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Frank About Health

Thursday, June 12, 2025
12
Jun
Facebook Live Video from 2025/06/12-Lessons Learned

 
Facebook Live Video from 2025/06/12-Lessons Learned

 

2025/06/12-Lessons Learned

[NEW EPISODE] D.I.D. You Know He Had Dissociative Identity Disorder - Followup

Thursdays 5:00pm - 6:00pm (EDT)

EPISODE SUMMARY:

A Review Show about the Lessons Learned Over The Last 10 Weeks

This is a review show that takes us back since April and reviews the top takeaways from the current season of Frank About Health.

www.frankrharrison.com

#LessonsLearned

Tune in for this healthy conversation at TalkRadio.nyc


Show Notes

Segment 1

In this special “Lessons Learned” episode of Frank About Health, host Frank R. Harrison reflects on the first 10 episodes of his latest season, which marked his return after a four-month hiatus due to personal and professional challenges. He emphasizes key themes such as emotional resilience, healthcare disruption, and the importance of transparency in navigating today’s fragmented health landscape. With heartfelt tributes, expert guests, and a renewed focus on empowering patients and caregivers, Frank reinforces the show’s mission to provide honest, actionable insights for healthcare advocates and providers alike.

Segment 2

In episodes 3 and 4 of this season of Frank About Health, Frank R. Harrison explores the themes of resilience and reflection through meaningful conversations with alternative care advocate Siobhan Laurice and longtime friend David Yang. Siobhan addressed the trauma of job loss and emotional fragmentation by promoting community-based healing and herbal remedies, while emphasizing agency in uncertain times. In a tribute episode to Brooklyn Technical High School, Frank revisited his personal journey from early health challenges to becoming a passionate healthcare advocate, showing how lived experience, education, and reflection can fuel long-term purpose and transformation in the health space.

Segment 3

In episodes 5 through 8 of this season of Frank About Health, Frank R. Harrison launched a focused exploration on The Great Healthcare Disruption, featuring thought leader Dr. Marshall Runge and co-host Phyllis Quinlan. Together, they tackled systemic healthcare issues such as professional burnout, decentralized care, and the urgent need to reimagine the U.S. healthcare model—emphasizing transparency, early education, and resilience. The segment also introduced groundbreaking innovations like CRISPR and mRNA technology, highlighting the promise of next-generation therapies while encouraging listeners to stay informed, engaged, and proactive amid today’s fragmented health landscape.

Segment 4

In episodes 9 and 10 of this season of Frank About Health, Frank R. Harrison explored personalized longevity and caregiving ecosystems through powerful conversations with Deepak Sani, Mark Feilerman, and David Yang. Deepak shared his TIME method for aging with vitality through natural lifestyle changes, while Mark and David reflected on caregiving, Alzheimer's, and the importance of collaboration in health and innovation. Frank closed the segment with heartfelt gratitude and a look ahead, reinforcing that health ownership, reflection, and resilience are essential in navigating ongoing disruption and preparing for a more empowered, community-driven future in healthcare.


Transcript

00:00:50.650 --> 00:01:02.289 Frank R. Harrison: Hey, everybody, and welcome to an episode of Frank about health. Today's date is June 12, th 2025. It is what I call my lessons learned show it would be like a season recap

00:01:02.690 --> 00:01:13.279 Frank R. Harrison: each. Each season is about 12 episodes. Last Thursday was the 10th of the current block of 12. So I'm going to do what I can to recap

00:01:13.470 --> 00:01:20.299 Frank R. Harrison: some of the highlights of the last 10 episodes, including the guests, quotes that were said.

00:01:20.410 --> 00:01:35.509 Frank R. Harrison: The key issue lessons learned during the show, because, if you all remember, I was on a 4 month hiatus prior to doing the last season of Frank about health, and that was due to a lot of issues that I was faced with, including grief.

00:01:35.650 --> 00:01:51.119 Frank R. Harrison: watching some challenges going on within my family, as well as also watching the devolving of some of the aspects of my business model that I had created when I relaunched Frank about health in 2021, however.

00:01:51.400 --> 00:02:03.849 Frank R. Harrison: part of the lessons learned while doing the 10 episodes that have just passed by is how to pivot, how to reposition, how to come back stronger, and how to make even

00:02:04.460 --> 00:02:08.989 Frank R. Harrison: my audience and my listeners, who've been loyal to me since 2021

00:02:09.110 --> 00:02:18.510 Frank R. Harrison: to see that frank about health was back and stronger, and when the next season begins in a couple weeks it'll be even stronger than it is today.

00:02:18.770 --> 00:02:46.759 Frank R. Harrison: That all being said, I want to 1st issue my disclaimer, as I do on every episode. Each episode talks about issues that could be considered controversial in nature. They are not the views of talkradionyc or of frank about health, but rather they are views of the guest in question or in Dr. Marshall Runji's case, the book in question, and simultaneously, as we also learned from other guests that we had on the show.

00:02:46.840 --> 00:03:05.790 Frank R. Harrison: There are some points of view that are only good for specific listeners, and yet, because of a lot of our society's views, the way they've become fragmented recently that can create a bias. And therefore all I do now is say, if this is not something that you can handle.

00:03:05.880 --> 00:03:28.509 Frank R. Harrison: then feel free to move on to another show. I'm just doing what I can to be frank, transparent, open, and honest about the health care issues that are affecting all of us, especially when we're also in a state of disruption, which is what the last 10 episodes have mainly focused on. But, as you learned probably from the last episode, if you had stayed tuned.

00:03:28.630 --> 00:03:50.260 Frank R. Harrison: it's also an opportunity for us to really get hold of our healthcare. So that's the beginning of this particular show. My summary of what this particular show is about. You see that I don't have a guest today. I guess I could say that clips of people that have been on the show, as well as quotes that I read

00:03:50.260 --> 00:04:01.789 Frank R. Harrison: from my transcripts and other kinds of things that I will show during my commercial commercial break will be highlights of who was on the show as well as what topics were discussed.

00:04:02.910 --> 00:04:12.219 Frank R. Harrison: I think that all being said again, if you are watching on Youtube, Facebook, Linkedin, or Twitch feel free to ask any live questions about

00:04:12.490 --> 00:04:21.789 Frank R. Harrison: what I'm talking about. If you had seen the show. If you didn't have a chance to ask the questions at that time. Feel free now, I will be able to help answer them in real time.

00:04:22.343 --> 00:04:34.209 Frank R. Harrison: I think I would like to 1st break out that of the 10 shows. The 1st 4 were kind of a slow rebuild after my 4 month hiatus.

00:04:34.380 --> 00:04:41.950 Frank R. Harrison: The second set of 4 was a 4 episode miniseries of the great Healthcare Disruption, including a book campaign.

00:04:42.060 --> 00:04:49.630 Frank R. Harrison: And then the last 2 was basically an individual named Deepak Sani.

00:04:49.840 --> 00:05:09.450 Frank R. Harrison: who was referred by Linda Marsonico from the A train to Sedona, and he proved to be an interesting ally from Canada who really looks at how we, as individuals, once our healthcare has been disrupted, we definitely learn to take ownership and actually create

00:05:09.500 --> 00:05:25.749 Frank R. Harrison: a model of change to continue to live with, to maximize your quality of life. And then we ended the season discussing about how once you have mastered your ecosystem and your business model for keeping your health care in check

00:05:26.500 --> 00:05:35.480 Frank R. Harrison: the entrepreneur in. You can come out in certain instances. I know it has come out for me. So that's basically what we're going to talk about in the next hour

00:05:35.770 --> 00:05:39.700 Frank R. Harrison: I will start by saying, episode one which aired

00:05:39.910 --> 00:05:42.570 Frank R. Harrison: on April 3, rd 2025

00:05:42.950 --> 00:05:58.080 Frank R. Harrison: was a very unique show. It was our conscious consultant, Sam Lebowitz, who I had interview me so that we could welcome me back into the fold after being away for 4 months. The name of the episode was the conscious consultant

00:05:58.490 --> 00:06:23.860 Frank R. Harrison: explores Frank about health, and I dubbed it during that episode as 3.0, because I'd already launched the show twice on 2 different milestone occasions. But this one was kind of a milestone, because it was a rebirth. It was a rebuilding. It was a repositioning of how I would have targeted shows that would be more focused on how we can get to maintaining our quality of life

00:06:23.890 --> 00:06:30.609 Frank R. Harrison: be more preventative, and at the same time deal with crises, crises as they occur.

00:06:31.550 --> 00:06:41.990 Frank R. Harrison: One of the quotes that I have actually from Sam himself during that show was when we're willing to be vulnerable, we give others permission to do the same.

00:06:42.430 --> 00:06:59.690 Frank R. Harrison: I would love to have shown you the clip, but I'm not as technologically advanced to be able to do that at this point. I think if you want to see that quote, or even other aspects of that interview that Sam and I had by all means just go onto the Youtube Channel, look for that episode and enjoy

00:07:00.070 --> 00:07:11.210 Frank R. Harrison: simultaneously some of the key lessons learned during that episode include that when dealing with challenges, as I was dealing with the loss of my dear friend Ritha Gray.

00:07:11.210 --> 00:07:30.589 Frank R. Harrison: also watching my caregiving attempts go south, due to our current administration as well as what had happened with my cousin being placed in a nursing facility, we had learned how to gain emotional resilience, and I think I had said, or maybe it was just discussed between Sam and I.

00:07:30.630 --> 00:07:34.490 Frank R. Harrison: Emotional resilience is essential when navigating grief.

00:07:34.550 --> 00:07:47.469 Frank R. Harrison: caregiving, and professional transitions. Resilience is the key lesson. There you have to maintain resiliency. If you look at a situation that falls apart in front of you, and you just basically give up.

00:07:48.220 --> 00:08:03.139 Frank R. Harrison: It's not worth it, basically is letting yourself become defeated. The focus is to keep on keeping on if you've heard it phrased that way. But at the same time most people can't do that if they're not informed correctly.

00:08:03.140 --> 00:08:27.190 Frank R. Harrison: and that's why I was also stating during the show that the reason for coming back was to help remove the cobwebs from a lot of people's minds, because there's a lot of misinformation in traditional media today, especially about all of the healthcare changes that have happened in our country since January. I don't need to explain why, but I just want to say that Frank, about health is the place where you're going to get the truth as

00:08:27.460 --> 00:08:37.880 Frank R. Harrison: much as possible, because I'm not an expert. I'm not an Md, I just basically am being an advocate and providing direction and resources.

00:08:38.620 --> 00:08:47.949 Frank R. Harrison: I also mentioned during that episode that, speaking one's truth in healthcare advocacy builds authenticity, authenticity and trust.

00:08:48.180 --> 00:08:51.930 Frank R. Harrison: and media platforms, can amplify messages of healing

00:08:52.010 --> 00:08:55.099 Frank R. Harrison: and reform when they are used intentionally.

00:08:55.180 --> 00:09:18.870 Frank R. Harrison: and that is exactly why I brought Frank about health to talkradio dot Nyc. 1st in 2016, to be open and transparent about epilepsy in 2021 to uncover the cobwebs of covid, and then branch out into every other illness that was affecting us all during that time, and then, of course, coming back while we are dealing with healthcare disruptions.

00:09:18.870 --> 00:09:31.509 Frank R. Harrison: both socially and technologically, that need to be managed, understood, and kept in sync with your own knowledge base. While working with your Pcp. And other medical providers.

00:09:32.530 --> 00:09:53.969 Frank R. Harrison: I thought that show was a very good one it. It made me feel it made me feel welcomed back to the family, and immediately, the very next week, I brought in my my co-host, Phyllis Quinlan for the second episode. The episode that we did was called Healthcare Disruption, fact, or fiction.

00:09:54.130 --> 00:09:58.689 Frank R. Harrison: On April 10, th 2025, and her quote was

00:09:59.222 --> 00:10:18.850 Frank R. Harrison: Actually it was all. We opened the show, showing the tribute to Betty White, with Ritha Gray and her chugging the wine together and saying, We're going to live forever, and we were reminiscing about Ritha as well as the time we did the tribute episode on Frank about health. When Betty White had passed 2 years earlier, and

00:10:19.160 --> 00:10:25.679 Frank R. Harrison: she said, when she was completely shocked, and could have never imagined Ritha's passing the way, that it happened.

00:10:25.780 --> 00:10:29.629 Frank R. Harrison: that it has been quite a life lesson

00:10:29.750 --> 00:10:46.969 Frank R. Harrison: to watch these 2 women be advocates in their own right, and at the same time, all of a sudden, whether they had moved on or transitioned, they were still with us. It was a way of affirming to us that our resiliency and our ability to deal with challenges in our health

00:10:47.120 --> 00:11:07.200 Frank R. Harrison: are sometimes reflected in their their nuggets of wisdom that they passed on prior to their death. You know the insights that even during the show I felt Ritha giving me insights into what to say about her which I had been spending most of February doing, especially when I went out to La for her memorial service

00:11:07.530 --> 00:11:21.119 Frank R. Harrison: overall. That was a way of Phyllis and I reconnecting and really discussing about the upcoming appearance of Dr. Marshall Runji, who was going to be releasing a book in May called the Great Healthcare Disruption. But we

00:11:21.290 --> 00:11:41.849 Frank R. Harrison: we're already seeing the disruptions in our local area here in New York City, she being a executive coach and a nurse in the New York City healthcare system. But simultaneously, me doing this show, how could I just come back to Frank about health in 2025 and talk about

00:11:41.950 --> 00:12:10.389 Frank R. Harrison: cancer, leukemia, or anything, knowing that a lot of that information has been removed from the Internet. Knowing that certain sites, certain local resources are still available to get transparency out to patients. But it's no longer the fluid dynamic communication that we were all experiencing, especially during covid, and especially when we had a different administration that was as transparent as they could be about any illnesses that were going on.

00:12:10.460 --> 00:12:34.070 Frank R. Harrison: It was just a total 180, and I think showing us that each of us have to be as almost like in our own medical program, our own medical school to get as much information necessary, so that we know how to deal with whatever's going on in our family, through our friends and and other other, especially if you're a caregiver. Other groups.

00:12:34.650 --> 00:13:04.120 Frank R. Harrison: Now, Phyllis, if you all remember, when I 1st met her, she was part of the share, the care organization which I believe she still is, and she was very much into caregiving through our two-hour caregiving panel that we had. Ritha was part of that, I remember, but she was definitely looking at the Frank about health audience as the caregiving that she could provide to say, Okay, Frank Phyllis, do you think that is fact, or is that fiction.

00:13:04.260 --> 00:13:32.939 Frank R. Harrison: That episode was more of a transition episode getting us ready for the rest of the season to follow. I think we learned that AI was definitely going to be very pivotal in 2025, particularly chatgpt and perplexity, which are very healthcare specific. Chatgpt has been very helpful to me in being able to be resilient in watching all of the changes that have gone on in both our society, as well as in my father's case and my cousin's case

00:13:33.050 --> 00:13:59.900 Frank R. Harrison: and among my own healthcare needs. But I would say that that proved to be a very successful episode. I think we had about 50 viewers on Youtube alone. And, by the way, Phyllis, happy birthday, I know today is your birthday, and if you're watching, you know, I wish you were here with me now, but we'll definitely have a reconvene in July when we, when we try to bring back Marshall Runji to see how his book has been doing.

00:14:00.550 --> 00:14:19.730 Frank R. Harrison: Well, I think I'm ready for my 1st break in the last 13 min. Yep, I have just covered the 1st 2 episodes of this season. As I said April 3rd I came back to Frank about health, and it was called the Conscious Consultant explores Frank about health.

00:14:19.820 --> 00:14:40.230 Frank R. Harrison: and on April 10th me and Phyllis Quinlan got together, and we talked about healthcare disruption, and trying to discuss, in addition to pay tribute to Aretha Gray's passing, whether healthcare disruption is fact or fiction, and we concluded it's predominantly fact. And then we were using the later episodes of Frank about health

00:14:40.530 --> 00:14:41.430 Frank R. Harrison: to

00:14:41.780 --> 00:14:59.419 Frank R. Harrison: disclose the facts, interpret the facts, and helpfully answer any of your questions out there. Okay, when we come back we will talk about episodes 3 and 4 right here on talkradio dot Nyc. On our socials, and we'll be back in a few.

00:14:59.570 --> 00:15:00.350 Frank R. Harrison: See you soon.

00:16:43.200 --> 00:16:45.179 Frank R. Harrison: Hey, everybody, and welcome back.

00:16:45.350 --> 00:16:48.469 Frank R. Harrison: I just tried to show you, during the 1st commercial break.

00:16:48.600 --> 00:16:53.089 Frank R. Harrison: both Sam Leibowitz and Phyllis Quinlan's Linkedin pages

00:16:53.740 --> 00:17:07.680 Frank R. Harrison: so that you can know who your conscious consultant is. Again. He's the executive producer of Talkradio, Dot, Nyc. And he has his show, the conscious consultant. Our everyday awakenings every Thursday at 12 noon, right here on the network

00:17:07.849 --> 00:17:25.479 Frank R. Harrison: simultaneously, Phyllis Quinlan continues to be a very dear friend and healthcare advocate in her own right, and I promise she will be on frank about health in the near future, as we continue to pay tribute to a lot of the core guests that we've been talking about the hard-hitting facts that are affecting us all.

00:17:26.060 --> 00:17:44.600 Frank R. Harrison: Episode 3, which happened on April 17, th 2025, was called building resilience, and the guest was Siobhan Laurice, a referral from Sam Lebowitz, Siobhan. Laurice was looking at alternative healthcare treatments for a lot of people in the Virginia Maryland area

00:17:44.650 --> 00:18:03.800 Frank R. Harrison: now a lot of people, if you remember, in the early part of the fall, in the early part of the year, were being eliminated from their jobs, especially within the Federal Government, leading to a lot of trauma reactions leading to a lot of issues related to depression, anxiety, and other kinds of

00:18:03.840 --> 00:18:18.169 Frank R. Harrison: stress triggers that were just not doing well. So she started to talk about her practice. That was also using alternative treatments with cannabis as well as some other herbal treatments that we she had discussed during the show.

00:18:18.270 --> 00:18:22.520 Frank R. Harrison: One of her quotes was, is that I'm here to help build community

00:18:22.650 --> 00:18:26.050 Frank R. Harrison: because it's going to be the key that gets us through all of this.

00:18:26.170 --> 00:18:35.189 Frank R. Harrison: the ongoing uncertainty that was starting out the year. And then, of course, even since that airing has gotten a little bit more worse. But

00:18:35.260 --> 00:18:58.219 Frank R. Harrison: at least I can say that that is a local area depending on where you're living. It could be more extreme than is happening right here in New York, for example, I mean, we've got some guardrails in New York, but I don't know. I've seen a lot of limitations on my side as well, but nothing to the extreme, like we've all been seeing recently in the media in California.

00:18:58.330 --> 00:19:02.611 Frank R. Harrison: you know, but that is not a health related topic.

00:19:03.330 --> 00:19:25.379 Frank R. Harrison: Siobhan. Laurice, basically, was very instrumental to my mother, who was watching the show, and she was already seeing that she could probably help her with her sleeplessness as well as other kinds of trauma reactions my mother had been having, you know, overall. I tried to pair them together because that was one of the things that Siobhan was able to indicate

00:19:25.450 --> 00:19:39.249 Frank R. Harrison: that she is able to work with anyone. That is a direct referral from Talkradio, dot Nyc. Or is at the same time dealing with a lot of these stressful reactions after job displacement and things like that.

00:19:39.920 --> 00:19:42.609 Frank R. Harrison: I'm not sure that ever happened. But

00:19:42.710 --> 00:19:51.759 Frank R. Harrison: or rather, I'm not sure they ever got in touch. But I will say that there were a lot of lessons learned in that particular episode.

00:19:52.520 --> 00:19:56.110 Frank R. Harrison: and I want to read from the notes I have here, because.

00:19:56.630 --> 00:20:00.859 Frank R. Harrison: you know, it would be more transparent than I could use from my own recall.

00:20:03.160 --> 00:20:09.649 Frank R. Harrison: The things that Siobhan mentioned during that episode is that rather than labeling.

00:20:09.760 --> 00:20:13.969 Frank R. Harrison: which also influences toxic dynamics in the workplace.

00:20:14.640 --> 00:20:19.340 Frank R. Harrison: Siobhan encourages turning into one's own gut instinct

00:20:19.470 --> 00:20:23.300 Frank R. Harrison: to determine which relationships to nurture and which to limit.

00:20:23.530 --> 00:20:40.489 Frank R. Harrison: offering practical insights for those navigating emotional fragmentation in an era of collective uncertainty. When people are leaving a government job. One can already speak about the culture in that job, but to have it all of a sudden displaced

00:20:41.040 --> 00:21:08.599 Frank R. Harrison: for no reason at all, no explainable one that makes any sense. You already have the trauma of losing the job, and you have the trauma of no explanation behind losing the job. And then you have a trust difficulty, a reality testing problem. When being able to face your family, your friends, any of your former coworkers, or even other colleagues, that you would want to network in looking for work. It actually prevents people from being motivated

00:21:08.690 --> 00:21:15.969 Frank R. Harrison: to finding another job. Most people would have been better off finding the other job if they knew the chopping block was coming.

00:21:16.010 --> 00:21:36.839 Frank R. Harrison: or if they felt it coming, and they had a matter of I don't know 30 days, or whatever to be able to make a transition. She did mention in that episode that there was a friend of hers that managed to get another job and leave on his own, which was a good thing, or maybe he took the severance and then got the other job I don't totally recall, but it was a lesson about

00:21:36.840 --> 00:21:54.020 Frank R. Harrison: taking agency over your own needs to make a transition, even if it's not what you wanted to do on default, even if it was not the main focus of your time, but knowing that you were pretty much advocating for your life, especially with all the uncertainty going on at that point

00:21:54.090 --> 00:21:56.580 Frank R. Harrison: with Mr. Musk as well.

00:21:57.381 --> 00:21:59.428 Frank R. Harrison: That all being said,

00:22:00.730 --> 00:22:30.179 Frank R. Harrison: overall. Siobhan does have a good practice out there showing how building resiliency is critical and is important, and I will show you in the next commercial break her website, so that if you're interested in contacting her so that you can just get a consult and discuss with Siobhan as to if she could help you with your emotional and and trigger needs, I would highly recommend her, as I did to my mother.

00:22:30.898 --> 00:22:42.739 Frank R. Harrison: Episode 4 was a a very special episode. It was April 24, th 2025, and it was about commemorating Brooklyn Technical High School with my

00:22:42.970 --> 00:23:00.980 Frank R. Harrison: my alumni friend from the class of 84 David Yang, David Yang, would would come back and prove to be very instrumental in having interviews with me and Marshall Runji, as well as also a guest of his, that he brought on the episode that aired last week

00:23:01.190 --> 00:23:02.790 Frank R. Harrison: more about that later.

00:23:03.260 --> 00:23:17.259 Frank R. Harrison: What I found interesting about David is that he and I, to begin with, were already participating in a Brooklyn Tech stem. Future World Vision Advisory Board Committee meeting the same week that I was about to go to my 40th homecoming.

00:23:17.380 --> 00:23:28.959 Frank R. Harrison: but I wasn't able to attend it, because I was actually going to be attending a trip for a fundraising a book fundraising campaign that was effect.

00:23:29.500 --> 00:23:32.929 Frank R. Harrison: you know, effectually added to Frank Frank about health

00:23:33.050 --> 00:23:44.319 Frank R. Harrison: during the following 4 weeks after that, and that was with Dr. Marshall Ranji. Now the thing is, though, that while business took over, I wanted to pay tribute to the legacy

00:23:44.440 --> 00:23:57.910 Frank R. Harrison: because the lesson learned for me in doing that show, and by bringing David into it being that he was from Brooklyn Tech being that he's also in the healthcare space that we were able to also determine, just by our discussion.

00:23:58.855 --> 00:23:59.640 Frank R. Harrison: That

00:24:00.200 --> 00:24:21.799 Frank R. Harrison: I wasn't motivated to be in healthcare. When I went to that high school I was motivated to just be in business. I loved mathematics, I loved marketing, I love psychology, but I just knew that they were tools that I was building, and I went to the college of my dreams, but I still did not really know what I wanted to do. I always found myself falling into what I was meant to do.

00:24:21.940 --> 00:24:40.939 Frank R. Harrison: but I couldn't help but feel challenged all the time. Where, for example, when I left my college, I went to work for a bank. I hated that, but I became a Dj, and after that I ended up in the music industry. And then, after that, when the music industry imploded. My entrepreneurial vision took hold along with healthcare crises.

00:24:41.020 --> 00:24:58.889 Frank R. Harrison: and I decided, well, you know what Brooklyn Tech did provide me with the skill sets to be resilient, and at the same time to be entrepreneurial and end up doing what I guess I always knew I was meant to do, which was to advocate or promote or market healthcare programs and opportunities.

00:24:59.040 --> 00:25:07.989 Frank R. Harrison: My very 1st epileptic seizure was at Brooklyn Technical High School in March of 20 1984,

00:25:08.050 --> 00:25:31.979 Frank R. Harrison: and I always wondered then, okay, I am living with something that has a stigma attached to it. But at this point now I wear it as a badge of honor. Again, I give Brooklyn Tech for being not only the initial problem case that made me have to find a way to live through my life with epilepsy, but it also became my pathway to build a solution.

00:25:32.070 --> 00:25:57.700 Frank R. Harrison: And one of the solutions you're listening to right now. It's frank about health. It has afforded me in over 4 years time to be a healthcare advocate, as well as to do what I can to continue to advocate for other people with other types of illnesses that at least I have become very informed about, and I have developed the key resources. So I would have to say that tribute episode was also paying tribute

00:25:57.850 --> 00:26:01.679 Frank R. Harrison: to Frank about health and paying tribute to

00:26:01.820 --> 00:26:08.399 Frank R. Harrison: how I've evolved over the last 40 years, and I and I I am glad we did that show together.

00:26:09.280 --> 00:26:36.430 Frank R. Harrison: So in the last I would have to say almost half hour. We've talked about key lessons from those 1st 4 episodes again. The one with me and Sam was about rebirth from challenges which I did have a preview, by the way, as being a guest on Linda Marsonico's a train to Sedona, where we talked about that a little bit, and then, at the same time being back with Phyllis, dealing with the grief

00:26:36.580 --> 00:26:56.550 Frank R. Harrison: over Aretha Gray's passing and understanding that we're living in a state of chaos with healthcare disruptions. But we're not sure if it's true or false, realizing that it's basically true. And then in episode 3 that I came back. You know, with Siobhan Laurice. She

00:26:56.790 --> 00:27:04.519 Frank R. Harrison: gave me the understanding that resiliency is a key tool that we all need to have. And then, by paying the tribute to Brooklyn Tech.

00:27:04.670 --> 00:27:33.860 Frank R. Harrison: I'm looking that. Not only do you have resiliency, but you also have reflection, and it is reflection reflecting on where things began for you that bring you to where you are today everything does come back full circle, and I guess I could honestly say that I give credit to Sam Phyllis, Siobhan and David for helping me continue to rebuild the trajectory post. My 4 month hiatus.

00:27:34.230 --> 00:27:35.280 Frank R. Harrison: Okay.

00:27:35.650 --> 00:27:43.180 Frank R. Harrison: that's already the 1st half hour gone. I am going to now. Take another break, and we will be back in a few. See you soon.

00:29:18.820 --> 00:29:20.709 Frank R. Harrison: Hey, everybody, and welcome back.

00:29:20.870 --> 00:29:26.350 Frank R. Harrison: Sorry about all those technical challenges during the commercial break. I wanted to get to Siobhan, Laurice's page.

00:29:26.420 --> 00:29:54.470 Frank R. Harrison: and also, at the same time prevent freezing out. I just wanted you to all see that she is ready to book a consultation with all of you at any point in time. If you should seek any information. If you saw while browsing through the site, not only does she deal with Ptsd issues and stress issues anxiety and depression. She does yoga therapy, and she does psychedelic therapy. I know cannabis is one of the tools, but she was also dealing with some other.

00:29:56.270 --> 00:30:11.850 Frank R. Harrison: I wouldn't call it drug some other herb that was able to also provide some healing, neurological healing, especially if some of those triggers are just recurring, regardless of what your circumstances are at that point.

00:30:13.820 --> 00:30:18.350 Frank R. Harrison: I think now would be the time to really, especially in this 3rd segment.

00:30:18.460 --> 00:30:21.570 Frank R. Harrison: emphasize the importance of healthcare disruption.

00:30:21.770 --> 00:30:44.649 Frank R. Harrison: The great healthcare disruption was released on May 6, th 2025. Originally on episode 5 of the season that aired May 1, st 2025 I brought back Phyllis Quinlan and Marshall, Phyllis and I had a conversation with him about his upcoming book, and I just thought it was perfect that someone with her.

00:30:44.960 --> 00:31:06.009 Frank R. Harrison: Phyllis's experience, a medical nurse, executive coach, someone who's been dealing in Emt and and trauma, therapy, trauma conditions and elderly and vaccines and all those kinds of issues could discuss all the nuts and bolts of what was in that book, what was about to be released?

00:31:06.654 --> 00:31:19.669 Frank R. Harrison: Overall. I remember from the show that Phyllis was able to do what she could to provoke him into giving more insights that he himself had forgotten to write about in the book.

00:31:19.770 --> 00:31:25.569 Frank R. Harrison: but I was glad that he was able to share with the Frank about health listeners some of those key

00:31:25.640 --> 00:31:52.130 Frank R. Harrison: issues, because I guess if anything, he's going to be in a position to write an appendix, or possibly even an addendum to the book, because he wrote it when we were still under healthier times about a year ago, and then now, even more than ever, we need more transparency. So I believe he is going to be doing that. I just don't know any hard information as to when or if or how.

00:31:52.790 --> 00:32:17.269 Frank R. Harrison: but I can say that Forbes has already picked up on his book, and they're going to do a tribute to him next week here in New York City. And I just think that's a high honor. I did learn from Marshall that you viewers out there have been watching the 4 episodes, including Episode 5 with Marshall and Phyllis.

00:32:17.320 --> 00:32:45.110 Frank R. Harrison: and have actually participated in viewing the book on amazon.com. And possibly even making a purchase. I just don't know if, in fact, that has been done, but I can honestly say I've gotten a lot of positive feedback from Marshall about the Frank, about health audience, really taking seriously the lessons, learned that he not only covered on the show with Phyllis, but also on the 3 subsequent shows which I will discuss later on.

00:32:45.770 --> 00:32:48.730 Frank R. Harrison: A quote that came from Marshall during that show

00:32:49.320 --> 00:32:52.819 Frank R. Harrison: is something that we should all be saying to ourselves.

00:32:53.080 --> 00:33:00.830 Frank R. Harrison: Disruption begins by acknowledging what no longer serves us all right now, simultaneously

00:33:01.000 --> 00:33:06.260 Frank R. Harrison: he meant it as disruption in society begins

00:33:06.450 --> 00:33:09.329 Frank R. Harrison: by acknowledging what no longer serves the people

00:33:09.820 --> 00:33:19.550 Frank R. Harrison: bottom line. Disruption is when there is a break in consistent treatment and coping that we are dealing with.

00:33:19.790 --> 00:33:26.889 Frank R. Harrison: and when there's constant uncertainty and fragmentation and misinformation, we are always in chaos.

00:33:27.090 --> 00:33:31.760 Frank R. Harrison: so what is now the constant is disruption.

00:33:31.980 --> 00:33:37.170 Frank R. Harrison: and therefore, in order to not let it affect our mental health, embrace it.

00:33:37.220 --> 00:33:46.920 Frank R. Harrison: and do what you can to figure out your own tailor-made individual strategies to be resilient during the challenges that are faced

00:33:46.930 --> 00:34:07.669 Frank R. Harrison: and to seek out the right information, treatments, technologies, and solutions to help continue whatever it is that you're dealing with, whether it's your own health condition, whether you're doing caregiving for someone else, or whether you're just doing a podcast, like I am doing by giving all of you guys a lessons learned episode.

00:34:07.670 --> 00:34:31.209 Frank R. Harrison: I'm just trying to repeat some of the key facts from the show. Again, I do advise. If any of you want to see the show in its entirety, please go again into our Youtube Channel and look under Frank about health, especially for the Marshall Runji episodes. If you want to buy the book as well as if you want to be able to understand what some of the key points of disruption that Marshall mentions.

00:34:32.520 --> 00:34:34.339 Frank R. Harrison: He also did say.

00:34:34.600 --> 00:34:40.269 Frank R. Harrison: or rather what was covered in that episode with Phyllis are some of the key points in the book

00:34:40.679 --> 00:34:47.380 Frank R. Harrison: he mentioned. To say, the US. Healthcare system must be reimagined, especially post pandemic

00:34:47.800 --> 00:35:12.199 Frank R. Harrison: leadership must address inequities and systemic inefficiencies. There was a conversation between Phyllis and Marshall about how the healthcare professionals out there. The doctors and nurses are either burnt out or aging out, and as such we have to get the new school or the new doctors of the future, probably by even tapping into them when they're still in middle school or high school

00:35:12.300 --> 00:35:40.230 Frank R. Harrison: that I thought was a big takeaway, because, as I said earlier, when I did the tribute to Brooklyn tech episode, what I learned from that show is that my interest in healthcare probably began back there. I was just not conscious of it, as I eventually became now, obviously, by having someone like Marshall Runji continue to advocate for healthcare in the younger audience the younger generations, and get them excited about it. In those younger ages

00:35:40.620 --> 00:35:57.060 Frank R. Harrison: who can say with the new technologies like in AI and genetic testing like in Crispr, that you're going to have solutions and cures for always considered fatal illnesses, probably age or or increase the age limit to over a hundred plus.

00:35:57.210 --> 00:36:18.939 Frank R. Harrison: you know. I know that one of the guests that we'll talk about later Deepak Sani said that that was his intention to be a centenarian. So the thing is is that in order to reach those goals you need to look from within, and be able to understand that if health care is something you want to fight for and advocate for, or even be a professional in.

00:36:19.410 --> 00:36:23.980 Frank R. Harrison: you have to also frag compartmentalize between the profession

00:36:24.200 --> 00:36:37.580 Frank R. Harrison: and caregiving aspects of healthcare versus the business of healthcare. And that's 1 thing that Phyllis had mentioned during the show that we did in Episode 5, there is a lot of focus and a lot of resilience and a lot of

00:36:38.060 --> 00:36:55.189 Frank R. Harrison: education. You need to learn on a daily basis in order to really pursue the healthcare field with as much professionalism as possible. Of course, if it's something that you really cannot withstand, based on your own personal experiences or whatever.

00:36:55.520 --> 00:37:10.919 Frank R. Harrison: Then maybe it's not the position for you, but like I can honestly say, I don't know if I'll ever be a doctor. That's not my plan. But I will continue to be an advocate even as I pursue other business goals or other professional goals going forward.

00:37:11.060 --> 00:37:17.540 Frank R. Harrison: So. Episode 5 on May first, st was the preamble to what would continue on beyond that point.

00:37:18.750 --> 00:37:39.169 Frank R. Harrison: The other shows that happened afterwards. Episode 6 of the season on May 8th was my first, st ever frank about Health Webinar, where I spent a AI generated Powerpoint with the QR. Code for that book, discussing the book in detail, hopefully giving you guys a lesson

00:37:39.220 --> 00:38:08.020 Frank R. Harrison: in that book, the great healthcare Disruption. So that you can understand that if I was going about it with you guys, that's the way you should be going about it with yourself and your family, so that you get your information up front and ready. And when you're ready to see your doctors or your specialists. You can discuss with them these issues rather than be dependent on them, giving you possibly misinformation, or even information that doesn't fit your case.

00:38:08.220 --> 00:38:11.230 Frank R. Harrison: You never really know you have to get on a collegiate level.

00:38:11.430 --> 00:38:20.150 Frank R. Harrison: So I was trying to educate all of you out there by using this webinar format, and again, like from what I heard, it was a success.

00:38:20.840 --> 00:38:26.100 Frank R. Harrison: Then, after that I was anticipating in Episode 7

00:38:26.390 --> 00:38:28.889 Frank R. Harrison: on May 15, th 2025,

00:38:29.100 --> 00:38:46.369 Frank R. Harrison: to bring David Yang back, and to have a conversation with Marshall Runji about the book. It was considered a live Q. And a panel, and lo and behold, he was disrupted! His own medical school, and, as well as his

00:38:47.260 --> 00:38:50.719 Frank R. Harrison: hospital system, was going through budget cuts.

00:38:50.920 --> 00:38:56.220 Frank R. Harrison: and I don't need to explain where they were coming from, but as a result he could not appear on the show.

00:38:56.550 --> 00:39:17.820 Frank R. Harrison: so we were watching. Excuse me, we were watching disruption in action, and both David and I were able to handle the conversation with the promise that he was going to return the following week, which he did in Episode 8, which was on May 20, second, 2025.

00:39:18.110 --> 00:39:27.980 Frank R. Harrison: We basically Marshall, David and I talked again about the very questions in the book that both David and I were exploring, but we added

00:39:28.020 --> 00:39:55.439 Frank R. Harrison: the whole neurological invention of Crispr, which David Yang's company was very much involved in developing a few years ago, and David Yang was involved in that. So that was, I thought, the bonus of not having Marshall and the previous show, but at the same time it also tried to become the beginning of looking at healthcare disruption as an opportunity.

00:39:55.970 --> 00:40:20.289 Frank R. Harrison: Now, the whole thing with Crispr technology is that it's gene editing technology which allows you to do the whole process of finding cures for things either in utero or possibly do what you can to reprogram genes that are markers for diseases like diabetes or cancer, or whatever. I know Crispr

00:40:20.290 --> 00:40:45.729 Frank R. Harrison: from my experience with epilepsy and understanding of how they would use Crispr technology to help minimize seizures, or even do what they can to prevent strokes or other kinds of genetic ailments. But it's still expanding as we speak. We just are looking at next generation therapies. And I think that that particular episode highlighted, that even though it's also featured in the book.

00:40:47.370 --> 00:40:55.959 Frank R. Harrison: A quote that came from that episode is decentralized, care must balance convenience, access, and equity.

00:40:56.210 --> 00:41:01.559 Frank R. Harrison: I could see both Marshall and David saying that, but more than likely that was a quote from the book

00:41:02.266 --> 00:41:15.629 Frank R. Harrison: David shares insights from his career in medical technology, emphasizes the transformative role that Mrna played during COVID-19, and Dr. Marshall Runji highlighted

00:41:15.710 --> 00:41:23.699 Frank R. Harrison: the benefits and concerns surrounding the decentralization of care, such as Cvs administering vaccines

00:41:23.780 --> 00:41:45.620 Frank R. Harrison: and convenience, access and equity, and intersecting in today's healthcare system. Now for those of you out there listening to the news and hearing about how the Cdc has been dismantled in the last week. The entire Vaccine committee. All I can say is, when you get information like that from Dr. Marshall Runji. That means you need to make best friends

00:41:45.680 --> 00:42:02.450 Frank R. Harrison: with your Cvs. Or I used Wayne Reed or Walgreens, but you need to make friends with your pharmacist to keep up to date with your vaccines. I I'm being totally honest about this. Have had a lingering cough for the past 2 weeks. 1st I thought it was allergies. Then I thought it was the flu.

00:42:02.820 --> 00:42:17.269 Frank R. Harrison: I'm wondering if it was Covid, but I'm fully vaccinated lately. I've had 9 shots over the last 4 years. So I called, Dwayne, read. They said, No, you're okay. Just get ready

00:42:17.670 --> 00:42:23.439 Frank R. Harrison: for my covid vaccine and flu shot in the fall. But the point is the lingering cough

00:42:23.850 --> 00:42:30.390 Frank R. Harrison: you need to be mindful of. Why is it lingering, and what concerns do I need to be mindful of.

00:42:31.360 --> 00:42:33.939 Frank R. Harrison: because we're not getting our information

00:42:34.490 --> 00:42:40.720 Frank R. Harrison: as frequently and open anymore. It's just radio silence unless you go out searching and asking.

00:42:42.200 --> 00:42:47.409 Frank R. Harrison: Wow, so episodes 5, 6, 7, and 8.

00:42:48.900 --> 00:42:49.610 Frank R. Harrison: Hum.

00:42:50.150 --> 00:42:56.129 Frank R. Harrison: Sorry. I consider that the great healthcare Disruption campaign

00:42:56.420 --> 00:43:12.830 Frank R. Harrison: we're about to take our. I think it's our 3rd and final break, and I'm going to show you the QR. Code. So if you're interested in getting the great healthcare disruption, please feel free. It links you straight into Amazon, and I believe if you're a prime member

00:43:13.360 --> 00:43:23.380 Frank R. Harrison: you will have it in your inbox by tomorrow, meaning your mailbox. And you might even get a discount. I know definitely free shipping. All right. Stay tuned. We'll be back in a few.

00:45:10.860 --> 00:45:12.460 Frank R. Harrison: Hey, everybody and welcome back.

00:45:12.800 --> 00:45:18.492 Frank R. Harrison: Episode 9 of the season on May 29, th 2025 was

00:45:20.097 --> 00:45:22.070 Frank R. Harrison: It was called.

00:45:22.200 --> 00:45:29.220 Frank R. Harrison: Let me get the right title. Here it was with time to thrive.

00:45:29.260 --> 00:45:36.459 Frank R. Harrison: TIIM. E. With Deepaksani, who was aging strong and living long

00:45:36.500 --> 00:45:52.699 Frank R. Harrison: again. This was a very good contact and a referral from Linda Marsonico, from the A. Train to Sedona, and he had claimed on her show as well as on frank about health and on his own podcast a deepak sani show on Youtube

00:45:52.710 --> 00:46:10.340 Frank R. Harrison: that he wanted to be a centenarian after living a long life with obesity and doing what he can to manage the comorbidities that came with that obesity when the pivot point happened. When he could not bend down to pick up his young child.

00:46:10.480 --> 00:46:32.339 Frank R. Harrison: He did everything that he could to lose the weight, but he went the natural route. He did not use the glp. One drugs he was mainly focused on eating right, and exercising and and walking and running, and aerobics and all other methodologies that he used. I think he said that it took him.

00:46:33.890 --> 00:46:42.400 Frank R. Harrison: Oh, wow! I don't know if it took him 10 years, or if it took him 10 months. But all I could say is that he basically

00:46:42.680 --> 00:46:47.530 Frank R. Harrison: gave the quote on that episode, that aging doesn't mean

00:46:47.740 --> 00:47:01.649 Frank R. Harrison: that life is meant to be declined or that your life is declining. It's an evolution. But the only way that you can make that happen is by being as healthy as possible, living your best quality of life, so that.

00:47:01.870 --> 00:47:04.190 Frank R. Harrison: using his methodology.

00:47:04.750 --> 00:47:13.500 Frank R. Harrison: the time methodology, and he broke it down during the show. You got to forgive me if I don't have the actual acronyms offhand

00:47:13.874 --> 00:47:18.000 Frank R. Harrison: but then that's reason to watch the show after you finish watching this one.

00:47:18.050 --> 00:47:46.810 Frank R. Harrison: Basically, he's able to take on clients just like the way Shervan is and work with individuals out there that are suffering, whether it's from morbid obesity or some other health ailments that they want to learn to live with and use the time methodology so that it decreases your developmental age. By the way, the vitality in you has been increased after you have made all the necessary changes with your health.

00:47:46.920 --> 00:48:08.359 Frank R. Harrison: That I think, was his way of saying that by, if your goal is to be a centenarian, or to live a hundred plus like as high as 125. Let's say, then, you have to use the right living well, methodology that he is able to at least educate you and help you participate in.

00:48:08.620 --> 00:48:23.029 Frank R. Harrison: I highly recommend that he is someone you contact, especially if you are living with morbid obesity, or have other kinds of ailments that you want to learn to either live with or try to try to resolve in as best of way possible.

00:48:23.560 --> 00:48:46.759 Frank R. Harrison: He also did point out that while in Canada he's noticing the disruption that is going on in the United States, but mainly on the side of the tariffs. He's not seeing it as readily as we are. I can tell you from personal experience that they have a very robust healthcare system. They actually manufacture a lot of their own

00:48:46.830 --> 00:49:05.679 Frank R. Harrison: pharmaceutical drugs, and they sell them at deep discounts without insurance. But now I would think that's more on the local level rather than the way it would be mailed into the United States like I was receiving my epilepsy medications from Vancouver at 1 point again. Tariffs

00:49:06.441 --> 00:49:09.570 Frank R. Harrison: vat costs, you know, shipping costs.

00:49:09.840 --> 00:49:13.389 Frank R. Harrison: you know, and not to mention that everything would be inflated, so

00:49:13.800 --> 00:49:28.509 Frank R. Harrison: I can't speak for that for the Us. Market. But I can say they also have a socialized healthcare system. So a lot of this stuff still maintains coverage from their government. The the thing is, though, that just like in the United States.

00:49:28.820 --> 00:49:31.529 Frank R. Harrison: whether you're in Canada or the United States.

00:49:31.600 --> 00:50:01.040 Frank R. Harrison: You have to really own your health care, and if your goal is to live long or age well, and also diminish the negative impact that your obesity or other ailment is creating. You have to develop a methodology for yourself that no one else is following, not even your doctors, would prescribe that methodology for him is the time, methodology. TIIME. But he could educate you on that, or something that would work best for you.

00:50:01.380 --> 00:50:04.870 Frank R. Harrison: Let me see if there were any other quotes from that show.

00:50:05.440 --> 00:50:06.690 Frank R. Harrison: He mentioned

00:50:07.050 --> 00:50:16.380 Frank R. Harrison: the 3 lessons learned that I have here from that show are longevity isn't about lifespan. It's about health span. That's something I remember him saying on the show.

00:50:16.580 --> 00:50:23.559 Frank R. Harrison: The time method integrates mindset sleep, metabolic health, all for optimal aging

00:50:23.670 --> 00:50:29.110 Frank R. Harrison: and personalized health strategies are more effective than the one size fits all plan.

00:50:29.510 --> 00:50:38.539 Frank R. Harrison: and another quote from him, aging. Oh, well, I already read. I already I already read it. Aging doesn't have to mean decline. It can mean evolution.

00:50:39.430 --> 00:50:59.429 Frank R. Harrison: Overall deepak Sani. I invited to join me and Phyllis, and possibly even David Yang in July, when I bring back Marshall Runji to do a recap on his book. By that point. It would have already been out on the street for 2 months, and we'll get to see the impact it's created with his audience.

00:50:59.440 --> 00:51:09.680 Frank R. Harrison: I could just say that I'm thankful to the audience out there that had been watching the 4 episodes that I had done on the great healthcare disruption. This way we were able to

00:51:09.970 --> 00:51:22.369 Frank R. Harrison: do our 2 cents to help promote and advocate for that book, because that's a manual that I use to this day for everything that I'm dealing with with my father, my cousin, and not to mention my own healthcare.

00:51:23.340 --> 00:51:27.270 Frank R. Harrison: Finally, the 10th episode, which aired last week.

00:51:28.380 --> 00:51:39.450 Frank R. Harrison: was on June 5, th 2025, with Mark Feilerman and David Yang, Mark Feilerman and David Yang, went to Brooklyn, tech together. Class of 84, Mark Feilerman.

00:51:39.620 --> 00:51:42.540 Frank R. Harrison: I felt I had a lot in common with him because

00:51:42.670 --> 00:51:46.899 Frank R. Harrison: he has a 95 year old grandmother living here, at least at home.

00:51:47.110 --> 00:51:52.420 Frank R. Harrison: But she has Alzheimer's disease while I have a 65 going on 66 year old cousin

00:51:52.720 --> 00:51:58.770 Frank R. Harrison: living in a nursing home with Alzheimer's disease, and I think her longevity

00:51:59.010 --> 00:52:02.949 Frank R. Harrison: is tantamount to her being in a comfort zone which is her home.

00:52:03.190 --> 00:52:10.399 Frank R. Harrison: I'm not very optimistic about the longevity of my cousin, and I'm sad to say, but the thing is is that

00:52:10.570 --> 00:52:20.560 Frank R. Harrison: to have longevity, not only like what Deepak Sani said, not only living your best life with getting rid of what ails you when you're an Alzheimer's patient.

00:52:20.720 --> 00:52:34.909 Frank R. Harrison: you're in more dependency with your outer environment, which is your caregivers as well as your nurses, doctors, whatever, whoever it is that's taking care of you when you're in a nursing home.

00:52:35.440 --> 00:52:40.480 Frank R. Harrison: One thing I could say is that neglect is almost guaranteed.

00:52:40.750 --> 00:52:47.200 Frank R. Harrison: And that's tragic. But thankfully her son continues to this day even unpaid

00:52:47.400 --> 00:53:01.670 Frank R. Harrison: to be her caregiver by visiting her daily and doing the work that the others are neglecting. In doing so, I would have to say the lesson learned there, especially with what Mark Feilerman had said about his

00:53:01.750 --> 00:53:24.240 Frank R. Harrison: his his mother is that family is everything, and you need to be respectful of each other as best as possible, even when you don't know what you're talking about, even when there's confusion and misinformation, I could say personally, Chatgpt has been able to help me bridge the communication gap between me and my parents, for example.

00:53:24.370 --> 00:53:35.679 Frank R. Harrison: But that's not a foolproof guarantee. You always do need the human connection, the human translator behind it. Because if you just believe in what your computer or your

00:53:35.960 --> 00:53:38.550 Frank R. Harrison: your handheld pocket device tells you

00:53:38.880 --> 00:53:44.489 Frank R. Harrison: you're actually isolating yourself. It's not. It's actually defeating the purpose. It's becoming an addiction.

00:53:44.600 --> 00:53:48.299 Frank R. Harrison: you know. Mark Feilerman talked about the value

00:53:48.450 --> 00:54:03.320 Frank R. Harrison: of creating an ecosystem with David Yang. David David Yang was also mirroring that based on how his companies have allowed him to develop an ecosystem methodology in dealing with the coworkers that have been there.

00:54:03.940 --> 00:54:23.810 Frank R. Harrison: I remember he was saying that at one of his companies there was, I don't know if it was a nurse or a researcher that was working with him on a protocol to understand a certain innovation that was being created, but because of her 30 years of rote experience in looking at the due diligence behind that particular invention.

00:54:24.240 --> 00:54:49.710 Frank R. Harrison: She was not looking at the new way of understanding how to use the ecosystem to your advantage, and he was able to clarify that to her she felt like the light bulb had gone off. And now there was this, this active engagement and collaboration going on in the company where I think the lesson learned there is that when dealing with ecosystems, whether it's a workplace, or if it's your own venture.

00:54:51.200 --> 00:54:56.709 Frank R. Harrison: collaboration is key, otherwise the idea will just eventually stagnate and die.

00:54:58.130 --> 00:55:03.049 Frank R. Harrison: Excuse me, I found that to be a nice wrap up

00:55:03.920 --> 00:55:12.179 Frank R. Harrison: of the season, because I was able to see that that's exactly what I've been doing over the last 4 years on Frank about health.

00:55:12.420 --> 00:55:26.000 Frank R. Harrison: I started talking about Frank, about health, you know, and all the episodes that I've done. And then I branched out by working with Hilton hotels and started to work on a documentary. Yes, the documentary will eventually come out

00:55:26.110 --> 00:55:45.159 Frank R. Harrison: at the same time. I've also learned in the last 6 months after Ritha's passing, that AI is very informative and inspirational. And I'm starting to learn all the necessary AI techniques that I could do to make Frank about health more seamless in the future. And at the same thing at the same time.

00:55:45.765 --> 00:55:54.659 Frank R. Harrison: It just tells me that what I deliver on Frank about health is basically the finished product of everything I'm doing in my daily life

00:55:54.810 --> 00:56:01.420 Frank R. Harrison: versus the other way around. Which is the way I think I was operating, especially when we were all operating under Zoom, through Covid.

00:56:02.450 --> 00:56:13.899 Frank R. Harrison: I see we are 2 min to ending now. I would like to say that it has been my pleasure to host these 10 episodes of frank about health over the last season.

00:56:14.350 --> 00:56:41.720 Frank R. Harrison: I'm going to, you know, conclude the campaign of disruption with Marshall Runji at some point in July, like I said earlier. I'm going to also do what I can to release the documentary and a special Youtube launch. More information on that to follow. Next week I will be hosting for my season finale. A young man who has been very instrumental with me these past 6 months in helping me revive my company. Vision.

00:56:41.790 --> 00:56:48.099 Frank R. Harrison: healthy media which had to be pivoted. As a result of all the changes that occurred during the hiatus.

00:56:48.310 --> 00:57:02.220 Frank R. Harrison: including our administration, I was in a constant state of disruption. That's why the last 10 episodes of Frank about health have been therapeutic for me to not only show you what I've learned, but also hopefully, what you can all learn as well.

00:57:03.028 --> 00:57:27.539 Frank R. Harrison: At 6 o'clock, right here on Talkradio, dot Nyc. Success with a splash will be airing. And again, after next week's episode of the conscious consultant hour. I will do what I can to present you with that season finale, episode of Frank about health which will give you insight into the next chapter that I take when I revamp

00:57:28.001 --> 00:57:32.570 Frank R. Harrison: the next season of Frank about health the week after. All right, everybody.

00:57:32.790 --> 00:57:41.810 Frank R. Harrison: I hope you learned your lessons right here on Frank, about health during the past hour, and I will see you next week. Take care.

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