
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Most of us learned as kids what was “real” and what wasn’t. We were taught how to behave, how to fit in, and where the limits of possibility lived. But what if those limits were never real to begin with?
In this episode, I’m joined by Dr. Deborah Ann Baker, a researcher, artist, and author whose work explores the intersection of neuroscience, creativity, consciousness, and childhood development. Through her books There Is No Such Thing as Purple Trees and Quantum Rebellion, Deborah makes a compelling case that we lose something essential when we disconnect from imagination, curiosity, and wonder; the very capacities that fuel healing, innovation, and deeper human intelligence.
We talk about:
• the moment a teacher shut down her creativity with one sentence
• why children are wired for multidimensional thinking
• how neuroplasticity allows adults to reclaim what they lost
• the bridge between science and spirituality
• why healing requires permission to be messy
• and what it means to remember what we forgot as we “grew up”
This episode is for anyone who senses there’s more to being human than productivity and perfection — and who is ready to reclaim the parts of themselves they once shut down to fit in.
03:40 — The purple tree story and the wound of conformity
07:15 — Childhood imagination as cognitive intelligence
11:50 — Neuroplasticity and why adults shut down curiosity
16:20 — Science and spirituality begin to converge
21:10 — Cancer, creativity, and the “black paint moment”
27:45 — Why messiness is required for innovation
31:30 — Quantum thinking and multidimensional reality
36:05 — How children teach us what we unlearn
41:20 — What Deborah hopes adults remember
✨Connect with Deborah Ann Baker:
✨ Connect with Michele Simms:
💬 Rate & Review
· Loved this episode? Please consider leaving a 5-star review and sharing it with a friend!
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Michele SimmsMost of us learned as kids what was “real” and what wasn’t. We were taught how to behave, how to fit in, and where the limits of possibility lived. But what if those limits were never real to begin with?
In this episode, I’m joined by Dr. Deborah Ann Baker, a researcher, artist, and author whose work explores the intersection of neuroscience, creativity, consciousness, and childhood development. Through her books There Is No Such Thing as Purple Trees and Quantum Rebellion, Deborah makes a compelling case that we lose something essential when we disconnect from imagination, curiosity, and wonder; the very capacities that fuel healing, innovation, and deeper human intelligence.
We talk about:
• the moment a teacher shut down her creativity with one sentence
• why children are wired for multidimensional thinking
• how neuroplasticity allows adults to reclaim what they lost
• the bridge between science and spirituality
• why healing requires permission to be messy
• and what it means to remember what we forgot as we “grew up”
This episode is for anyone who senses there’s more to being human than productivity and perfection — and who is ready to reclaim the parts of themselves they once shut down to fit in.
03:40 — The purple tree story and the wound of conformity
07:15 — Childhood imagination as cognitive intelligence
11:50 — Neuroplasticity and why adults shut down curiosity
16:20 — Science and spirituality begin to converge
21:10 — Cancer, creativity, and the “black paint moment”
27:45 — Why messiness is required for innovation
31:30 — Quantum thinking and multidimensional reality
36:05 — How children teach us what we unlearn
41:20 — What Deborah hopes adults remember
✨Connect with Deborah Ann Baker:
✨ Connect with Michele Simms:
💬 Rate & Review
· Loved this episode? Please consider leaving a 5-star review and sharing it with a friend!
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.