Hi! My name is Kasey Longordo, you can call me Teddy! I am the original Subconscious Practitioner here at Dietitian Live!
Let me tell you how my life has influenced this work.
For most of my life I believed transformation came from stronger discipline, more willpower, or the perfect plan. I spent years chasing external strategies, convinced that if I could just organize my routine or tighten my structure enough, everything would finally click into place. What I didn’t understand then was that the real battle was never outside of me. It lived in the quiet, unexamined stories running beneath the surface of my awareness. Those stories were shaping every choice I made, every pattern I repeated, and every limit I kept bumping into without knowing why.
Subconscious reprogramming became the turning point. It wasn’t a single technique or a moment of revelation, but a sustained commitment to exploring the beliefs that silently organized my reality. I began to see how the mind creates meaning long before we consciously think a thought, and how those meanings influence our physiology, our emotional patterns, and the way we engage with food and health. As I worked with these deeper layers, my life began to shift in ways no diet or routine had ever created. My weight fell away through a steady and intuitive process rather than a forceful one. Chronic symptoms that had felt immovable began to soften. My sense of possibility expanded because I was no longer negotiating with an identity built on scarcity, fear, and survival.
Studying neuroscience through Stanford Online helped me understand what I was experiencing. The brain is constantly reshaping itself in response to the thoughts we rehearse, the emotions we return to, and the internal narratives we unconsciously accept as truth. When we work with that plasticity intentionally, we can interrupt entrenched patterns and build new ones that support clarity, resilience, and self trust. This is not mystical thinking. It is a biological reality. The subconscious is not a vault of mystery; it is a living, dynamic system that responds to safety, repetition, and alignment.
As this work transformed my own life, it reshaped how I lead and how we coach at Dietitian Live. Nutrition counseling becomes far more powerful when it is rooted in an understanding of identity and belief. A client does not struggle because they lack information. They struggle because their internal narrative has not yet shifted into one that supports change. When dietitians learn to recognize the emotional and cognitive patterns beneath the surface and respond with grounded, evidence based coaching, clients start stepping into a version of themselves that naturally makes different choices. They stop trying to fix themselves and begin to understand themselves. That is when outcomes improve in a way that lasts.
My personal journey sits at the core of why this work matters so deeply to me. I know the frustration of cycling through surface solutions that never touch the real problem. I also know the freedom that comes from aligning your inner world with the life you want to build. That alignment changes how you speak to yourself, how you regulate your emotions, how you show up in your relationships, and how you nourish your body. It creates a sense of integrity between intention and action that becomes self-sustaining.
At Dietitian Live we have built a coaching model (Quantum Mind Architecture) that honors this connection. We train dietitians to understand the science of neuroplasticity, the role of emotional intelligence in behavior change, and the power of identity in shaping health outcomes. Our approach recognizes that sustainable transformation emerges when people feel safe enough to explore their internal landscape and empowered enough to rewrite the beliefs that once held them back.
Subconscious reprogramming didn’t just change my life; it became the foundation of a new way of supporting others. It is helping us create a healthcare experience that respects the complexity of human behavior and the remarkable capacity every person has to grow when given the right tools, the right guidance, and the right relationship with themselves.
