Inside Consciousness: Brain Waves, Memories & Alternate Realities
Description
What is consciousness, really — and how does your brain build your reality?
In this episode of The Write Brain podcast, Ellis and Dr. Robert Melillo dive into the trippy but practical side of consciousness: how your brain stitches together sight, sound, memory, and emotion into a “movie” of your life… and what happens when that timing gets thrown off (anxiety, paranoia, psychosis, false memories, and more).
They get into gamma waves (40 Hz), quantum entanglement, parallel realities, why two people can remember the same moment totally differently, and how brain timing tools like the Interactive Metronome can actually help rebalance perception.
All of that… plus Jackie’s pastries and Ellis’s croissant cravings as B-plot. 🥐
In this episode, we talk about:
- What consciousness actually is (and why it’s the #1 question in neuroscience)
- How the brain “binds” sight, sound, memory, and emotion into one reality
- Why your brain is really a reality emulator
- How timing issues between the hemispheres can warp perception
- False memories, paranoia & “filling in the blanks”
- Quantum entanglement & the idea of a collective consciousness
- How tools like Interactive Metronome help sync the brain’s timing
- Why big life changes (moving cities, quitting drinking) can feel like “timeline jumps”
Timestamps
00:00 Intro, fasting, pastries & live audience energy
02:30 What is consciousness? Self-awareness & subjective experience
06:30 The “binding problem”: how the brain turns fragments into a single reality
10:30 40 Hz gamma waves & the brain as a reality emulator
14:30 When reality in your head doesn’t match the outside world
19:30 False memories & the left brain “filling in” stories
23:30 Right-brain big-picture paranoia (texts, tone, overthinking)
27:30 Quantum entanglement & universal/collective consciousness
33:00 Timelines, “quantum leaping” & changing your reality
38:00 Interactive Metronome, timing, and balancing the hemispheres
42:30 Wrap-up: how all of this connects back to mental health



