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Transcript of audio podcast interview by Douglas Eby with Judith Orloff M.D.
Welcome to another Inner Talent Interview, a series of Podcasts on the psychology of creativity and personal growth.
I'm Douglas Eby, author of the Talent Development Resources site.
My guest today is energy psychiatrist Judith Orloff M.D., an assistant clinical professor of psychiatry at UCLA and author of the book "Emotional Freedom."
She synthesizes traditional medicine with intuition, subtle energy, and spirituality and provides in her books strategies to transform strong negative emotions to help achieve inner peace and better access to our creativity.
For more information, see the
Podcast page with the interview and links to her site, to my previous interview with her, and to her book.
Now, here's the interview.
Douglas: Well, hello, Doctor Orloff.
Dr. Judith Orloff: Hi, it's nice to talk to you again.
Douglas: Thank you. Your bio on your site says, "You passionately assert that we have the power to transform negative emotions and achieve inner peace."

Psychiatry has usually been about medical experts managing our negative emotions with drugs or therapies. Are you describing a more self-help approach in your book "Emotional Freedom"?
Dr. Orloff: Well I'm a different kind of psychiatrist. What I do is I incorporate traditional medicine with information from intuition, spirituality, subtle energies, and psychology.
I want to provide solutions from every possible realm for people who are experiencing anxiety because I know how potent anxiety can be and how it can just throw you off.
I don't feel traditional psychiatry offers all of the solutions that are available.
Douglas: You've also written, "I've learned that emotional freedom is rarely just about removing a symptom."
Many of us feel an urgency about dealing with anxiety or irritability when it comes up. I, for example, sometimes use an herbal preparation called "Pure Calm" that does provide some quick relief.
Do you include strategies that can have a fairly immediate relief or is this more a long term emotional health approach?
Dr. Orloff: Oh no, that wouldn't work with anxiety! [laughs]
Douglas: [laughs] Right...
Dr. Orloff: You want immediate relief from anxiety.
Douglas: Yeah, really.
Dr. Orloff: You don't want to wait, so I have both immediate methods that you can use and those that you can develop longer term to shift your biology and neurochemicals, because what happens with medication is that that alters your neurochemicals, but I believe that we can do that naturally with our own techniques and our own meditation practices.
But, in addition to that, there are four ways to find calm and cure anxiety that I talk about in "Emotional Freedom, that has to do with supplements and the ones I recommend are 5HTP, which is a plant extract which converts into serotonin and epinephrine that works for certain people; Kava-kava which is taken from the root of the plant that grows in the south pacific and promotes relaxation and improves sleep; and also calcium and magnesium, I believe that's what you were just referring to, the Pure formula I think, and these are essential minerals, they can be depleted by stress, which are calming and improves sleep.
So those are four possible natural supplements to use. And also, to relieve anxiety, you must learn how to quiet your system because the fight or flight response revs it up and so it's important as much as possible to avoid caffeine and other stimulants, excessive sugar, and violent newscasts and films, because these make you jumpy and increase the startle response.
Douglas: Right. Actually the "Pure Calm" I was referring to was put out by Native Remedies and it's a homeopathic preparation.
Dr. Orloff: Oh. Oh I see, OK.
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Read more about these supplements that Dr. Orloff recommends at Anxiety Relief Solutions.
~~~~~~~~Douglas: Anyway, I'm glad you mentioned those others as well.
Speaking of getting revved up, which is certainly a problem in a lot of ways in modern society. Many actors get anxious about auditions, about not getting work, et cetera, and you know, have anxiety issues that are really kind of built in, in a way, to the profession. Do you have actor or performer clients that you've helped?
Dr. Orloff: Oh, all the time, my practice is in Los Angeles so a great portion of the list is creative people and actors and directors and so forth, but actors in particular, and then there are a number of options for that.
One is basically the beta blockers or Inderal. It's a medication to reduce stage fright by decreasing the fight or flight response.
All right, that's one way, but a better way is that I teach everyone to do a three minute mini-meditation from emotional freedom where they learn how to breathe, center themselves, let their thoughts flow by, and focus on something really nurturing and positive for three minutes which is a better way, I believe, to learn how to shift your anxiety and really own the moment. You can do that anywhere.
I teach patients with panic attacks this three minute mini meditation. Let's say the panic attack is coming on at a party, they could go to the bathroom, close the door, and do this three minute meditation to bring themselves back together again and then go back out.
It's as important that we learn how to shift the biochemical rush that comes in from anxiety with specific strategies to bring it back down instead of feeding it because then it could snowball and turn into a panic attack, which is what you don't want.
Douglas: Yes. Well, that's that really interesting. It relates to a number of mindfulness approaches I'm sure you're familiar with, but it sounds like you've developed a very quick and efficient version of longer mindfulness meditation techniques.
Dr. Orloff: Oh, yes. You need a quick and efficient version with anxiety. Because when it starts revving up, you want to rev it down. It's like pain, you have to break the pain cycle in order for it to stop. The same with anxiety.
And I also want to make the point that many traditional psychiatrists don't understand that certain people are what I call emotional empaths. It's a type of emotional type I talk about in "Emotional Freedom."
And I am one so I really have a great interest in it. Emotional empaths are so sensitive that they can absorb the negative emotions of others in their body, and actually take it on. So when an empath is around somebody who is anxious, they can actually absorb that energy into their body, when it isn't even their own anxiety.
Dr. Orloff: And they don't know the difference. It's hard to know what's what. And so in "Emotional Freedom" I go through techniques on how to identify this, and how to breathe it out, and other strategies to get rid of somebody else's anxiety.
And you need to know if you're an emotional empath. If you're suffering from anxiety and you're an emotional empath, there are a number of strategies that are not presented by traditional medicine that you can try in order to stop absorbing the energy of others.
I practice these strategies myself so I don't absorb the emotions of others. And if I didn't, I couldn't go out on a book tour. I couldn't be around large groups of people because my body is literally like a sponge.
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