13:08,720 --> 00:13:13,320 Speaker 1: who knows what powers we might uncover In reality, As 188 00:13:13,400 --> 00:13:17,320 Speaker 1: neurologist Barry Gordon of John Hopkins School of Medicine pointed 189 00:13:17,320 --> 00:13:21,439 Speaker 1: out in Scientific American we in fact use virtually every 190 00:13:21,440 --> 00:13:26,040 Speaker 1: part of our brain almost all the time, and yet 191 00:13:26,360 --> 00:13:28,720 Speaker 1: there is little doubt that there is much about the 192 00:13:28,720 --> 00:13:32,160 Speaker 1: function of the brain that isn't known, let alone the 193 00:13:32,200 --> 00:13:35,560 Speaker 1: workings of the quantum mechanical processes that underpin it on 194 00:13:35,600 --> 00:13:39,800 Speaker 1: a subatomic level. And though we might not ordinarily have 195 00:13:39,880 --> 00:13:43,400 Speaker 1: the ability to manipulate spaces around us with thoughts alone, 196 00:13:44,160 --> 00:13:48,000 Speaker 1: thanks to a number of recent developments in neurotechnology, such 197 00:13:48,040 --> 00:13:53,400 Speaker 1: a thing may well one day be available to all. Already, 198 00:13:53,679 --> 00:13:58,480 Speaker 1: Companies such as Nurable and Elon Musk's neurolink are developing 199 00:13:58,520 --> 00:14:02,240 Speaker 1: ways to measure patterns of electrical brain activity in order 200 00:14:02,280 --> 00:14:06,679 Speaker 1: to enact physical actions with thought alone, and Facebook are 201 00:14:06,679 --> 00:14:10,000 Speaker 1: currently developing a system that detects chemical changes in the 202 00:14:10,040 --> 00:14:12,360 Speaker 1: brain in the hope that it might one day be 203 00:14:12,520 --> 00:14:17,079 Speaker 1: used to convert our thoughts into type. Such developments are 204 00:14:17,120 --> 00:14:20,920 Speaker 1: likely only to become more sophisticated and more integrated into 205 00:14:20,960 --> 00:14:24,680 Speaker 1: our bodies. It might not be exactly what we had 206 00:14:24,720 --> 00:14:29,720 Speaker 1: in mind, but one way or another, psychokinesis could be 207 00:14:29,800 --> 00:14:37,800 Speaker 1: coming to us all. If you enjoy listening to Unexplained 208 00:14:38,040 --> 00:14:40,600 Speaker 1: and would like to help supporters, You can now go 209 00:14:40,680 --> 00:14:46,080 Speaker 1: to Unexplained podcast dot com Forward Slash Support. All donations, 210 00:14:46,280 --> 00:14:51,520 Speaker 1: no matter how large or small, are massively appreciated. All 211 00:14:51,520 --> 00:14:55,280 Speaker 1: elements have Unexplained are produced by me, Richard McClain Smith. 212 00:14:56,080 --> 00:14:59,280 Speaker 1: Please subscribe and rate the show on iTunes and feel 213 00:14:59,280 --> 00:15:02,200 Speaker 1: free to get touch with any thoughts or ideas regarding 214 00:15:02,200 --> 00:15:05,400 Speaker 1: the stories you've heard on the show. Perhaps you have 215 00:15:05,440 --> 00:15:09,040 Speaker 1: an explanation of your own you'd like to share. You 216 00:15:09,080 --> 00:15:13,080 Speaker 1: can reach us online at Unexplained podcast dot com, or 217 00:15:13,160 --> 00:15:18,120 Speaker 1: Twitter at Unexplained Pod and Facebook at Facebook dot com. 218 00:15:18,240 --> 00:15:31,160 Speaker 1: Forward Slash Unexplained. Now it's time to take care of yourself. 219 00:15:31,600 --> 00:15:35,320 Speaker 1: To make time for you. Teledoc gives you access to 220 00:15:35,360 --> 00:15:38,560 Speaker 1: a licensed therapist to help you get back to feeling 221 00:15:38,560 --> 00:15:42,320 Speaker 1: your best. Speak to a licensed therapist by phone or 222 00:15:42,400 --> 00:15:46,280 Speaker 1: video anytime between seven am to nine pm local time, 223 00:15:46,760 --> 00:15:50,600 Speaker 1: seven days a week. Teledoc Therapy is available through most 224 00:15:50,640 --> 00:15:55,320 Speaker 1: insurance or employers. Download the app or visit telldoc dot com, 225 00:15:55,480 --> 00:16:00,160 Speaker 1: Forward Slash Unexplained Podcast Today to get started. That's t 226 00:16:00,120 --> 00:16:04,520 Speaker 1: e l a d oc dot com. Slash Unexplained Podcast