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Joe Dispenza

Joe Dispenza is an American non-fiction author, speaker, and researcher in neuroscience, quantum physics, and meditation. He authored several books, including Breaking the Habit of Being Yourself: How to Lose Your Mind and Create a New One (2013), You Are the Placebo: Making Your Mind Matter (2014), and Becoming Supernatural: How Common People Are Doing the Uncommon (2019).

Dr. Joe holds a Bachelor of Science degree from Evergreen State College and is a Doctor of Chiropractic. His post-graduate training includes the fields of neuroplasticity, quantitative electroencephalogram (QEEG) measurements, epigenetics, mind-body medicine, and brain/heart coherence.

He is known for his appearance in the documentary What the Bleep Do We Know! (2004), a pseudo-scientific film that posits a spiritual connection between quantum physics and consciousness. According to Publishers Weekly, the film was one of the sleeper hits of 2004, as "word-of-mouth and strategic marketing kept it in theaters for an entire year." The domestic gross exceeded $10 million, described as a success for a low-budget documentary.

Joe Dispenza's work revolves around the idea that the human mind and body are capable of remarkable transformations through the power of thought and meditation.

Dispenza has conducted numerous workshops, seminars, and retreats worldwide, where he teaches people how to use the power of their minds to overcome self-limiting beliefs.

His book, You Are the Placebo: Making Your Mind Matter, was New York Times Bestseller within one week and Amazon Bestseller after publication.

Joe Dispenza currently resides in Washington State.

Photo credit: drjoedispenza.com
years of life: 22 March 1962 present

Quotes

Сашаhas quoted2 years ago
When you ask Anna about her past health problems, she will tell you that having those challenges was the best thing that ever happened to her. Think about it: What if the worst thing that ever happened to you turns out to be the best thing that has ever happened to you? She often tells me that she loves her present life, and I always respond, “Of course you do, you created your life every day by not getting up from your meditations until you were in love with that life. So now, you get to love your life.”
Alejandrahas quotedlast year
it is very clear to me that when your brain works right, you work right, and when your brain is troubled, you are much more likely to have trouble in your life.

With a healthier brain, you are happier, physically healthier, wealthier, wiser, and just make better decisions, which helps you be more successful and live longer. When the brain is not healthy for whatever reason—such as a head injury or past emotional trauma—people are sadder, sicker, poorer, less wise, and less successful.
Alejandrahas quotedlast year
If an atom is 99.99999 percent energy and .00001 percent physical substance,1 then I’m actually more nothing than something! So why do I keep my attention on that small percentage of the physical world when I am so much more? Is defining my present reality by what I perceive with my senses the biggest limitation I have
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