Episode 58
Lindsay (Bonus) - Cycle Syncing: Harnessing Women's Hormonal Phases for Optimal Productivity & Well-being
Understanding the different phases of a female hormone cycle and how it affects productivity and mental state.
Cycle Syncing: Synchronizing lifestyle activities and expectations with the four phases of the monthly cycle: menstrual, follicular, ovulatory, and luteal.
- Follicular Phase: Post-menstrual, estrogen dominant. Often a time of increased creativity and energy.
- Ovulatory Phase: Short, lasts 24-36 hours. The body releases an egg.
- Luteal Phase: Production of progesterone, basal body temperature rises. Often a period of sluggishness or irritability.
Benefits of Cycle Awareness: Avoiding negative messaging about cycles and leveraging biology for productivity and mental well-being.
Rest during the menstrual phase, high-intensity workouts during follicular, and gentler exercises like yoga during luteal.
Follicular phase is best for big picture thinking, while luteal phase is better for execution..
Impact: Increased productivity and better mental health through understanding and syncing with the cycle.
Mentioned in this episode:
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Transcript
Hi everyone.
Tali:Welcome to a special bonus episode of Orange Hatter.
Tali:We're shaking things up a bit today.
Tali:Instead of talking about Bitcoin, I'm venturing into a topic that is fascinating
Tali:and probably a little bit unexpected.
Tali:In the last episode, Lindsay mentioned a topic that was new to me, something
Tali:about the female hormone sinking with lunar cycles and how working with it
Tali:rather than against it has advantages.
Tali:I was very curious about it, so I asked her to do a special segment to explain.
Tali:I hope you find it interesting and helpful.
Tali:Enjoy.
Tali:So the question is how you were able to improve your productivity
Tali:and , your mental state by understanding the different
Tali:phases of a female hormone cycle.
Lindsay:Yeah.
Lindsay:So the concept that we're talking about is called cycle syncing, like
Lindsay:S Y N C, like synchronizing our lifestyle activities, expectations
Lindsay:for ourselves with each phase of our monthly cycle, which is four phases.
Lindsay:So we're all like most familiar with our menstrual phase.
Lindsay:It's very obvious when we're in that phase.
Lindsay:And you know, there's a lot of just cultural messaging around how that phase
Lindsay:usually impacts women and the people that are in relationship with them.
Lindsay:But most people don't really understand the other three phases and even sub
Lindsay:phases of the rest of our cycle.
Lindsay:But right after our menstrual phase is our follicular phase which really from day
Lindsay:one until ovulation is all, including the menstrual phase, is considered follicular,
Lindsay:but that is when our ovaries are preparing for ovulation by maturing you know,
Lindsay:these little sacks that hold our eggs.
Lindsay:So, you know, we have our follicular phase, which is estrogen dominant.
Lindsay:And a lot of women experience increased creativity or energy to kind of
Lindsay:execute on projects, myself included, just feel more creative and more sort
Lindsay:of like goal oriented, able to like strategize, you know, life planning stuff
Lindsay:or, you know, just various projects.
Lindsay:It, I can really just really be more efficient with my, my time thinking
Lindsay:when I'm in my follicular phase.
Lindsay:And then, between the second or first and second half of the cycle is a very
Lindsay:short phase called the ovulatory phase.
Lindsay:And you know, it is what it sounds like that's when our bodies release
Lindsay:an egg to either be fertilized or not.
Lindsay:But that's a very short phase.
Lindsay:It's really like, you know, 24 to 36 hours and then after
Lindsay:that phase is the luteal phase.
Lindsay:So that is when the sac that the egg was maturing inside when that little
Lindsay:sac actually transforms into a temporary endocrine gland, which is pretty cool.
Lindsay:And produces progesterone for the second half of our cycle,
Lindsay:which is progesterone dominant.
Lindsay:So one difference that is really easily measurable is basal body temperature.
Lindsay:So during the first half of the cycle, the basal body temperature is lower, and
Lindsay:then between follicular and luteal basal body temperature rises and then stays
Lindsay:high until the next menstrual phase.
Lindsay:So that hormone, progesterone is progesterone.
Lindsay:So promoting gestation or incubating.
Lindsay:So that's kind of like, you can remember, like that's, that's when your temperature
Lindsay:is higher 'cause you're, you know, theoretically cooking a new human.
Lindsay:So yeah, the luteal phase is often one where women find themselves
Lindsay:feeling a little more sluggish, maybe a little more irritable.
Lindsay:Although when those symptoms get really severe, it's definitely a
Lindsay:sign that something's out of whack.
Lindsay:Because really our, even though we do have these different phases I think
Lindsay:a lot of women, myself included, have experienced really extreme
Lindsay:like gnarly luteal phases and PMS.
Lindsay:You know, even to the point of, you know, PMDD which is premenstrual dysphoric
Lindsay:disorder, where you just, it's like, just severe PMS to the point of, you
Lindsay:know, just completely not feeling like yourself feeling really down or irritable.
Lindsay:So anyway, that's not normal.
Lindsay:Some amount of just variation and kind of how our, our brains just what
Lindsay:perspectives on things we lean into is normal, but when it's extreme and
Lindsay:really disruptive, that's not normal.
Lindsay:So anyway, you know, the, the luteal phase gives way to the menstrual phase again.
Lindsay:And then you do it all over again.
Lindsay:So I think a lot of women, myself included, grew up with this messaging
Lindsay:around our cycles that they are negative, that they're a pain in the
Lindsay:butt, that they you know, it's better to just not have to deal with them.
Lindsay:Whether you can do that with a pharmaceutical or surgically, you know.
Lindsay:But you know, I, I had this shift a few years back where I
Lindsay:realized like I didn't need to be at war with my body in that way.
Lindsay:And it was really pointless to try to fight biology, but I could
Lindsay:actually like leverage biology if I did it in the right way.
Lindsay:So I still, I, it, it's, I'm a work in progress because I used to I used to get
Lindsay:so frustrated with myself and I had no idea why it was happening, but I would
Lindsay:like, you know, find myself just really excited about life and set up, you
Lindsay:know, friend dates with everybody that I hadn't seen in a while and like, just
Lindsay:really think to myself like, oh, I'm, I'm really getting myself on a workout
Lindsay:routine and I'm gonna stick with this.
Lindsay:Like, I would think that, oh, I'm, I'm just, I'm finally there.
Lindsay:I've finally arrived and I'm no longer feeling held down by, you
Lindsay:know, whatever I felt last week.
Lindsay:And I thought it would be like a permanent thing.
Lindsay:And then when I would inevitably like, find myself back, you know, at a place
Lindsay:of feeling unmotivated or like, oh, I actually don't really like, have the
Lindsay:bandwidth to like, go and have this social event that I signed up for.
Lindsay:Like, I would feel really discouraged that, oh man, I,
Lindsay:I really don't know myself.
Lindsay:Or like, I really, why did I do this to myself?
Lindsay:But now, obviously some things in life, you know, can't be rescheduled.
Lindsay:But as much as I can, I try to schedule things just to where whatever, like
Lindsay:the intensity of that activity, mental or physical matches the, the energy
Lindsay:level and the clarity of thought that I am likely to have at whatever phase.
Tali:Okay.
Tali:So can you give us some examples, like, let's use exercise as an example.
Tali:So you said there, there are just these different phases.
Tali:How do you take advantage of each phase when you're trying to exercise regularly?
Lindsay:Yeah, definitely.
Lindsay:So a lot of the other women who are teaching about these topics kind
Lindsay:of recommend that the menstrual phase be one of just rest and not
Lindsay:really like overexerting ourselves.
Lindsay:I forget the exact like, physiology, but basically if we work out too hard
Lindsay:during our menstrual phase, we, we end up secreting, you know, tons of cortisol
Lindsay:and just kind of like, it backfires.
Lindsay:And then our bodies end up having this greater, like burden of
Lindsay:just hormone removal and it just is kind of counterproductive.
Lindsay:So really, like the most productive thing you can do in that phase is rest.
Lindsay:And then kind of entering the, the bulk of the follicular phase, just more
Lindsay:intense, like higher intensity workouts.
Lindsay:That's when I like to do like more like just get my heart rate up more.
Lindsay:I feel like my body is like more responsive and like wants
Lindsay:to have my heart rate up.
Lindsay:It feels good.
Lindsay:It doesn't feel like a chore.
Lindsay:It feels like, like, I feel happy to be alive and to be pushing myself.
Lindsay:And then sort of transitioning into luteal phase that is kind of when more just
Lindsay:like stretching and non-high intensity like walking or yoga just activities
Lindsay:that can keep us active but that are not you know, super intense, so...
Tali:That's really useful because I never consider my
Tali:cycle when I'm going to the gym.
Tali:It was just, you know, I tell myself I'm going to, I'm going to work out
Tali:three to five days a week, and then if I fall off, then I feel awful.
Tali:You know, what's wrong with me?
Tali:What have, why don't I have any willpower?
Tali:You know, that kind of thing.
Tali:So this is really helpful.
Tali:Can you use another example, like let's say you're trying to
Tali:be creative, like how should you use your cycle to your advantage?
Lindsay:Yeah, so I'm still, I'm still working on this, but I have generally
Lindsay:found that in my follicular phase I'm better at just kind of big picture things.
Lindsay:So right now my creative outlets are my work to some extent, but really my house.
Lindsay:So I'm a homeowner.
Lindsay:I bought a fixer upper in 2020, and I've been slowly but surely just kind
Lindsay:of renovating it and updating it.
Lindsay:And I find that during my follicular phase, I, I'm really good at being like,
Lindsay:oh, I need to schedule pest control.
Lindsay:I need to, you know, plan this project or call this person to
Lindsay:get an estimate for this thing.
Lindsay:And I try to kind of batch all of those types of tasks when I know that
Lindsay:it's not gonna feel like drudgery.
Lindsay:And then, you know, maybe just plan them for a time when it's like, okay,
Lindsay:my luteal phase, like I'm not gonna be, you know, setting up all of these
Lindsay:contractor meetings or whatever.
Lindsay:But I'm just gonna like, execute on them.
Lindsay:I'm gonna open the door and have the chat.
Lindsay:I'm not gonna, but I'm not having to do the heavy lifting of figuring
Lindsay:out like, okay, what's my budget, what's, what's my timeline?
Lindsay:Like I am, I just set myself up in my follicular phase to be able to to execute
Lindsay:during my luteal and you know, obviously sometimes it's gonna have to flex a little
Lindsay:bit, but I find that when I keep most of the tasks like appropriate to how I
Lindsay:know I'm gonna feel in those phases, like just everything goes more smoothly and I
Lindsay:don't end up feeling as discouraged within myself that I like can't get stuff done.
Tali:Yeah, that is so helpful.
Tali:Do you have any recommendations of authors, books, podcasts,
Tali:or articles we can look up?
Lindsay:Yeah, so I've learned a lot from Misty Myler on Instagram.
Lindsay:I'll have to get back to you about her Instagram handle 'cause
Lindsay:I think she might've changed it.
Lindsay:But she talks a lot about cycle syncing.
Lindsay:Nicole Jardim has a podcast called The Period Party, and she has her website
Lindsay:where she has courses and things that you can dive a little deeper.
Lindsay:What else?
Lindsay:I personally use the Natural Cycles app to keep track of my my cycle.
Lindsay:I also use the Oura Ring to measure my basal body temperature.
Lindsay:So that I don't have to take my temperature with a
Lindsay:thermometer every morning.
Lindsay:I did that for a while and it just got really old.
Lindsay:And I wake up at different times depending on whether I'm going to work at the
Lindsay:hospital that day or have a day off.
Lindsay:So it was just a little more inconsistent.
Lindsay:So I have a little piece of technology that keeps track of my basal body
Lindsay:temperature and really just like starting to pay attention to like,
Lindsay:when do I feel like the most like am I always feeling this way?
Lindsay:I don't know.
Lindsay:Just, just starting to pay attention to the choices that you
Lindsay:make and how they pan out and like whether there's a pattern there.
Tali:So you said that you've been doing this for a few years.
Tali:Have you noticed an increase in your productivity or just
Tali:general better mental health.
Lindsay:Yeah, I would say both.
Lindsay:I give myself a lot more grace when I just need a recovery day.
Lindsay:And on the days when I am feeling really motivated, I just lean
Lindsay:into that and I celebrate that.
Lindsay:And I just, I try to capitalize on it as much as I can because I know
Lindsay:that it's, it's kind of fleeting, but that it will come back around.
Lindsay:So it's it kind of compels me to like make the most of my time in a way that
Lindsay:I don't think I was aware of before.
Tali:So what would you say to the doubters who would say, well you just
Tali:need to muscle your way through and every day should be the same as the other
Tali:day, or you are just using this as an excuse to not work hard on those days.
Lindsay:Yeah.
Lindsay:So well, I would say that that sounds like messaging that has come from a male
Lindsay:dominated world, and I think that that approach to productivity like it makes
Lindsay:sense if you're a male and you have, you have a predictable hormone cycle as well.
Lindsay:It just happens to reset every 24 hours instead of every 28 days.
Lindsay:So I, I've noticed there's a lot of like male motivational speakers who are
Lindsay:like, you need to wake up at 4:00 AM and get stuff done when everyone's asleep.
Lindsay:And I just completely discount that advice because I am not a male.
Lindsay:I am a woman of reproductive age and that's actually going to backfire for me.
Lindsay:So I just I just kind of have to be secure in myself.
Lindsay:And that's, that is the messaging that I'm gonna get from the world because, you
Lindsay:know, we have a male dominated society.
Lindsay:Even a male dominated like research orientation, you know, like a lot
Lindsay:of medical studies are conducted only on men, then the results are
Lindsay:applied to women, and that's just not very helpful a lot of the time.
Lindsay:Even things like intermittent fasting it doesn't make sense for a woman
Lindsay:of reproductive age and it's going to put undue stress on our bodies.
Lindsay:That actually is like counterproductive in our goals of, you know, being
Lindsay:a healthy and fit individual.
Tali:Okay, so the four o'clock thing, I have heard that from a lot of different
Tali:places, and you're right, they're all male authors and my husband is able
Tali:to do it, and for the life of me, I can't because to me, four o'clock is
Tali:in the middle of the night, you know?
Lindsay:Mm-hmm.
Tali:It is one thing to rise with the sun, like the farmers of old, right?
Tali:It's another thing to wake up when the stars are still out for another two hours.
Tali:So why does it not work for women?
Lindsay:Well, I think it doesn't work for a lot of women and it also
Lindsay:doesn't work for a lot of men either.
Lindsay:Because there's this concept of having a chronotype that is just
Lindsay:like baked into our physiology.
Lindsay:Some people are like morning people.
Lindsay:Some people are night owls, and I forget what the, the in-between group is called.
Lindsay:But like I have a friend who is very productive from like 10:00 AM
Lindsay:to 2:00 AM are his waking hours.
Lindsay:And it's kind of frustrating for me because I am like, you know, I'm
Lindsay:probably more of like a seven or 8:00 AM till about 10:00 PM kind of person.
Lindsay:And you know, we're, we're just wired differently.
Lindsay:I think that we would all do well to just encourage each other to figure
Lindsay:out, okay, how are you wired uniquely?
Lindsay:When are you the most productive?
Lindsay:When when is an ideal time for you to have your me time or whatever?
Lindsay:Because it's gonna look different for everybody.
Lindsay:But I think there's like some kind of virtue that has been placed around this,
Lindsay:like four or 5:00 AM waking and, you know, grinding out journaling or, you
Lindsay:know, writing or I guess that's the same thing, but like, or can be yeah, and,
Lindsay:and that's just doesn't work for me.
Lindsay:I personally don't even think we should, I don't think we should
Lindsay:get up before the sun ever.
Lindsay:I have to do that, you know, part of the year because of the
Lindsay:hours that I have at my job.
Lindsay:But that's part of why I wanna get out of nursing is because I don't want to
Lindsay:like for the, that half of the year when I'm getting up, when it's pitch black
Lindsay:outside, like I can feel it in my, my mental and my physical health suffers.
Lindsay:So I think, I think that we're meant to be these cyclical beings that are maybe
Lindsay:more productive in the summer months and more like restful in the winter.
Lindsay:But we have this, not only is it like, you know, day to day expectation that
Lindsay:we can be the same, but also like 365 days a year that our productivity
Lindsay:would not have like ebbs and flows.
Lindsay:So I would...
Lindsay:to figure out and lean into what works for you.
Tali:Yeah, that's, that's definitely true.
Tali:I feel like sometimes I feel like I'm a robot because I'm supposed to
Tali:function the same every single day, when inside, you know, that you don't.
Tali:Why?
Lindsay:Oh, I was just gonna say, like, as a homeschool mom, you know,
Lindsay:I feel like our, our, the school system, the government school system
Lindsay:in our country really doesn't take that into account for the students.
Lindsay:And I wonder if your experience as a homeschool mom has really shown you
Lindsay:the value in kind of paying attention to what kind of mood or, you know,
Lindsay:learning state your child is in any given day and like, leaning into that
Lindsay:rather than like being really rigid that certain things have to get done on
Lindsay:certain days at certain times or else.
Tali:Yeah, that's a, it's a tough call because while you're homeschooling, you're
Tali:also trying to teach self-discipline, and so from my own experience being
Tali:an immigrant and being Asian, the discipline comes first, and so...
Lindsay:Mm-hmm.
... Tali:there are a lot of things that I deal with my kids when they were younger
... Tali:to instill discipline that I think I would do differently today with what I know.
... Tali:But I definitely noticed that.
... Tali:Like, for example, so I have four kids, so one, one son in particular, he seems
... Tali:like an extrovert and he would go out and have an entire day, like morning until
... Tali:late night of activities and he's great.
... Tali:And you never see him wind down at all until the moment he goes to sleep.
... Tali:But then the next day he's non-functional.
... Tali:Literally he's like a zombie.
... Tali:You can talk to him and he won't, he won't answer.
... Tali:And the Chinese in me would've said, this is where self discipline comes in.
... Tali:You need to buck up, and even though you had a long day, you're,
... Tali:the next day should be the same.
... Tali:But what I have found is if I just leave him alone for one day
... Tali:so that he can recover mentally, physically, the next day, he's fine.
... Tali:But if I don't allow him that space to recover, then it drags on many more days.
... Tali:So that's an example of you just gotta know the person, right, you gotta
... Tali:that cycle that you're talking about.
... Tali:His cycle was very particular.
... Tali:It was, it was, he was great, you know, very, very energetic
... Tali:for very long, prolonged time.
... Tali:And then he needs a very long period to recover, versus another child
... Tali:would, would literally shut down after being active for just a few hours.
... Tali:But the next day is the same.
... Tali:So she doesn't need an entire day of recovery because she shut down
... Tali:long before the other one did.
... Tali:You know?
... Tali:So cycles are very different and respecting your individual cycle
... Tali:is so important for, I keep saying productivity, but I feel like that's
... Tali:even the wrong focus really, here.
Lindsay:Yeah.
Lindsay:It's really just like your life rhythm of like, 'cause we all have stuff
Lindsay:that we have to do to like keep our lives going forward, you know, paying
Lindsay:the bills, like making sure we like schedule routine maintenance of things.
Lindsay:So it's, it's just kind of, it, it really makes your life less like
Lindsay:drudgery because you're like, okay, I'm gonna leverage the time when it's least
Lindsay:annoying to do these annoying things.
Lindsay:So that I'm like, I'm being kind to my future self who like is just
Lindsay:gonna be so glad that I already took care of this kind of thing.
Lindsay:It's, I think it's a way, it's just a different approach to discipline maybe.
Lindsay:So yeah, my, one of my biggest things in life and, and something
Lindsay:that I do struggle with is like, I don't, I don't like to force things.
Lindsay:And so if I really don't feel up for doing like a really intense
Lindsay:workout or for I don't know.
Lindsay:I, I'm trying to think of other things that can feel really forced or really
Lindsay:just really unpleasant if they are forced, maybe like a difficult conversation or
Lindsay:something like when, when I just like surrender to it happening in its own time.
Lindsay:Like it happens, like it still gets done, but I don't have to like be
Lindsay:at war with myself all the time.
Tali:Yeah, for sure.
Tali:Can I ask you a, another question, which is kind of a personal question.
Tali:You mentioned that inter intermittent fasting is not good for women.
Tali:Why is that?
Tali:Because I hear it is so popular right now.
Tali:Like everybody should be intermittent fasting.
Tali:You should always have 12 hours of digesting without giving
Tali:your stomach more work to do.
Tali:Why do you say it's not good for women?
Lindsay:Yeah.
Lindsay:So I do wanna say like, it really depends on how you're doing it because I do think
Lindsay:there's something to be said for giving our bodies time to digest and detox
Lindsay:kind of between dinner and breakfast.
Lindsay:But the problem for women, specifically women of reproductive age A, we need
Lindsay:carbohydrates to make our hormones, B, just the burden of cortisol, like running
Lindsay:on cortisol is a lot higher for us.
Lindsay:And so and I, I admit, I'm, I'm not great at this.
Lindsay:I like to drink coffee first thing in the morning on an empty stomach.
Lindsay:I do it and it's something that I'm hoping to change soon.
Lindsay:I don't really plan on cutting out coffee 'cause I'm fine with my relationship
Lindsay:with it and the fact that I do kind of need it to get going in the morning.
Lindsay:But I've just heard from so many different people that I trust in the, in the
Lindsay:world, of like women's health that it really wreaks havoc on our hormones.
Lindsay:And it's much better to like eat a satiating meal and then drink coffee.
Lindsay:Because like our bodies are supposed to signal to us that
Lindsay:they're hungry in the morning.
Lindsay:And we can suppress that with coffee.
Lindsay:Or we can just like ignore it with our willpower.
Lindsay:I just, I think our bodies are really intelligent and really they don't
Lindsay:really deceive us or lead us astray.
Lindsay:I have met people who disagree with me and I've noticed that those people are
Lindsay:really at war with their bodies, and that's just not how I wanna live my life.
Lindsay:I, I made a shift sometime back where I just decided that I would be my
Lindsay:body's ally and that I would listen to what it was telling me, I would get to
Lindsay:know the language that it speaks in.
Lindsay:And if it's saying I'm hungry and I'm hungry for watermelon, I'm like,
Lindsay:okay, I'm gonna, I'm gonna try to make that happen and like, or I'm
Lindsay:hungry for a steak or something.
Lindsay:Like, I just think that our bodies' cues can be trusted and our bodies are really
Lindsay:trying to help us, like, help ourselves.
Lindsay:And even things like injuries you know, you might have some kind of
Lindsay:sprain or something like that and it becomes swollen with inflammation
Lindsay:and like the, the prevailing attitude is like inflammation bad must reduce
Lindsay:with ice or with medication and it's inflammation that actually carries those
Lindsay:repair cells to where they need to go.
Lindsay:And so, and now sometime...
Lindsay:like excess inflammation is maybe another, another story, but I don't
Lindsay:think that we need to, like...
Lindsay:our bodies for becoming inflamed because they're trying to heal.
Lindsay:Like that's, that is part of the healing process.
Lindsay:So you know, we can, we can try to identify and remove sources of
Lindsay:inflammation, but when inflammation makes sense, then I, I don't think
Lindsay:that we should be interfering with it.
Tali:Yeah, I think we can talk all day long about this because
Tali:I have so many examples that I would be able to share with you.
Tali:I'll just quickly say that I go to a Chinese herbalist,
Tali:he's also my acupuncturist, and in the Chinese medicine, you
Tali:just, ice is just not a thing.
Tali:You know, if you, if you twist your ankle, you apply heat, 'cause you're
Tali:helping your body repair itself.
Tali:Ice is not a thing.
Tali:So, but, but in the Western medicine, you get injured and
Tali:it's ice, it's immediately ice.
Tali:You know, ice it down kind of thing.
Tali:And then I've heard some people say, when you have a fever, let
Tali:it run because it's your body fighting the bacteria or the virus.
Tali:But of course the, the scary part is a fever can become a runaway fever
Tali:and then you have other issues.
Tali:So it is a very fine line to walk, I think.
Lindsay:Yeah, definitely.
Lindsay:Right.
Lindsay:And, and I'm very pro fever as well with the caveat of like,
Lindsay:okay, if I, I know I have this fever because I have an infection.
Lindsay:I'm going to try to support my immune system in other ways by like giving
Lindsay:it nourishing you know, building blocks for my immune system to keep
Lindsay:functioning like to stay in the fight.
Lindsay:You know, like I'm not just gonna do nothing, but I'm not going to
Lindsay:suppress it without, suppress my immune system without supporting it.
Lindsay:So...
Tali:Yeah, I really like the way you put that to, to not
Tali:suppress it, but to support it.
Lindsay:Mm-hmm.
Tali:But it's, it, I must say it's still really scary to do that, especially from
Tali:the point of view of a mom watching a child, you know, go into that fever state.
Tali:It's really scary.
Tali:It's really scary to, to just sit back and go, I'm gonna let it do its work.
Tali:It's such a shift in the mindset, you know.
Lindsay:I wonder how much of that that fear comes from like, you know, it's
Lindsay:like it's legitimate rational fear or fear that comes from just what you've
Lindsay:been told about fever equals bad.
Lindsay:So, 'cause I, I kind of think even the threshold for what we
Lindsay:maybe should consider a, a healthy fever is higher than we think.
Lindsay:But I'm, this is not medical advice.
Tali:Yeah.
Tali:I mean there, like I said, there's, I can tell you story upon stories
Tali:of, of my personal experience.
Tali:But anyway, we'll just wrap up here and we'll, we'll talk about that another day.
Tali:Thank you so much, Lindsay.
Tali:I really appreciate you talking with us.
Lindsay:Me too.
Lindsay:This was so great.
Tali:So how did you like that?
Tali:Did you find that helpful or would you rather stick with purely Bitcoin stories?
Tali:I'm just curious.
Tali:When I talk to different guests, they, they all have such different backgrounds
Tali:and they have such different insights, and if I hear something interesting
Tali:that I'm curious about, I would love to be able to explore it further.
Tali:Instead of making the Bitcoin segment super long, I would just pull the
Tali:material out and make them bonus segments.
Tali:So please let me know.
Tali:Send me an email.
Tali:Tell me what you think at Tali, at orangehatter.com.
Tali:Talk to you soon.