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EverydaySpy Podcast

Rewire Your Brain to Get Anything You Want (CIA's Dark Method)

EverydaySpy Podcast

Andrew Bustamante

Business, News, News Commentary, Education, Self-improvement, Entrepreneurship

4.6695 Ratings

🗓️ 2 February 2026

⏱️ 28 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

FREE TEST: Find Your Spy Superpower HERE - https://yt.everydayspy.com/4bnPvlu Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

There's two types of memory. Most people know there's two types of memory. Photographic and.

0:04.5

Portographic and photographic. There you go. Short term and long term memory. And CIA teaches us that

0:10.4

not everybody has, well, nobody has both. Everybody's mind is cognitively wired for one or the other,

0:16.8

short term or long term, which means we all have a memory deficiency. It's just what is the memory deficiency.

0:22.1

You have some people who can remember things for years.

0:25.7

My grandmother was one of the people who could just have detailed memories that she held

0:31.1

on to for decades.

0:33.2

She passed that to my sister, right?

0:36.5

And her eldest daughter.

0:39.5

So in my, in my family line, grandma was a fucking encyclopedia.

0:45.2

She had four kids.

0:47.8

Three of those kids can't remember dick longer than like two days.

0:52.3

But one is an encyclopedia like her.

0:55.0

My mom had three kids, of which only one has that incredible long-term memory, my middle

1:01.7

sister, just incredible.

1:02.9

Like, I don't even know how to describe it, incredible.

1:05.8

I have a short-term memory.

1:07.4

So I have a strong short-term memory, but it's really, really hard before CIA. It was

1:12.2

very, very hard for me to be able to retain things I wanted to retain. Even the things I knew I wanted

1:17.2

to retain. I didn't know how to retain them. What constitutes a short term and long term? So when you have

1:22.2

an experience, when you get new information, your brain will basically buffer every seven seconds. So you have seven seconds

1:30.0

to determine whether or not what just happened gets retained or not. Now here's like,

...

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