ReeThink - Where Neuroscience and Technology Converge to Rewire Minds, Markets and Human Potential

Rudi Adigbli

ReeThink the System. ReeWire the Future.In an age of digital immersion and algorithmic pressure, your most valuable asset is your attention span. As the line between biological and digital intelligence blurs, the ReeThink Podcast explores how to protect and expand human potential. Hosted by Rudi Adigbli, this is the "Mental Gym" for the modern era. We bridge the gap between neuroscience research and the neurotech innovations reshaping our world. Why ReeThink? The old paradigm of the brain as an "isolated island" is dead. We are witnessing a once-in-a-lifetime shift: from the "AI Pressure Cooker" forcing education reform to the discovery that movement is neuromodulation for the Central Nervous System (CNS). The old rules of human performance no longer apply. We don't just talk about change; we decode the cognitive science behind it. Each episode features deep-dives with PhDs, neuroscientists, and tech pioneers to provide a biological and technological "Software Update" for your life and business. What We Explore:Neuroscience Research: How the brain evolved to navigate 3D environments and why the cubicle is a biological "stagnation trap". Neurotech & Innovation: The intersection of neurotechnology, VR, and AI to enhance our human expierence. Human Performance & CNS: How coordination drills like juggling synchronize brain hemispheres to unlock genius-level logic. Attention Span & Sovereignty: Reclaiming focus from digital offloading through Bio-Energetic grounding to shift from "Survival" to "Creative" mode. Future of Education: Preparing humans for a society where AI handles the procedural, and humans must master originality. Master Your Originality The highest hierarchy of thinking is Creation. To be original, you need a regulated, grounded, and expressive Central Nervous System. Stop being a "copy of a copy" and start exploring your true capacity. Subscribe to ReeThink on Spotify and YouTube. ReeThink the Science. ReeWire the Mind.

  1. 6D AGO

    Beyond the Brain: Embodied Intelligence, Breath & Intuition With Lucia Hegenbartova

    In this episode of the ReeThink Podcast, Rudi sits down with Lucia Hegenbartova – former tech executive turned executive coach, breathwork teacher and consciousness explorer – for one of the most expansive conversations yet on the show. Lucia spent 15 years building enterprise SaaS startups, several of which became global market leaders and one a unicorn. Then, after a traumatic personal experience left her acutely suicidal and her mind completely out of control, a single meditation session changed everything. Ten minutes into a simple breath-slowing practice, months of constant mental anguish dissolved in an instant. That moment sent her on a deep journey into breathwork, somatic practice, neuroscience and the nature of consciousness itself – and ultimately led to a radical career pivot from C-suite executive to guide for leaders who want to access their full human potential. Together, Rudi and Lucia explore why chronic stress is not just a health problem but a cognitive performance problem – literally pulling blood flow away from the prefrontal cortex and turning leaders into a more primitive version of themselves exactly when they need their most evolved capacities. They unpack the autonomic nervous system as the hidden lever behind executive function, creativity and decision-making, and why breath is the most elegant and accessible back door into that system. From there the conversation goes deeper: into embodied intelligence and why the brain is not the seat of intelligence but merely one node in a larger system that includes the gut, heart, fascia and nervous system. Into three distinct layers of intuition – from fast pattern recognition to creative breakthrough to transpersonal knowing. And into the big question of what remains uniquely human as AI commoditises analytical thinking. 00:00 Introduction to Lucia Hegenbartova 01:29 Journey from Tech to Human Complexity 06:11 The Drive to Understand Human Behavior 07:45 The Intersection of Science and Spirituality 11:01 Experiencing Consciousness Beyond the Self 12:24 The Nature of Truth and Subjective Experience 15:11 The Career Pivot: From Executive to Coach 25:26 Shifting from Ambition to Inner Alignment 30:55 Embodied Intelligence: A New Perspective 35:28 The Role of the Nervous System in Decision Making 46:39 Chronic Stress and Cognitive Performance 57:35 Authenticity and Emotional Regulation 01:01:49 Understanding Intuition: A Personal Journey 01:03:44 The Science of Intuition: Three Layers Explained 01:09:34 The Intersection of Intuition and Consciousness 01:15:20 AI and Human Cognition: Opportunities and Challenges 01:26:29 Practical Steps for a Regulated Nervous System

    1h 31m
  2. APR 6

    From Data to Presence: Mindfulness, Calm Tech & The Pulse Ring With Johan Matton

    In this episode of the ReeThink Podcast, Rudi talks with Johan Matton, co‑founder of Pulse Mindfulness, about why the future of wellness is less about tracking and more about training your nervous system in real life. Johan spent 12 years in New York’s high‑pressure film industry making content for brands like Spotify, Nike and Microsoft before leaving it all behind to build the Pulse Ring – an “awareness wearable” that doesn’t track anything, but uses gentle haptic vibrations to snap you out of autopilot and back into the present moment. We explore how most wellness tech sits on your phone – the same device that is already overloading you with notifications – and why Johan believes life is meant to be lived, not just measured. Instead of more dashboards, Pulse uses subtle, random vibrations throughout the day to remind you to pause, take a few deep breaths, notice your body and reconnect with what you’re actually doing. Over time, these micro‑pauses become a powerful anchor for mindfulness, nervous‑system regulation and habit change, especially for overthinkers and people with fast minds. Johan shares his own story of growing up with anxiety and a difficult home environment, becoming obsessed with self‑help and meditation, and then discovering that the missing piece wasn’t another 10‑day retreat – it was remembering to practice in the middle of real life. After an eight‑week mindfulness course changed everything, he watched the benefits fade simply because he forgot to pause once the course ended. That insight eventually led to the idea of a ring that vibrates 10 times a day as a physical prompt to breathe, relax your shoulders, unclench your jaw and observe your thoughts instead of reacting from them. We discuss: How the wellness industry drifted into biohacking, longevity and endless tracking, and why Johan is betting on a shift back toward well‑being over data.The difference between reacting to life on autopilot vs acting with intention, and how tiny pauses train your brain to choose your response instead of being dragged by thought loops.Why breathwork and deep breathing remain one of the simplest, most powerful tools for stress reduction and executive function – if you actually remember to use them 10 times a day.How Johan thinks about identity, founders’ anxiety and over‑identification with a startup, and why repetition and conditioning are key to rewiring old patterns.Where he believes mental health and wellness are headed over the next 5–10 years: a likely short‑term decline in mental wellbeing, especially among teens, followed by a wave of solutions that help people disconnect from screens and reconnect with their bodies and communities. 00:00 Introduction to Pulse Mindfulness 06:18 Personal Journey and Motivation Behind Pulse 14:25 Transition from Filmmaking to Mindfulness Tech 18:15 The Challenges of Startup Life 22:04 Explaining Mindfulness to Beginners 27:24 The Future of the Wellness Industry 31:26 Investor Perspectives on Wellness Innovations 35:09 Pulse's Vision for the Future 42:47 Childhood Trauma and Mindfulness Healing

    48 min
  3. MAR 30

    Human as Sensor: Eye‑Tracking, Cognitive Load & Human‑AI

    🎙️ Episode 24 - Human as Sensor: Eye‑Tracking, Cognitive Load & Human‑AI In this episode of the ReeThink Podcast, Rudi talks with Aladar Tepelea (CEO) and Dr. Christian Kusmitsch (CTO), co‑founders of Mindset Technologies, about how our eyes, body signals and context can turn humans into high‑resolution sensors for the next wave of human‑AI systems. Christian is a neuroscientist in psychophysiology and cognitive performance; Aladar comes from finance and systems thinking, and together they’ve built a neurotech company that measures cognitive load, stress and focus in real time using eye‑tracking, head and body posture, and biofeedback in environments with zero tolerance for error: race car cockpits, aviation, control rooms, elite performers and even professional musicians. We explore why people “choke under pressure”, what’s happening in the brain when you over‑engage and try too hard, and how eye movements, blinks and pupil dynamics reveal whether you’re in flow or cognitive overload – and how Mindset’s “Biofeedback 3.0” stack turns those subtle signals into actionable insights for coaches, trainers and operators. From there, we widen the lens to the emerging “human as sensor” paradigm and the future of non‑invasive brain‑computer interfaces (BCI): comparing invasive BCIs like Neuralink with high‑resolution eye‑tracking and multimodal sensing, why gaze may become the fastest, most intuitive interface in the age of “physical AI”, and what this means for the ethics of deploying AI and neurotech in defence, industry and everyday life. You’ll also hear: Why musicians can train for thousands of hours without burning out, while esports players often crash by 18 – and what that teaches us about stress, recovery and motor control.How Mindset’s software layers on top of devices from Pupil Labs, Tobii and others to interpret fixations, saccades, blinks and pupil size as indicators of cognitive load and situational awareness.Why only fixations (not fast saccades) actually carry visual information, and how mis‑labelling these events breaks most off‑the‑shelf analytics.How head movement, skeleton tracking and heart‑rate variability can refine models of arousal, attention and overload beyond what eye‑tracking alone can do.Why EEG is still hard to use outside the lab, and how AI helps clean artifacts and tune filters both for EEG and high‑frequency eye dataThe coming shift from large language models to world models, and why Jan LeCun, Elon Musk and others see real‑world sensors as the next big frontier.A deep ethical debate on AI, weapons systems, social media algorithms, cognitive overload and children’s brains – and why “human‑centred” design must be more than a buzzword.The long‑term vision: applying the same bio‑signal insights to healthcare, early detection of conditions like Alzheimer’s, stress‑related disease and workplace wellbeing. 00:00 – Welcome & who are Aladar and Christian? 07:00 – Musicians vs esports: why some performers burn out and others don’t 12:30 – What Mindset Technologies actually does: Biofeedback 3.0 explained 27:30 – Head posture, body tracking and heart‑rate variability as extra channels 34:30 – Invasive vs non‑invasive BCIs: ethics, safety and real‑world use cases 47:00 – AI, paperclip problems and “agents of chaos”: risks without consciousness 53:00 – Consciousness, qualia and why intelligence alone isn’t enough

    1h 19m
  4. MAR 23

    Rewiring Executive Function: Metabolism, Sleep & Cognition With Dermot Rock

    🎙️ Episode 23 - Rewiring Executive Function: Metabolism, Sleep & Cognition With Dermot Rock In this episode of the ReeThink Podcast, Rudi talks with Irish founder and former soldier Dermot Rock, creator of Cogn8, about how much of your “intelligence” is fixed – and how much is physiology you can change. After a parachute accident, years of seizures and brain fog, and a startup that failed at the regulatory finish line, cognitive testing showed his performance was “on the floor” despite outward success. Refusing to accept that as fate or IQ, Dermot turned himself into a full‑time N=1 experiment, overhauled his underlying physiology and improved his measured cognition by about 40%. Today, he helps fund managers, founders and other high‑consequence operators upgrade decision‑making by fixing sleep, metabolism and movement before chasing hacks. We talk about: Why most high performers never test their cognition – and what happens when you finally see your numbers. How blood sugar, insulin resistance and “energy stability” impact your prefrontal cortex and long‑term thinking. Building a real‑time cognitive dashboard with labs, genetics, wearables and continuous glucose monitoring. Activity vs exercise, why 10 minutes with a kettlebell can beat an hour at the gym, and how VO2 max links to brain oxygenation. Sleep as “taking out the metabolic trash” – and why 7–8 hours of quality sleep is non‑negotiable for good decisions. Sugar, “cheap dopamine” and the environment that keeps your brain in circus‑level plate spinning instead of calm execution. How a 3% dip in clarity at the wrong moment can compound into millions in opportunity cost. Dermot’s vision for a measurable physiological state of “decision‑making readiness” for leaders and investors. If you’re a founder, investor, executive – or just suspect you’re leaving cognitive capacity on the table – this conversation reframes how you think about your brain, your lifestyle and your potential. 00:00 – Welcome & who is Dermot Rock? 02:30 – Parachute accident, brain injury & years of seizures 08:30 – Seeing cognitive scores “on the floor” for the first time 11:15 – From IQ myths to brain plasticity and trainable cognition 15:00 – Why metabolism and blood sugar are central to clear thinking 19:00 – Testing, dashboards and measuring what actually moves the dial 23:30 – Sleep as metabolic housekeeping for the brain 33:00 – Sugar, cheap dopamine and the modern “monkey mind” 38:00 – High‑stakes operators, tiny dips in clarity and huge opportunity costs 44:30 – Activity vs exercise, VO2 max and oxygen for the brain 51:00 – Time is not the problem: building tiny, high‑leverage habits 1:03:00 – Dermot’s “big three” for better cognition: sleep, energy, exercise 1:11:30 – Vision for Cognate and the future of decision‑making readiness

    1h 16m
  5. MAR 16

    Neurotech, Psychedelics & the Future of Mental Health: re.Mind Capital’s Joao on What’s Coming Next

    🎙️ Episode 22 - Neurotech, Psychedelics & the Future of Mental Health: re.Mind Capital’s Joao on What’s Coming Next In this episode of ReeThink, Rudi Adigbli sits down with Joao Barbosa Da Silva (MD, Imperial College London), Investor and Managing Partner at re.mind Capital, a $130M venture fund dedicated to neuroscience and behavioral health. From psychedelics to neurotechnology, Joao shares why he believes we are at the beginning of a massive wave of innovation in brain health, and how founders can build the next generation of tools for mental health, cognition and human performance. Joao explains his transition from clinical medicine and academic neuroscience into venture capital, and why he got obsessed with translating cutting‑edge research into real‑world therapeutics instead of waiting decades for traditional funding cycles. He walks through re.mind’s thesis: investing across neurotechnology (devices that read and write to the brain), novel therapeutics (from psychedelics to new mechanisms in psychiatry and neurology), and digital health models that rethink how care is delivered at scale.​​ A big part of the conversation dives into neurotechnology trends: non‑invasive focused ultrasound for deep‑brain stimulation, temporal interference, advances in EEG and next‑gen brain‑reading methods and why Joao believes neurotech is the only real path to precision psychiatry. He breaks down how commercialization paths differ for invasive BCIs, non‑invasive devices and digital tools, why he prefers starting “clinical‑first” for credibility and evidence, and where consumer plays can still make sense.​ Rudi and Joao also explore the emerging field of neuro‑AI: using neuroscience to build more robust, safer AI systems, and using AI to extract more signal from messy brain data. They discuss why current AI models are hitting scaling limits, how insights from human intelligence might shape the next wave, and what this means for founders building at the intersection of cognitive AI tools, brain‑computer interfaces and mental health. Finally, Joao offers a candid view on the future of mental health care. He argues that one‑to‑one therapy, while important, will never be scalable enough to solve the global crisis, and that the next decade will be defined by interventional mental health: higher‑effect‑size tools like TMS, psychedelics, neurostimulation and next‑gen therapeutics that can be deployed at scale. If you’re a founder, investor or clinician trying to understand where brain optimization for business and health is heading, this episode is a roadmap. 00:00 – Welcome and introducing Joao & the re.mind Capital fund 02:00 – From medicine and psychedelics research to neuroscience VC 05:20 – Why venture can sometimes answer scientific questions faster than academia 10:40 – Building re.mind’s thesis: from psychedelics to full‑stack brain health 16:20 – Commercialization paths in neurotech: invasive BCIs vs. non‑invasive devices 22:10 – Hybrid routes: consumer devices, supplements and the path to regulated therapeutics 39:40 – The rise of neuro‑AI: using brain insights to build safer, more capable AI 43:30 – Scaling limits of current AI models and why neuroscience matters next 50:40 – Joao’s outlook: the next 5–10 years of brain health and neurotech innovation

    52 min
  6. MAR 9

    From OCD to FineMind: Community Mental Health in Uganda and Beyond with Pavel Reppo

    🎙️ Episode 21 - From OCD to FineMind: Community Mental Health in Uganda and Beyond with Pavel Reppo In this episode of ReeThink, Rudi Adigbli sits down with Pavel Reppo, co‑founder of FineMind, to explore what community‑driven mental health can look like when you start with lived experience instead of theory. Pavel shares his lifelong journey with obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD), from hand‑washing rituals that left his skin cracked and bleeding to relationship OCD and the hard work of exposure and response prevention (ERP) therapy, and how that pain eventually called him into global mental health. The conversation then moves to Uganda, where FineMind operates in a context with roughly 50 psychiatrists for 50 million people and high rates of depression and suicide. Pavel explains how FineMind uses task‑sharing and peer‑based support to deliver evidence‑based depression care through local community health workers, supported by technology rather than replaced by it. With a tablet‑based system and cognitive AI tools in the background, counselors in rural clinics can track progress, follow structured protocols, and bring mental health into primary care, one of the biggest gaps in global health today. Rudi and Pavel also dive deep into neuroplasticity, metacognition and intelligence. They explore how OCD forced Pavel to build meta‑awareness of his own thoughts, why that kind of mental “zoom‑out” is crucial for good decision‑making, and how a mix of pain plus reflection can become a training ground for mastery. Along the way, they connect movement and neuroplasticity, flow vs. trauma, and the idea that what we call “talent” might just be long‑term feedback loops in a plastic brain. Finally, they zoom out to the bigger picture: Sub‑Saharan Africa’s surprising mental‑health advantage on some indices due to community and lower smartphone saturation, the shadow of the attention economy in the West, and the urgent need for brain optimization for business and health that treats mind and body as one system. Pavel lays out his vision for FineMind over the next decade: mental health embedded into every primary care facility in Uganda, backed by government policy, and a model that can be adapted from Kampala to Canada.​ If you care about mental health access, global health innovation, or how cognitive AI tools can support, rather than replace, human connection, this episode is a powerful, hopeful look at what a mental gym for communities could become. 00:00 – Welcome and introducing Pavel Reppo & FineMind 06:45 – Obsessions, compulsions and the reality of living with OCD 16:30 – Neuroplasticity, intelligence and why effort can beat “natural talent” 25:00 – FineMind’s model: task‑sharing, peer support and listening as medicine 28:20 – Holding space, men’s circles and deep listening as nervous‑system regulation 36:00 – Global mental health, poverty and why depression is an economic issue too 52:00 – How FineMind uses tablets, data and cognitive AI tools in the field 59:00 – AI as coach, not therapist: on‑call chatbots and supervision for counselors 01:06:30 – AI, jobs and “skating to where the puck is going” (Pavel’s worry for his mom) 01:19:40 – Mind–body medicine, acceptance and mitochondria: why mental health belongs in every clinic

    1h 18m
  7. MAR 2

    AI, Mental Health & Human Motives: Skip Rizzo on Ethics, Risk and Real Care

    🎙️ Episode 20 - AI, Mental Health & Human Motives: Skip Rizzo on Ethics, Risk and Real Care In this episode of ReeThink, host Rudi Adigbli sits down with VR and clinical psychology pioneer Skip Rizzo to explore how AI and executive function intersect with mental health, ethics and the economics of care. Together they examine where AI can truly support humans, where it becomes dangerous, and why incentives and values may matter more than the technology itself.​​ Skip explains how he uses AI as decision support rather than decision making, and why human judgment must remain at the center of healthcare and mental health applications. The conversation covers virtual companions for veterans, elderly people and those in crisis, and how conversational AI can either expand access to support or be misused as a cheap replacement for real human care. They also discuss how cognitive AI tools could transform education and “productive failure” learning models, making high‑quality teaching scalable without removing the human teacher.​​​ A major thread in the episode is incentives: whether AI becomes a force multiplier for clinicians, teachers and caregivers, or a way to cut costs and jobs under the banner of innovation. Rudi and Skip draw parallels to social media and the attention economy, where design decisions optimized for engagement have already eroded youth mental health, and they ask what guardrails are needed so AI does not repeat those mistakes at scale.​ They also dive into sensing systems that can read stress and emotional states from voice and facial signals, and what this means for brain optimization for business, safety‑critical roles, and highly vulnerable populations. Throughout, AI shows up as a kind of “barometer” for the health of human systems, revealing whether societies use new tools to deepen care or to outsource it.​​ This episode is designed for founders, investors, researchers and practitioners who want a grounded, systemic view of AI in mental health and education: not as magic, not as doom, but as a potential mental gym tool whose impact depends on how well we align ethics, incentives and human dignity.​​ 00:00 – Why Skip Rizzo came back: unfinished business with AI 06:20 – AI as decision support vs decision maker in healthcare 11:10 – Sentience, the Turing test and why LLMs are not “alive” 16:00 – Suicide hotlines, the VA and the danger of replacing humans 21:20 – Billion people with mental health issues and the care gap 25:20 – Guardrails, ethical guidelines and red‑teaming patient‑facing AI 31:30 – Social media, youth mental health and lessons for AI design 39:30 – Aging, executive function and AI as a cognitive exoskeleton 43:20 – Children, responsibility and where regulation becomes non‑negotiable 47:30 – AI as a barometer of human motives and system health 53:30 – Sensing emotion from voice and face: promise and slippery slopes 59:00 – Closing reflections and why we’ll revisit these predictions

    56 min
  8. FEB 23

    Can Tech Help Us Focus Again? Opal’s Kenneth Schlenker on Attention, Phones & Mental Health

    🎙️ Episode 19 - Can Tech Help Us Focus Again? Opal’s Kenneth Schlenker on Attention, Phones & Mental Health Smartphones and social media have turned into industrial‑grade attention machines, and most of us never got the manual. In this episode of the ReeThink Podcast, Rudi Adigbli sits down with Opal founder and CEO Kenneth Schlenker to explore how the attention economy, persuasive design and constant connectivity are reshaping our focus, productivity and mental health. Kenneth shares his journey from a calm childhood in the Alps to working at Google, where he saw how powerful user data is for predicting and influencing behavior. He explains how this experience, combined with the rise of ubiquitous smartphones (5 billion devices) and social media platforms like Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp, led him to build Opal, a screen time management app designed to help people use technology without being used by it. We dive into: How big tech learned to hack human attention using data, dopamine and micro‑habits.​Why constant context switching destroys deep work, clarity and emotional regulation.​The link between the attention economy and today’s youth mental health crisis, anxiety and burnout across all age groups.​How Opal combines screen time analytics with interventions (blocking/limiting apps and websites) so your digital environment matches your intentions.​Why real change requires agency, not just restrictions, especially for teenagers and families trying to build healthier phone habits together.​ 00:00 Introduction to Kenneth von Oppel and Opal 05:51 Realizations at Google: The Attention Economy 14:10 Aligning Technology with Human Wellbeing 29:49 Balancing Profit and Positive Impact 36:42 Hiring for a Strong Company Culture 38:51 The Importance of a Clear Mission 42:05 Achieving Success with a Small Team 51:58 Understanding Context Through Technology 54:55 The Importance of Measuring Attention 57:15 Parenting in a Digital Age 58:34 Agency and Empowerment in Children 01:04:42 Navigating Screen Time and Technology Rudi and Kenneth also discuss research on persuasive tech, dopamine loops, variable rewards, and the overlap between flow triggers and addictive product design. They explore how perceived agency can turn the same high‑stimulus environment into either a path to trauma and helplessness, or a path to growth and flow.​ If you’ve ever felt your phone quietly taking over your day, struggled to focus at work, worried about your kids growing up on social media, or wondered how to align your tech use with your values, this conversation is for you. You’ll come away with a clearer understanding of: What’s really happening behind the screen when you scroll.Why digital wellbeing is now a civilization‑level challenge.Practical ways to reclaim your attention, focus and mental health while still benefiting from modern technology. #DigitalWellbeing #ScreenTime #AttentionEconomy #MindfulTech #OpalApp #ReeThinkPodcast #KennethSchlenker #DeepWork #Productivity #MindfulTech #SmartphoneAddiction #AttentionEconomy #DigitalWellbeing

    1h 12m

About

ReeThink the System. ReeWire the Future.In an age of digital immersion and algorithmic pressure, your most valuable asset is your attention span. As the line between biological and digital intelligence blurs, the ReeThink Podcast explores how to protect and expand human potential. Hosted by Rudi Adigbli, this is the "Mental Gym" for the modern era. We bridge the gap between neuroscience research and the neurotech innovations reshaping our world. Why ReeThink? The old paradigm of the brain as an "isolated island" is dead. We are witnessing a once-in-a-lifetime shift: from the "AI Pressure Cooker" forcing education reform to the discovery that movement is neuromodulation for the Central Nervous System (CNS). The old rules of human performance no longer apply. We don't just talk about change; we decode the cognitive science behind it. Each episode features deep-dives with PhDs, neuroscientists, and tech pioneers to provide a biological and technological "Software Update" for your life and business. What We Explore:Neuroscience Research: How the brain evolved to navigate 3D environments and why the cubicle is a biological "stagnation trap". Neurotech & Innovation: The intersection of neurotechnology, VR, and AI to enhance our human expierence. Human Performance & CNS: How coordination drills like juggling synchronize brain hemispheres to unlock genius-level logic. Attention Span & Sovereignty: Reclaiming focus from digital offloading through Bio-Energetic grounding to shift from "Survival" to "Creative" mode. Future of Education: Preparing humans for a society where AI handles the procedural, and humans must master originality. Master Your Originality The highest hierarchy of thinking is Creation. To be original, you need a regulated, grounded, and expressive Central Nervous System. Stop being a "copy of a copy" and start exploring your true capacity. Subscribe to ReeThink on Spotify and YouTube. ReeThink the Science. ReeWire the Mind.