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The Tai Lopez Show

5 Lessons You Should Learn From Mother Nature

The Tai Lopez Show

Tai Lopez

Business

4.86.9K Ratings

🗓️ 2 December 2014

⏱️ 7 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Today's book-of-the-day is "Folks, This Ain't Normal - A Farmer’s Advice for Happier Hens, Healthier People, and a Better World" by Joel Salatin, if you want to order this book from me click here: http://bit.ly/12BAhE0

When I was still a teenager my mentor Joel Salatin used to tell me, "Tai, nature always laughs last."

For you to live the good life you're going to have to understand nature and biology.

I don't care if you live in a high-rise in Manhattan or one of the hundred million dollar condos I saw in London last month. The laws of nature still apply as much to you today as they did 10,000 years ago.

If you don't know who Joel is (besides the fact that he was my first mentor), he's a famous international speaker, who’s done two Ted talks, and has written 10 books.

But most importantly, he's known for pioneering grass-fed beef and pastured eggs. His Virginia Polyface Farms has had everyone (from celebrities, presidents, even prime ministers) coming to learn from his wisdom.

I was actually just visiting Joel and his family for Thanksgiving last week and I recorded some special videos for you.

Enable your images to see me interview Joel Salatin

The point of his book, “Folks,This Ain’t Normal” is simple. You and I in the modern world are so far removed from biological reality that 80% of the problems we face have nothing to do with flaws in us, per se, but more to do with flaws in the system.

It's like the Harvard professor Daniel Lieberman talks about in “The Story of the Human Body.” The quickest way to change your physical health (weight, waistline, etc.) is not to rely on willpower, but to change the system and environment in which you find yourself.

So what is Joel saying is wrong with our system?



Why Unconventional Works



1. We grow our food with pesticides, herbicides, insecticides, antibiotics, and growth hormones:

"Our animals don't do drugs. Instead, we move them almost daily in a tightly choreographed ballet from pasture spot to pasture spot."

Joel figured out that you don't have to be locked into the conventional ways to grow food by using chemicals. For example, if you mimic natural systems with your beef cows by moving them around in rotated pastures not only do you get healthier cows but the fertility of the soil increases. That's a true Pareto efficiency.


2. We’ve become detached from our food and the land that grows our food:

"A farmer friend of mine told me recently about a busload of middle school children who came to his farm for a tour. The first two boys off the bus asked, 'Where is the salsa tree?' They thought they could go pick salsa, like apples and peaches. Oh my. What do they put on SAT tests to measure this? Does anybody care? How little can a person know about food and still make educated decisions about it? Is this knowledge going to change before they enter the voting booth? Now that's a scary thought."

The average child hardly even realizes eggs don't come from the grocery store. Or that Velveeta cheese doesn't come from a can.

The only true path to food security is to know where your food comes from - have a relationship with the farmer who grows your food.

Get the rest of the lessons here: http://bit.ly/12BAhE0Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

All right, today's book of the day. I'm here special guest Joel Salatin. We're

0:05.7

talking about his books, folks, this eight normal. I like it. The high priest of

0:10.8

the pastor, they call you. We're here on the farm by the way of Virginia. You

0:13.8

can see a lot of Joel's sustainable agricultural ideas. Egg mobile, the hoop

0:19.6

houses for the chickens, the feed buggy, the trellis grapes, beehives, and sheep

0:25.7

all in one, the mountain, the shade mobile, rabbit shelter, cow shade mobile,

0:31.0

all sorts of stuff. Now this book, it's not just for people on a farm. What made

0:35.8

you write the book? What made me write the book was because I was doing so many

0:39.4

college, college lectures, college presentations. And I realized that these young

0:46.0

people today really thought that today's living is normal. Right. And they

0:52.1

actually thought that they could kind of sail off into some sort of a

0:56.2

star trek, cosmic nirvana, you know, and and sever this old umbilical to our

1:02.6

ecological nest. Right. And and and didn't have to worry about earthworms and

1:07.5

air and soil and water and, you know, nutrient dense food and whatever. And so

1:13.2

it just struck me that that I wanted to bring to them. Here are the here are the

1:21.4

principles and the patterns that have stood the test of time that are that are

1:26.0

actually more normal. Right. Then being then playing 20 hours of video games

1:32.0

a week, not knowing what vegetables are in season, what vegetables are out of

1:37.5

season, not having a home larger with your home processed prepared packaged

1:44.8

preserved food, but rather having all your food in in in cans with

1:50.6

unpronounceable ingredients down at the at the supermarket. You know, those are

1:55.2

extremely abnormal. And so we think they're normal. We yeah, because we have a

...

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