Elon Musk recently admitted in his Saturday Night Live appearance that he was diagnosed with Asperger syndrome.
How does his face line up with my Smile Difference theory—which suggests that autism & Asperger's are asymmetrical brainstem injuries?
You may be surprised.
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Here's the entire 17-minute video explaining the Smile Difference if you haven't already seen it. It's fascinating.
Recall that Asperger syndrome is, according to my theory, a right-side brain injury. Like other injuries, your body can sometimes heal from such a thing, causing the effects to be less noticeable over time.
Unfortunately, the brainstem is an extremely intricate part of your nervous system and if damaged enough, may not be able to heal very much.
I believe that autism and Asperger syndrome are mirror-images of each other. In autism, the left side of the brainstem has more issues, often give rise to creative and artistic individuals.
With Asperger syndrome, the right side of the brainstem may be more affected, giving people less ability for abstract thought but granting them more linear, mathematical, rational thinking.
This isn't just a theory—you can easily see it on people's faces. Recall global warming ambassador Greta Thunberg, who has said she has been diagnosed with Asperger syndrome. She has what we would expect of someone with a right-side brainstem injury—right-sided facial weakness
The right-side facial issues associated with Asperger's isn't just a smirk, but a bona-fide weakness that shows up whenever you try to smile and don't concentrate on making it even.
So when I heard that Elon Musk said that he had been diagnosed with Asperger's, I was curious if his smiling pictures would line up with my theory. They do. As a reminder, here's what the face of someone with Asperger's should look like, according to my theory.
And here is a young Elon Musk, smiling with right-side facial weakness, just as we might expect
Here's another young Elon Musk photo. Same right-sided facial weakness. Notice the crease—what's called the "nasal-labial fold"—on the left side of his face. See how it's missing on the right?
In this picture, you can tell his eyes don't always point in the same direction, something called strabismus. I would guess his left eye is pointing where he wants it, but the right is not. People with this condition can, with effort, direct their eyes in the same direction.
Here's a picture of Elon Musk displaying another common sign of facial weakness, something I call "droop."
This drooping effect can be the result of injury to the 7th cranial nerve, something you may have seen with other celebrities like Sylvester Stallone, Alicia Silverstone, Katie Couric, and Milo Ventimiglia.
Elon Musk is in good company with Steve Jobs who, along with his first wife, show the same right-sided facial weakness of Asperger syndrome.
As I mentioned earlier, these sorts of injuries—if minor—can be overcome with effort. Many people with asymmetrical weakness can smile perfectly symmetrical if they try hard enough. Daniel Radcliffe can work out an even smile but you can tell there is some right-sided weakness.
Elon Musk is a special person, without a doubt—and his face clearly points to a portion of why that may be.
If you or someone you love deals with autism or Asperger syndrome, you will no doubt be aware they have changed the diagnostic criteria for these issues several times.
It can be frustrating.
It is my belief that uncovering which side of the brain has been affected is much more valuable in understanding yourself (or someone else) than the autism or Asperger labels.
The spectrum is wide, and some are more affected than others. The side of the injury often can explain much more about a person's behavior than the current diagnostic criteria in use today.
If you're interested in this topic, I have two books that cover this line of thinking in more detail. Crooked: Man-made Disease Explained attempts to explain this and many other neurological & autoimmune conditions. It's currently on Amazon & my store: amazon.com/Crooked-Man-Ma…
The other book that covers facial asymmetry and its relation to autism and Asperger is called The Autism Vaccine. It's an incredible story and is also available on Amazon & my store: amazon.com/gp/product/B07…
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Why do we kiss?
Is memory contagious?
Is instinct transmitted by something other than genetics?
Can we dream other people's memories? Other animals’ memories?
I researched the answer to these things & what I found changed everything I thought about science & life itself…
🧵👇
I’d always wondered what the evolutionary explanation for affection was. It serves no reproductive purpose. We kiss our children. Dogs lick our faces. Even animals who are supposedly enemies “kiss” each other.
The question is why?
There is apparently no evolutionary explanation for affection.
In the scientific context, it doesn’t make any sense. Many animals kiss, lick, preen, groom, and nuzzle for hours each day—time that could be spent hunting, eating, mating, or many other crucial functions.
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Before I started researching "The Germ in the Dairy Pail," I had no idea silos played a part in the downfall of milk. But they did.
Wanna know how? It's a crazy story...
Raw/unpasteurized was the only way humans drank milk from other animals for all of Creation. Every mammal drinks milk that way. Until the last 150 years, there wasn't a single mammal on the planet that made it past infancy without drinking raw, unpasteurized milk.
What changed?
The first big change came in the form of silos. Silos began appearing in the early 1800s & allowed farmers to store food to be eaten later by their cows. Summer has plenty of grass. Winter? Not so much.
So farmers stored up food for their animals in silos.
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3. A few years ago, I started asking questions about the Trinity at church. The answers I got—and the way they were given to me—started to feel real familiar.
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For years, I’d heard about a supposed connection with DDT, the pesticide that began being used shortly after World War 2.
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If you’re a mother, or are thinking of having children, I want to share 9 tiny stories from history about doctors, medicine, mothers, and their children.
Please read this before you trust a single thing they say.
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My top 22 epiphanies, realizations, reluctant admissions, and random thoughts for 2022.
Let me know if I've left something important out!
Here they are (plus a few extras perhaps), in no particular order:
1. Hypocrisy isn’t a sign of mental weakness. It’s a sign of strength—a sign someone thinks they’re winning & can get their way on anything, no matter the irrationality.
Pointing out hypocrisy is just highlighting the side that’s winning.
Find some hypocrisy in your life today!
2. Email is still the best project management tool there is. It has search. It works as file storage. You can sort and organize. Everyone knows how to use it.
There are a bunch of other project management tools out there, but nothing beats email for flexibility and ease of use.