Quantum Science Expert: How To Erase Your Fears & Transform Your Future

Estimated read time: 1:20

    Summary

    Dr. Mayim Bialik delves into the exploration of consciousness and transformation through discussions with physicist Thomas Campbell. The conversation touches upon meditation, intuition, overcoming fears, and the potential influence of past lives. Campbell shares insights on using intuition over intellectual reasoning, the role of consciousness in shaping reality, and how meditation can serve as a tool for spiritual growth. The dialogue underscores the importance of personal change and the exercise of free will in achieving a fulfilling life.

      Highlights

      • Thomas Campbell emphasizes the power of intuition over intellect in daily life decisions. ๐ŸŒŸ
      • Meditation is identified as a crucial practice for spiritual and personal growth. ๐Ÿง˜โ€โ™‚๏ธ
      • Fear is a common underlying issue that manifests in various personal challenges. ๐Ÿ˜ฑ
      • Campbell suggests that past life recollections can serve as wake-up calls to the complexities of reality. ๐Ÿ“š
      • There is an exploration of binaural beats as a tool to aid in meditation. ๐ŸŽถ
      • The conversation highlights the importance of imagination in accessing a broader state of consciousness. ๐Ÿค”

      Key Takeaways

      • Intuition can often be more reliable than intellect in making decisions. ๐Ÿง 
      • Meditation helps in growing spiritually and understanding consciousness. ๐Ÿง˜
      • Facing and overcoming fears is essential for personal growth. ๐Ÿ’ช
      • Reality is shaped significantly by our consciousness and perceptions. ๐ŸŒŒ
      • Past lives and consciousness are intricate and hold potential influence over current experiences. ๐Ÿ”ฎ
      • Synchronicities and positive life changes often indicate progress in reducing personal entropy. ๐ŸŒˆ

      Overview

      In this fascinating episode, Dr. Mayim Bialik engages in a deep conversation with physicist Thomas Campbell about the complexities of consciousness and how it shapes our reality. Campbell, known for his work on the theory of everything, discusses the significant role that meditation plays in personal development and spiritual growth. He elucidates how cultivating an intuitive mind can provide insights that go beyond logical reasoning, thereby enriching one's life experience.

        The discussion takes a turn into how fears can constrict personal growth and how facing them head-on can open doors to becoming a more loving and complete individual. Campbell articulates that true change is not in merely acting like a better person but in being one through the transformation of self from the inside out. This transformation involves taking responsibility for one's own fears, ego, and beliefs.

          Alongside these profound insights, Campbell touches on intriguing topics such as the possibility of past lives, the nature of reality, and the impact of consciousness on our daily lives. His ideas challenge conventional ways of thinking and encourage individuals to explore their intuitive abilities, which are often overshadowed by intellectual pursuits. Dr. Bialik and Campbell together provide listeners with a comprehensive view of how consciousness can transform personal realities when fear and ego are stripped away.

            Chapters

            • 00:00 - 03:00: Introduction and Overview The chapter titled 'Introduction and Overview' explores profound existential questions and psychological concepts. It begins by challenging the reader's understanding of reality through the concept of past lives, suggesting that reality is more intricate than it appears. The chapter then addresses the concept of trauma reactivation, explaining that it manifests as a fear-based response when people feel triggered. A central theme is personal transformation, with an emphasis on the intrinsic desire for changeโ€”specifically, changing reactive patterns of anger and emotional responses. The chapter sets the stage for further exploration of these themes, encouraging the reader to dive deeper into their own psychological and emotional landscapes.
            • 03:00 - 10:00: Intuition versus Intellect The chapter 'Intuition versus Intellect' discusses the importance of developing the intuitive side through learning about paranormal activities. It emphasizes that this development does not lead to negative emotions like stress but instead opens an individual to a broader array of information and decisions. By enhancing one's intuitive side, a person becomes more capable of understanding love and aligns themselves with a greater whole beyond their individuality. The chapter contrasts intuition with intellect, suggesting that growing intuitive abilities can broaden one's perspective and decision-making space.
            • 10:00 - 14:30: Paranormal and Meditation The chapter explores the intricate connection between paranormal phenomena and meditation, as narrated by a physicist, Thomas Campbell. He emphasizes the role of intuition in everyday life and how initial impressions can offer profound insights. The discussion likely delves into understanding how meditation can enhance intuitive capabilities and possibly link them to paranormal experiences.
            • 14:30 - 21:00: Importance of Intuition The chapter titled 'Importance of Intuition' is centered around the concept of intuition as explained by the author of 'My Big Toe: Theory of Everything'. The discussion underscores the necessity of listening to the first episode for a comprehensive understanding, though the second episode can also stand alone. The chapter delves into practical meditation tips, highlighting the role of binaural beats and specific frequencies in enhancing meditation practices. Additionally, it touches on the themes of trauma and fear.
            • 21:00 - 27:00: Personal Experiences and Paranormal This chapter explores the balance between intellectual processing and intuitive living. It delves into paranormal topics, including past lives, and suggests ways to approach life with an open mind. The content encourages understanding life as a spectrum of infinite possibilities, where one can experience various realities. Additionally, it touches upon how fear can manifest into reality.
            • 27:00 - 31:00: Reality and Consciousness The chapter titled 'Reality and Consciousness' explores the resurgence of interest in transcendental experiences. This movement, which has gained significant traction over the years, often involves the use of drugs to achieve altered states of consciousness. The discussion mentions Timothy Leary, who advocated for such experiences through drugs as part of his platform.
            • 31:00 - 36:00: Growing Intuition and Consciousness The chapter titled 'Growing Intuition and Consciousness' explores the concept of advanced consciousness and the idea of individuals being connected with something greater than themselves. This elevated state of consciousness, often associated with experiences of love, unity, or divinity, is discussed. The role of certain substances or drugs as potential pathways to accessing such states of consciousness is also examined. The narrative delves into interpretations and considerations surrounding the use of these tools to foster a deeper experience of consciousness.
            • 36:00 - 44:00: Imagination and Reality The chapter titled 'Imagination and Reality' discusses the concept of achieving altered states of mind without the use of drugs. It argues that while drugs might offer temporary enhancements, the true potential of the mind can be realized through natural practices and self-discipline, without relying on substances. The main point is the empowerment and understanding gained by developing these abilities independently.
            • 44:00 - 55:00: Emotional and Spiritual Growth In this chapter, the focus is on understanding the limits of certain spiritual experiences facilitated by external means, such as drugs. It highlights that while these experiences can be visually and sensorially enriching, leading to a momentary feeling of oneness and connection, they do not contribute to personal or emotional growth. The chapter stresses the difference between transient, external experiences and genuine, sustained personal development.
            • 55:00 - 65:00: Past Lives and Spiritual Awakening This chapter discusses the distinction between merely acting kind and truly being kind. It emphasizes the importance of genuine transformation over superficial changes in behavior. The true value lies in becoming a kinder person through a fundamental change in one's being, not just in performing acts of kindness. The example given stresses the difference between helping out of genuine compassion and doing it just to appear kind.
            • 65:00 - 68:00: Music, Fun, and Intellectual versus Intuitive The chapter discusses the limitations of relying solely on external frameworks and ideas to change one's identity. It emphasizes the importance of personal experience and organic growth over time. The chapter also touches on the nature of paranormal activities, suggesting that while they may be interesting, they are not inherently significant and individuals often move beyond them in their personal growth journey.
            • 68:00 - 72:00: Concluding Thoughts The chapter 'Concluding Thoughts' discusses the journey of learning and personal development through paranormal experiences. It emphasizes the importance of stopping behaviors or thoughts that no longer serve one's growth. The process is presented as a means to develop the intuitive side, which eventually leads to an expansion of understanding and love. It opens individuals to more information, better decision-making, and a realization of being part of a larger, intelligent, and aware whole.

            Quantum Science Expert: How To Erase Your Fears & Transform Your Future Transcription

            • 00:00 - 00:30 Is past lives a thing? Basically, it's a wakeup call and it just says reality is more complicated than you thought. What is a reactivation of trauma when people feel triggered? It's just fear. So, here's the question everybody wants to know. How do you change who you are? There is a deep thing inside of you that says, I want to be different. I want to not be reactive, not get angry. not get
            • 00:30 - 01:00 upset, not even get stressed. This is maybe one of the most important clarifications in terms of extrensory perception that I think is out there. Learning paranormal things is a exercise that you go through to help develop your intuitive side. But that intuitive side opens you up to becoming love, opens you up to more information, more choices, a bigger decision space. and suddenly you see yourself as a part of something a whole lot bigger than you. Logic
            • 01:00 - 01:30 requires a lot of information. Mostly you don't have that much information. I tend to live my life out of my intuition. When I sit down and let's say I meet you two, I walk in, I meet you too. Well, I immediately get information about both of you. What'd you see? [Applause] [Music] Welcome back to our breakdown. Today is part two with Thomas Campbell, physicist
            • 01:30 - 02:00 and author of My Big toe: His theory of Everything. Uh if you haven't heard the first episode, you cannot listen to the second one without going back and hearing the first. You could you could listen. It holds up on its own, but there is so much good information in part one. Yes, we're going to be talking today about uh meditation, practical meditation tips, why um binaural beats and a certain particular frequency can help you get into meditation. We're also going to talk about trauma, fear, u the
            • 02:00 - 02:30 intellectual processing we do that can take the place of the intuitive sense that we need to live in. We're also going to talk about some paranormal stuff, past lives, um, and also ways to sort of approach your life with an opening of understanding. There's a an infinite number of possibilities that you've already lived and that you could live and you get to experience the data of them all. One of the best explanations for how fear actually creates the thing
            • 02:30 - 03:00 that we're afraid of. I'm wildly excited to dive into the second part of this episode. Uh without further ado, here is Thomas Campbell back at the breakdown. Break it down. So some of the movement that that we've seen and you've seen it in your lifetime and you know we're seeing kind of a resurgence of it um is a a strong emphasis on transcendental experiences and in many cases people are using drugs to get there and you know Timothy Liry had an entire platform you know um about this
            • 03:00 - 03:30 the notion that you know people who have an advanced consciousness people who are in touch with something greater than themselves people who have an experience of God is love or that we're all one, right? Which, you know, there are drugs that can induce these states as it were. Um, for some people that is a pathway there. What's your sort of interpretation in terms of using that as a tool to access this consciousness?
            • 03:30 - 04:00 I think it's u the wrong way to go. I think it's not it may be helpful around the edges uh but it's not the main course. Okay. And the reason I say that is that everything that the drugs allow a person to do you can do without the drugs. None of those require drugs. Now if you learn to do that on your own you understand
            • 04:00 - 04:30 what you get. You know what you get. You're a part of what you're connecting to. You understand all the connections when you get blasted into the non-physical, you know, with a drug rocket. Ah, you then you crash on the other side. Oh, geez, that was awesome. That was beautiful colors and this and that and I was one with everything and yeah, that was really great. But that doesn't help you grow up any. It doesn't really help you grow up any. You're still the same person now. Okay,
            • 04:30 - 05:00 your beliefs have changed. beliefs aren't the thing. You have to change who you are. You have to become kinder. It's not that you act kind. Now, maybe that'll get a lot of people to act better. Oh, yeah. I say it. You know, it's all about love. Okay, I'll act better. See that little old lady? I'll help her across the street. That's not the point. It's not acting kind that's valuable. It's being kind that's valuable. And that only happens if you change who you are. Taking a drug
            • 05:00 - 05:30 doesn't help you change who you are. It may give you a bigger picture, but it's a bigger picture that you can believe in, but it's not really your experience. You don't own it. It's you don't learn from it like you learn from it when you do it organically yourself. So, you have to make changes in order to do those things. And it's a changing process like all the paranormal things. The paranormal things aren't important in and of themselves. And anybody who does paranormal things eventually grows out
            • 05:30 - 06:00 of it. You don't do it anymore. You quit. You stop with it because you realize everything is just the way it's supposed to be. It's a process. Learning paranormal things is a exercise that you go through to help develop your intuitive side. But that intuitive side opens you up to becoming love. Opens you up to more information, more choices, a bigger decision space. And suddenly you see yourself as a part of something a whole lot bigger than you. And this something is intelligent, is aware, is
            • 06:00 - 06:30 real, and you can connect to it. But if you don't develop that intuitive side, then it's all theory. Oh yes, I should do this. I should pray six times a day. I should whatever. It's just it's it's going through the motions. And you get blown up on a on a drug rocket and it's the same thing. You're you're taking the pill, but you're not really owning the experience. You're just having the experience. So, it's like going on a
            • 06:30 - 07:00 roller coaster, and you go, "Wow, that was great. Let's do it again." But it doesn't really change who you are. It's a it's a peak experience in your life. You'll always remember that roller coaster with its 10 flips, but it didn't really change you any. So, that's the way drug is. It doesn't really change people. And I've noticed that it does something that's that's not so good with people. It makes them feel like they're more spiritual and they have a deeper understanding. Oh, I've shaped the hand of God and I've been there and I felt I was one with all existence and yeah, I
            • 07:00 - 07:30 got that now. I'm so much better off. And they start thinking that they've gained spiritually because of their experience. And experience does not cause you to be spiritual. That has to be changing who you are at a fundamental level. So here's the question everybody wants to know. How do you change who you are? Well, there are some processes that help. But the main thing is is that you
            • 07:30 - 08:00 have to really want to. Now, a lot of people say, "Oh, yeah. I'd love to grow up and I'd love to change. I'll help the little old lady across the street." But again, they're working out of their intellect. They're trying to be grown up. Okay? It's like 12 year olds, right? They're really trying real hard to be grown up, but they're not grown up. They have to change who they are to grow up. Well, it's the same way. So, the most important thing is that you really want to. And that sounds pretty easy, but it
            • 08:00 - 08:30 isn't. To really want to means that there is a deep thing inside of you that says, "I want to be different. I want to not be reactive, not get angry, not get upset, not even get stressed. I want to not re somebody insults me, I want to not fight back. I want to not do any of those things. I just want to be love and caring for people. And if somebody's
            • 08:30 - 09:00 rude to me, well, gee, maybe uh I can help them see it from from a different perspective rather than reacting to it and getting angry. I need to get rid of my ego. I need to get rid of my beliefs. I need to get rid of my fear. And if you really want to do it, then it'll happen because your intent will modify future probability and you will become it. But you have to want to do it seriously. Now, if all you want to do is look better, then it won't help. You can do all those things, but it's not about
            • 09:00 - 09:30 doing. It's about being. And being can only be done if you have a real serious desire to change who you are. You see yourself as the problem. You take responsibility for who you are. You can't say, "Oh, George made me angry. He made me so angry." Well, George didn't make you angry. You chose to be angry. There was some fear in you that when George said that, it triggered that fear and you come up and you're angry. Take responsibility for it. Don't blame
            • 09:30 - 10:00 George. So when you're when you take responsibility for who you are, take responsibility for your fear and your ego and you want to change, you will because you will automatically do those things you need to do to change. You'll start looking say what are my fears? You know, what is it that triggers me? Why do I get upset? Why do I feel stressed? And you'll find it and you'll say, oh, okay. Um, I feel kind of uh insignificant. I feel like I'm not
            • 10:00 - 10:30 really doing up to my ability. I feel I haven't helped enough people or I'm feeling insecure. And because of that insecurity, somebody mentions something about me doing something wrong, I get angry because it triggers that insecurity that I have. So now I'm going to have to work on that. When somebody tells me I'm doing something wrong, I'm going to not react that way and I'm going to not be that way. But the first step is not reacting that way. Step one, intellectual. You got to do that first because you have to be aware of it. Be
            • 10:30 - 11:00 aware of the changes you need to make. That's intellect. But then you have to actually be them. Not just pretend and not just act, but be them. And if you really want to do it, you'll change. You'll just start changing and those fears will start to fall away and you'll feel lighter. You'll feel better. Your stress levels will go down. You'll be healthier. And instead of eating a box of chocolates, you'll want to eat, you know, a box of spinach because your body just is telling you that's what your
            • 11:00 - 11:30 metab I mean your metabolic needs and your physiology actually does change from those. It does change from those things. Yes. And your your whole interest in what you want to do and what you spend your time doing, you know, will change. But it changes from the inside out as you as you grow. And once you start, you won't notice it at first, but the way you see whether you're growing or not is two things. One, you look back, say, "Where was I, you know, the last five years? How how am I am I the same way?" And if you're the same
            • 11:30 - 12:00 way, then you haven't been growing. Usually people looking back of, "Wow, I was like that. Yeah, I remember that." You know, I'd get angry, I'd get upset. I was always crosswives with my co-workers. And now I'm not. So you'll see it looking back because it happens. You hardly notice because it happens just the little tiny increments every day. My Alex breakdown is supported by notion. Like so many of you, I spend a lot of time dealing with my emails. Too
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            • 13:30 - 14:00 beautiful design, and the ability to supercharge productivity. Now, they're leveling up your inbox. Get Notion mail for free right now at notion.com/break and try the inbox that thinks like you. That's all lowercase letters notion.com/break to get notion mail for free right now. When you use our link, you're supporting our show notion.com/break. [Music] So, one of the things though, and most people need a little more help, they need a little structure. They need a
            • 14:00 - 14:30 little support. Um the the way you describe you know getting in touch with consciousness it makes sense that a program to develop your consciousness should naturally start with finding and becoming acquainted with that consciousness. Yes. So one of the things you talk about is meditation is almost universally prescribed as the first step the doorway to understanding and exploring consciousness as well as to the attainment of spiritual growth. So you
            • 14:30 - 15:00 happened upon meditation and um kind of by accident you were introduced to transcendental meditation which here in Los Angeles is a a very very big business. you pay a lot of money to get your mantra and I was actually inspired because last night and you have it's it's a a really um what I love about your book is you you start out by saying I'm going to take a lot of digressions but you
            • 15:00 - 15:30 indicate them very clearly and I appreciate that so that you always get back to the point but you take a huge and I don't want to call it a digression you take us on a huge field trip into understanding one of the most basic ways and the way that you literally on your first experience were introduced to an ability to examine your own consciousness. And I was inspired and last night, you know, I was always hung up on like you got to go get a mantra and you
            • 15:30 - 16:00 got to pay the money and the thing and you have to like commit to four sessions and they keep texting you and like it's like a it feels strange. And so you literally were like, "Here's some options of mantras. Fi find one." So I picked one and I um and I did it. I set a timer for 20 minutes. And um I had the longest stretch of sleep that I've had in like a ridiculous amount of time. And yes, it could be
            • 16:00 - 16:30 coincidence, but I'm going to keep doing it. And when I woke up this morning, it's the first thing I did is I set a timer for 20 minutes. and I sat. Um, so one of the things that you do talk about and um you go into the the science of it um but I wonder if you can talk about what it is to drop into this space. You talked a little earlier about having dropped into your childhood and had and had an experience and that would fall
            • 16:30 - 17:00 under the category of out of body. Now, let's talk a little bit about out of body. What does that mean? Okay. What your UB you call it? Yeah. Ubby. Yes. Right. That's a terrible name because you're not in your body. You don't you're not a spirit that lives inside your body. That's old think from probably the 1800s. But you are a piece of consciousness. So, you're already in your consciousness, right? And your body
            • 17:00 - 17:30 is just a a computed thing. So out of body means that you have turned off all of your sense data. It's just that simple. So you no longer are seeing, hearing, feeling, smelling, tasting. Now that doesn't mean that you can't say here. If the phone rings, you'll hear it. But you don't process it. Oh, the phone's ringing. Well, if you're expecting a really important
            • 17:30 - 18:00 call, then you'll get up and go answer it. But if it's just the phone ringing and you're not expecting anything, you just let it ring till it stops. If you want to, you can think about, "Oh, I'm sitting. Can I feel the chair?" Yes, you can feel the chair underneath of you, but you're not processing it. You get in the same state when you're reading a good book. When you sit down and read a good book and you're into that book, somebody walks by behind your chair, you don't notice it. Even if somebody talks to you, you may
            • 18:00 - 18:30 not notice it unless they are loud or come up and touch you. You're in that space with that book. Now, be getting into that deep meditation state is doing the same thing without a book. You just don't have the book, but you're in that same state where you are no longer processing your sense data. You can process it. If it's something intrusive, you'll notice it. But in general, you're not processing it. You're not feeling
            • 18:30 - 19:00 the beds. You're not feeling, you know, you're not hearing the traffic outside. You just shut all that off. And that is your what I call the the point consciousness state. That's the state that I said. When you shut all your all your sense data off, you're just a point of consciousness floating in a black void. See nothing, hear nothing, whatever. Now, that's like the launch point. That's the launch pad when you can do that. And sometimes you get that like I've had that literally for like not even a second and then it's gone.
            • 19:00 - 19:30 And then it's gone. Right. With practice, you can get there longer. Now, there is another method you can use besides meditation. A lot of people have trouble with meditation, particularly people that have uh, you know, attention deficit disorder. Meditation is a real hard thing because their mind's just buzzing around all the time. So, it's just letting go of the physical world. That's the key. You just let go. Practice. You shouldn't assume that if you do it once, you're not the
            • 19:30 - 20:00 kind of person that can do it. It's like a muscle. It needs to be exercised. It's a Exactly. that you get better at it the longer you do it. Now, there are some aids that'll help. One of them is binaural beats. I've designed a a whole set of binaural beats. It's like uh 30 different binaural beats with different uh bass frequencies. And so anyway, and I've done that on my about 40 years of dealing with people, teaching them how
            • 20:00 - 20:30 to do paranormal things, putting them in the state. So I've done that and over the years. Can you explain what binaural beats are? Yeah. A binaural beat is a you put two pure tones, one in each ear. It's an auditory stimulus. It's an auditory stimulus. So pure tone number one, let's say 100 hertz goes in this ear. Another, let's say 104 hertz goes in that ear. Now they go through the the the pathways of oral, you know, you're a neuro girl. They go through the pathways, they get to the corpus
            • 20:30 - 21:00 colossum, which is the membrane between the two hemispheres, and they meet there. And when they meet there, they actually create a beat frequency. When you have a 100 and 104, if you just mix those, say had a speaker here and a speaker here, 100 and 104, you'd hear a four hertz beat. You're hearing the difference. You're hearing the difference between the two frequencies. And a four hertz beat would be like that's 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4. Every second you get a count of four.
            • 21:00 - 21:30 That's four hertz. That's what hertz means is per second. Okay. So, I didn't mean that to you. I meant that to your audience. No, it just made me happy because I'm a musician and so when I also like teach music to my kids, you know, he's like, "Well, what is 44?" And I'm like, "If you want to get metaphysical, it's, you know, so anyway, you hear these you actually hear these beats, right? Not through your normal hearing, but they're actually beating at the corpus colossum where the the integration the integration and it's not
            • 21:30 - 22:00 going through bone conduction or anything else. They've done enough Yeah. They've done enough research on it that it's really beating inside the brain. And this has been found just through experimentation. And by beating, sorry, just neuroscientist. By beating, you're talking about the integration of the of the electrical information, right? But it's the electrical information that's coming into a set of cells that are perceiving. This is happening by opening sodium channels. Like it's a whole thing happening that allows you to perceive a
            • 22:00 - 22:30 beat. a beat right of four hertz 100 and 104 if it's 100 and 110 you'll hear a 10 hertz beat so they have found that this entrains brain wave activity so if your brain wave activity is usually like this it's going all over all different kinds of frequencies coming and going depending what's in your mind and what happens is then it'll start to migrate down to four hertz so more of your energy starts to go to four hertz that's
            • 22:30 - 23:00 what they mean by ent train the brain wave Four hertz is the basic uh thing you get with somebody is it's the EEG you get with somebody who's a longtime meditator. So you get a monk out of the out of his they've done these studies out of his cell and put an EEG on him and let him meditate and you'll see that his energy migrates to around four hertz. Okay, in that vicinity could be 3.85 or something. So you're you're picking this up as
            • 23:00 - 23:30 electrical impulses that that can be picked up off the scalp for an EEG. Yeah. Right. EEG just Yeah. on your head. So that idea that you can drive the brain waves into a similar state that somebody who's been meditating for 10 years achieves. Well, as it turns out, that really helps. If you put these binaural beats on and you listen to them, you will find that getting into the meditation state and holding it is
            • 23:30 - 24:00 much easier. Are you following the beats? Like, are you listening to them? No. No, it's not listening to them. They just they just work whether you listen to them or not. It's a passive experience. It's a passive experience. Yeah. Matter of fact, if you follow the beats, that will be your intellect and it will be getting in the way making the thing not work very well. Right? You need to just let it be. Let it go. Now, my beats are are very complex in the sense that I don't keep the beat frequency the same. I move it around
            • 24:00 - 24:30 different things for different reasons. Uh I make it run up very for a very short time, like 30 seconds. I'll run it up to a a low alpha just to wake people up because a lot of people will lose consciousness when you do this, right? And so I wake them up every so often and then I'll drop them actually down into the delta for about two and a half seconds, 3 seconds, kind of drag them down a little bit, and then I'll go back up to four. And then I'll go back up to
            • 24:30 - 25:00 a to a I think I go up to like a an eight and then back to the four and then maybe back to the to the two. So what's the four? Because there's data, there's theta, there's four is around theta. Great. That's a theta state. Yep. So, anyhow, so these are the binaural beats and I've have, you know, I sell them at my website, but and I don't sell for very much. I'm not really trying to make money. I'm trying to spread the ideas. So, you know, you can buy one for, I don't know, $10 or
            • 25:00 - 25:30 $15 or something. You buy a whole set of them for $25. But any anyway, so the binaural beads help as a training aid. Now, like all training aids, you eventually need to take, you know, the the what do you call the training wheels off the bike. The training wheels will help you ride a bike because they'll keep you from falling over and then scaring you and not wanting to get back on, but they don't drive the bike. But they but if you really want to be good at a bicycle, you can't be good on a
            • 25:30 - 26:00 bicycle with training wheels touching the back of it because you won't be able to lean it and turn and there's things you can't do with them on. This is the same. This is the same with the binaural beats. They will help the novice who isn't good at meditating to get there and stay there because these binaural beats that you listen to will last for say 50 minutes. So for 50 minutes you're locked in to that state if you just let them run in your mind and it will it will work real well for most people.
            • 26:00 - 26:30 Hypnosis is also uh dropping people into theta. Correct. Yeah. Because it drops them out of their intellect. Right. Anything that drops you out of your intellect is going to be good. Right? So the intellect crashes the intuitive mind. Now eventually we're just changing the subject one after another, but eventually you learn that the intuitive mind and the intellectual mind work together and they become good friends. And the intuitive mind says, "Oops, I need a little logic for this." And passes it over there. And the the
            • 26:30 - 27:00 intellect says, "I need some information for this." and it gets to the intuitive mind to go get the information and they work together as a team. But most people like in our culture, we hone our intellectual capacity and we work on it. We work on it our whole lives. The the intuitive side we just let lie there. We don't use it. So it's way out of balance. They don't work as a team. The intellectual mind works as a bully. And the intuitive mind tries to do something. And the intellectual mind
            • 27:00 - 27:30 jumps in and says, "Let let me take care of that." Oh, you just heard your dead grandfather say something. Nah, that probably wasn't that. That was just your imagination. That's what your intellect tells you. And it just crashes the process. So that's why it's so important to get that intellect to sit down and be quiet enough to let your intellect go. And the that I mean, let your intuitive side go. And that intellect wants to boss, wants to judge, wants to tell you what you're doing right or doing wrong. And people
            • 27:30 - 28:00 tend to jump into their intellect all the time. Oh, I've been meditating. Am I doing it right? Does this feel right? And so, I don't know, straight off your your original question. No. No. The phrase, "It's just my imagination." Yeah. Is one of the most painful phrases to me. Yes. Because is our imagination not the microscope or magnifying glass by which we look around this data field
            • 28:00 - 28:30 that exists to examine what's around us and what's possible. I told you there was another way other than meditation. That other way is through your imagination. You can skip meditation entirely and work with your imagination. But then you're just making things up. No. No. Yes. Thank you. not you're not making things up. And here's the difference. There's your imagination isn't the goal, isn't the end point. Your imagination is just the launch pad.
            • 28:30 - 29:00 I have a thing that I made up I called Tom's Park. And Tom's Park is for those people who have a trouble meditating that just can't get there through meditation. In Tom's Park, what you do is you imagine. And the trick is you imagine some story and the story is better if it's full of you see things, you hear things, you smell things, you touch things, it's got all your senses going and it's very engaging. Yep.
            • 29:00 - 29:30 That's kind of things you have to imagine. You're not just imagine sitting on a toad stool, you know. You have to imagine something that's very engaging. Now that imagination if you if you just get so absorbed in it what will happen is that you will actually stop making it up and the story will take off on its own. So you're imagining that you're swimming laps and you're driving a jet ski or
            • 29:30 - 30:00 whatever it is you're doing there. Um, and as you get into it, you realize that you're not making it up anymore. You're having a conversation with a horse and you're not making up both parts. You're actually talking to a horse and the horse is talking to you and this is in your imagination. Well, what happens is, and I've kind of made an arrangement with the larger conscious system to support the Tom's Park thing. And you get there and you start, okay?
            • 30:00 - 30:30 And now you imagine you're talking to the horse and the horse says hello or something that you imagine that a horse might say. But the more you get into it, then you no longer making up all the parts. It just happens on your own and you're actually having a conversation with your horse and you're not putting words in horse mouth because the horse is saying things that you would never have thought of saying. The horse starts to tell you about an emotional problem you have had, you know, since you were three years old. Well, you're not making that up, you
            • 30:30 - 31:00 know, and you you talk with it and then it's an opening. It's an opening. So, you you use your imagination until you let it go. And this the larger conscious system will pick up to that story, you and the horse and whatever, and pick up from there and start giving you a data stream that picks up on that. And now you're the same place you were if you meditated. You're getting a data stream from the larger conscious system. you're humming along in what we call an out of body and it's just as valid an out of
            • 31:00 - 31:30 body as if you went through the meditation process. So, and this is you know the this is the it's it's an imagination theory right in psychology where you take you you take something that starts as imagination and it is showing you a window into your your actual consciousness meaning not just what you're consciously aware of uh but it could be uh and and I'm I don't mean to intellectualize it but I'm going to
            • 31:30 - 32:00 you know it could be these are the we intellectuals can't help that, right? But it's like these are the things that um you know these are the unconscious processes that are going on which in a simulation theory kind of language that's the that's the program has been written and you're simply tapping into the program. Right? Now take one step more beyond that and say that you're a piece of consciousness, right? And you're getting a data stream from the
            • 32:00 - 32:30 larger consciousness system. The system is interested in you growing up. The system is interested in you changing and that's my highest good becoming love and it's going to feed you a data stream there. It's not just you wandering through your unconscious memories and things. You're actually getting a data stream from the LCS larger conscious system that is taking you through a interaction experience and you're going to learn from that experience something important. This horse is going to tell you something you really need to know.
            • 32:30 - 33:00 You see, it's not just you wandering around in in the un unaware parts of your mind. You you make a connection just like you would out of body, just like you would in meditation. And that connection is is entirely real and effective. And why does the LCS do that? Well, as you lower your entropy, the systems entropy lowers. So, it's all in its own self-interest to help you. I want to reiterate that point cuz because I it didn't totally land for me and I
            • 33:00 - 33:30 was like listening trying to like feel and sort of sort that out. But what I'm hearing is if I make something up which I don't ever believe I'm making anything up. If I go through this creative part of our problem if I go through this creative imagination exercise and it's true mime's problem with me is that I go off into these what could this be? And then of course some of that has to be brought back and say whereas the tangible reality and we can't do absolutely everything in the physical realm. I can incorporate a lot of it you know like
            • 33:30 - 34:00 there's a cost for example of redoing all the lighting in the studio or moving things or other practical uh implications of some of this creative imagination. But if I go and do an exercise like this what I heard you say is that I'm going to learn something. It may not be that we do the lighting or but some part of that experience will teach me something that lowers my entropy that increases my overall well-being
            • 34:00 - 34:30 in some fashion or other that will also benefit the system. So it's almost remove the end result and be more process engaged. Is that exactly right encouraging imagination? Yeah. the the um you know it may be just doing the process and just being aware of the process may be what you're supposed to learn not the stuff that actually comes in you know it's it's sometimes it's not the thing you get it's the process of doing it is what's really valuable and
            • 34:30 - 35:00 I've actually seen you know we got a little note from a one of our producers who's listening who's like well the what is the danger sometimes of doing something like this and I can and I have seen sort of the dark side of the wellness sort of alternative movement where they disassociate from their real world problems or situations and they're just lost in creative fantasy and they're not paying their bills and they're don't know where they're going to live and they're not thinking about
            • 35:00 - 35:30 how they're impacting one another. So let let's talk about that. Yeah, that's because they don't really understand what's going on and and why it's going on. There's three separate sources that will give you information. Okay, you get an information stream. Three possible sources of that. One source is the larger conscious system. That's typically how we get this reality. The other source is some other consciousness because there's a conscious consciousness connection. And the third
            • 35:30 - 36:00 possibility is yourself. You can create you are consciousness. You can create information. So just summarizing so there's the larger consciousness system. There's direct connection to another person's conscious person and yourself. So there there's three different sources of this data stream. Now they don't come with tags. This is you making it up. This is the larger conscious system. This is it all feels the same. This is it all feels the same. There's no tags
            • 36:00 - 36:30 on it. It's just information. You cannot tell the difference between those. This is maybe one of the most important clarifications in terms of extrensory perception that I think is out there. Okay, you you get all three. They're just information. You can't tell the difference. Now, that means that one, you have to be always skeptical of anything you get. It might be you that's creating this. That has to be a possibility. Now, it doesn't necessarily mean that
            • 36:30 - 37:00 what you're creating is a problem, right? You just that it could be coming from you. Now, if you happen to be full of fear and you're full of ego and you're full of beliefs, then there's a good chance that the stuff you get from you is garbage and it's not going to be helpful and it's consistent. I'd like to say it's consistent. It's it's gonna probably move you to make poor choices or the same choices which are generally poor choices. Okay. A little personal
            • 37:00 - 37:30 there, but yeah. Yeah. Okay. So, so you have to always have that in mind and you have to always be in charge of yourself. You have to be responsible for your own free will. Now, if you go and you you're in some sort of state and God tells you to go shoot somebody or go jump off a bridge, you have to think about that and say, "What is my you know, what is my free will? Think about that." And my free will says, "I don't think so." All
            • 37:30 - 38:00 right. Then you follow what your free You have to be responsible for yourself. You don't go shoot somebody because God told you to do it. You see, or God tells you that, you know, the way to heal is to eat nothing but spinach for the rest of your life. You know, well, that's unbalanced. You know, that's not going to work. So, you have to always look at everything and assess it and then make your own choice about it. And that choice is informed by your memory, your
            • 38:00 - 38:30 sense of responsibility. you know whether you are trying to control with power and force or whether you're trying to become love it's all part of how you make those choices. So that's you never know for sure and you never will know for sure. Now with practice you'll know pretty much you'll get no they don't comes with tags so you can always be fooled. You'll never know 100%. But you can know 95% because you've done it
            • 38:30 - 39:00 thousands of times. And you know what it feels like when you're talking to the larger conscious system. You know what it feels like to get data in. You know what it feels like to communicate mindto mind. And those things are different in the way you process them. They're different in the way they feel when you get them. So you do, you know, but you don't have a tag on it that says I know for sure this didn't come from me. You can say, "Well, I'm 99.9% sure this didn't come from me." But you always leave that possibility, which means your own free
            • 39:00 - 39:30 will needs to make the choice. A lot of people who are very intuitive, who practice meditation for a long time, can easily say, "I'm not sure if I'm afraid of something or I'm actually being shown not to do it." You know, there's sometimes when we try to make a step that is outside of the patterns that we're used to, you know, we we gravitate towards familiarity and pattern repetition, it's easy to be fooled
            • 39:30 - 40:00 without that experience. But with practice, it does become clearer where, you know, I I can think back when I was thinking about buying that house um years ago when I moved out and disconnected from the owner's energy. I could feel all of a sudden I was really hijacked by the messages that they wanted me to buy that house so badly. And while I wanted it, I was getting clear that I shouldn't buy it. But it wasn't until I removed myself from that
            • 40:00 - 40:30 entanglement that I didn't even realize how entangled I was that I could get clarity on what my true messaging was. Absolutely. That is, you know, that's the way things work. If you take responsibility for your choices and you have to very seldom to will you ever have a one or a zero in the probability this is absolutely true this is absolutely false. You almost never get to that point. You don't have enough
            • 40:30 - 41:00 information to do that. You can say I think this is probably I'll give it a 90 or I think this is probably not right. I'll give it 10% that that's true. And then as you get experience, you shuffle those those percentages up or down or whatever way based on your new experience. But very seldom should you ever get a one. And you need to be aware of your own, you know, of your own issues, your own problems. So if you're somebody who
            • 41:00 - 41:30 really likes to please, that's just your personality. You just like to please. You know, if you're around people, you'll do things just Oh, you don't have to define it for me. I know what a people pleaser is. You're looking at one. Yeah. If you're like that, then you have to be aware of that, right? And if suddenly, you know, you get, oh, you have to buy this house. Well, you need to think, is that just me trying to please because this person really wants, you know, to sell it to me or not, which means the way you figure that out is what you did. You remove yourself, right? And now, do I still want to buy
            • 41:30 - 42:00 it that much? You know, or you you say, well, I'm going to take a a week where I'm not going to think about it. I'm just not going to think about it at all for a week and then I'm going to bring it back up and see if I feel the same. So, you learn strategies for dealing with your own ego. It's know it's knowing yourself on a very deep level, right? I'm going to say something about Jonathan that he may make us cut out of the episode. Probably he talks to the universe and he sometimes asks it like which um if he's
            • 42:00 - 42:30 looking at two protein powders, he asks which he should. This is But the protein powder example is not a good example because but I want him to I want him to sort of speak to that because some people do have that kind of opening. It can energetically feel different. I'm not saying it's not a thing. I just want you to know what I'm living with. No, I use this tactic most often for much more um specific decisions that are often beyond an intellectual understanding.
            • 42:30 - 43:00 Right. Yes. I will actually try to feel food that may be beneficial for me or may not. Um I don't necessarily do it with protein powder. So I have done it with protein powder. It's not that I've never done it with protein powder, but uh she actually has there's a picture of me that maybe we'll post uh for this episode where we're in uh Ashland, Oregon, and I'm lying down and I have one hand over my heart and I have the other hand using it as a muscle testing device as a tool to sort of feel a
            • 43:00 - 43:30 resonance. And really what I'm trying to do is instead of seeing or hearing, I'm sort of using auditory uh feedback, but also using physical feedback to sort of gauge where just should mamm be in the same room as me right now or not? I don't remember what I but she got she has this picture of me and it's this nice picture but what it does speak to is my belief that we can ask for different scenarios or decision making and I believe
            • 43:30 - 44:00 that fundamentally developing our intuitive capability and receptivity is a core part of transforming how we make decisions in this world to navigate towards a life that has more ease, more joy, more happiness because when only using the intellect, we're limited by what we can know and so much of what our experience might ultimately be. There are many times where I've only used intellect and been
            • 44:00 - 44:30 seriously disappointed and then used extra sensory ability and everything on the surface would have seemed like this would have been a great choice and ultimately I was super glad that I made a different decision. Well, the thing that you have to be careful with is that you don't give up your free will to some other chooser. I knew a lady who uh had a little pendulum. Yeah. She'd hold it up and if the pendulum
            • 44:30 - 45:00 went this way was a yes, went that way was a no. And she couldn't, you know, I know these people. She couldn't go to the bathroom unless she consulted the pendulum first. her whole life was directed by this pendulum. And at that point, you're giving up your free will. And what will happen if you do that is that the system will make a correction. And your pendulum will tell you to take a long walk off a short period. And when
            • 45:00 - 45:30 you hit the water, that's the correction that says make up your own mind. I'm not, you know, going to tell you how to live your life. The choices you have to make. you have to do. That's why you're here. You make choices. You evolve or to evolve according to your choices. Getting somebody else to make your choices for you is not a good idea. Make your own choices. Now, you want information that helps you make that choice. You want to get an idea. You know, look at it. Okay. What's the future probability say three years from
            • 45:30 - 46:00 now if I make that choice? Five years from now if I make that choice. And you can go do analysis. You can think about it. You can feel about it. But in the end, it's your choice to make. And if you get in the mindset that, well, I want to make the choice that they tell me, that's the wrong mindset. You have to say, gather information now. I'll make the choice and it'll be my, you know, my choice. 100%. My strategy is always let me feel a possibility of
            • 46:00 - 46:30 something, gather that information, integrate it back in, and then use sort of a a skeptical evaluation process. But taking that extra sensory data and then bringing that back as as part of my decision strategy. Yeah, that is good. And I'll tell you, you know, about my own experience with that is that the more you grow up, the more you work out of your intuitive side. When I was just a brash young arrogant
            • 46:30 - 47:00 physicist, I worked entirely out of my intellect. I ran my life with my intellect. Everything went through my intellect. Now, probably 80% of my life is lived through my intuition. My intellect runs 20%. Because your intuition, if you develop it, can be more accurate and more reliable than your intellect. And the reason for that is your intellect has
            • 47:00 - 47:30 this wonderful tool called logic. But logic requires a lot of information. You can't be deductively logical without a whole lot of information to give you to and therefore mostly you don't have that much information. So you get to some point and then you got to jump which is you know your intuition's making the jump right. But if you do that from your intellect make that jump then it's a 50/50 whether it's good or bad because your intellect isn't good at making guesses like that. It's your intuition
            • 47:30 - 48:00 that's good at that. So I tend to live my life out of my intuition. So my intellect hops in when there's something that needs you know thinking anal analysis then it jumps in and does that. But when I sit down and let's say I meet you too. I walk in I meet you two. Well I immediately get information about both of you about who you are how you feel. What color was what what you're you know what you're thinking about. When I was younger, I'd get it in my intellect and
            • 48:00 - 48:30 then I process it. But mostly now I don't. I get it out of my because see I was living through my intellect. So I needed to get the information, use the intellect, use the information. It's not like that now. Now I live out of my intuition. So I don't actually get it at the intellectual level. I get it at the intuitive level. So then I know maybe places to go and places not to go when I sit and talk with you and things that you know I get a feel for your energy where you're coming from and I get all
            • 48:30 - 49:00 of that in the first 3 seconds that you know as I walk in the door that just comes because my mind it's not that I have to look at you to get it. It doesn't have anything to do with your body. I could be a thousand miles away makes no difference. But when I come here and I walk in, then suddenly I'm a part of a thing that's going to take place. I gave birth in that front room. I wonder if you could sense that. So, well, I think about the vibes of a house though, right? When you walk into a house, you sometimes can tell like, "Oo, something doesn't feel right."
            • 49:00 - 49:30 Right. Yeah. Sure. But it's it's the house, it's the people. I mean, it's everything. And my intellect no longer sorts it out. Oh, this person's dressed. This person's wearing a ball cap. What does that mean? You know, it doesn't do any of that stuff. It's just My head is very shiny on camera. It uh it just my intuition picks up it and picks it up and then I interact mostly with my intuition, right? Not with my intellect. So, it just takes care of itself and I don't really bother. So,
            • 49:30 - 50:00 when I get to the store and I got two kinds of protein or something, I'm looking at my hand just goes and gets one of them and that's okay. I'm all right with that. It happens to be the wrong one, well, that's okay. I I'll be okay with that, too. So basically if you don't have any expectations then you never have any disappointment. So that's a saying from Allen on. So you just you know you just uh deal with your life as it comes mostly intuitive and let it all wash out
            • 50:00 - 50:30 however it does. We have two things we'd like you to explain. meaning in terms of this framework. Um I'm curious because um I've been learning about um neural retraining programs which are supposed to sort of calm the nervous system down and try and encourage uh you know limbic overactivation to calm down. And one of the you know sort of techniques of a lot of these neural retraining programs is very similar to
            • 50:30 - 51:00 what you were describing in terms of imagination. You have to imagine as part of the protocol for one of these programs, you have to imagine a future scenario. Make up anything you want and you have to engage as many senses as possible. What does the environment look like? And how do you feel? And what are you smelling? What are you tasting? You know, what is the color like? If the if the feeling had a movement, make that move. You know, all this stuff. And so the idea is to use imagination to sort of build and sustain a positive feeling, right? You're setting an intention for a
            • 51:00 - 51:30 future probability. Um, but I'm I'm curious if you can describe in the sort of language that you operate in, what is trauma? What is a reactivation of trauma when people feel triggered when we find ourselves going down the same pathway, the same negative thinking, the same perverative, you know, um, thoughts and feelings? What is that in the system? What that is, it could be multiple
            • 51:30 - 52:00 things, but what it is dominantly is fear. It's just fear. The person has a fear. They, you know, it could be anything, but mostly the fears turn around things like inadequacy, um, not being lovable, not being competent enough, being, you know, all those kinds of things. They have fears about being wrong, not getting it right. Um and those fears get
            • 52:00 - 52:30 triggered. They get triggered by somebody um you know well here's another thing you know if you have fears you tend to create that reality. You create it by your expectations. You create it out of your fear to be the things you fear. So now here's a here's an example I use often. And you know, if I'm outside and I say, "Look, the sky is a beautiful blue." And most people would just say, "Yes, it is." Somebody who's very insecure would say, "Are you trying to
            • 52:30 - 53:00 tell me that I don't know what color the sky is?" You see, they interpret that because they're feeling insecure about not knowing, not being whatever. And they'll take that that I was trying to tell them that the sky was blue. And then they get upset. I know that person. It's not you. Don't worry. They get angry then. So they won't, you know, the the uh uh comes up as a a good example is the guy who lived in New York City and was afraid of wild elephants and he saw wild elephants everywhere. He saw
            • 53:00 - 53:30 see that bush and the winds blowing around. There's an elephant hiding there. See that puddle on the ground? That's from an elephant's footprint. So he found signs of wild elephants all over New York City. Well, of course there are no wild elephants in New York City, but if you fear them, they're at the zoo. You'll find them. They're not wild at the zoo, but if you find, you know, if you fear something, you will tend to find that. Are we shifting the probability? Are we shifting a con the concept of a probability? Oh, if you're
            • 53:30 - 54:00 negative and you have fears, those fears will make the probability of that of whatever you fear will make that come true. We make our fears come true. And most people spend most of their time in a negative state. Very few of us just are happy and enjoy life and everything's fine. Mostly we're crunching over annoyances and things and people said this and and all of that negativity produces more probability for
            • 54:00 - 54:30 negativity just like being happy and positive makes higher probability for happy positive things happening. So yes, you create your own reality in a couple of ways. One is by your thoughts, your intentions. If they're negative, you create negativity around you. If that's one way. The second way is by the way you interpret things. If you're negative, you tend to interpret things negatively. So suddenly your life is more full of negative stuff. But this is two powerful ways that you make you
            • 54:30 - 55:00 create your own reality through your intentions, change the probabilities, through the way you interpret the data. Right? Okay. So yes, if you're positive, then your life has tended to be positive and people say something that would annoy you. Well, it doesn't annoy you. Even if they just outright say something really ugly to you, you think, well, it's not about me. It's about them. I wonder why they, you know, said that. Maybe I should talk to them a little bit. Well, it's the entire culture of
            • 55:00 - 55:30 micro doing is trying to elevate everyone to that point. But again, it's about Yeah. But then you're using something to help you do something that you're not capable of doing, right? Well, that may be civilizing in the short term, but it doesn't help you grow up in the long term. There's the problem with it. Uh Bruce Lipton talks about this on a cellular level and on an environmental level. I mean, it's, you know, we we often say this to our listeners and our viewers like, I don't know how many ways we can tell you like,
            • 55:30 - 56:00 it's all the same, right? It's all the same. It's about a connection with something greater than yourself, right? It's about understanding yourself on this deeper level. It's about, you know, being able to set an intention of positivity. It's also about doing the work in the moment when you do have a thought of annoyance or frustration that you have some tool or method by which you can pull yourself back from that in ingrained reaction to build the new pathway. More tools than others. But you are changing your reality. Not just in a
            • 56:00 - 56:30 sense of your feelings, but you're actually changing your reality. The mind leads, the body follows. Your body reflects that. We create a lot of physical problems for ourselves. Well, autoimmune conditions rampant among women. And it's not just in our bodies, but we create those attitudes that the people at the office then come at us with that upset us, right? We create those attitudes. So, if you have if you're negative and unhappy, you'll create an environment that feeds your
            • 56:30 - 57:00 unhappiness. Oh, the other thing we wanted to talk about was past lives. And I don't know if you're familiar with the work of Jim Tucker, but I was recently turned on to the work of uh Jim Tucker, who's a psychiatrist. Um, and he works with children who have very very complicated recall of I don't even want to say past lives. they have a complete um complete emotional and biographical
            • 57:00 - 57:30 recall. Um that is not something they've read on Wikipedia. It's not something that's a book that their parents read that they overheard. Um they have very complicated and elaborate in many cases emotional connection. uh sometimes they have proclivities um towards a profession that this past life you know and this happens in cultures that do not just have reincarnation as part of the vernacular it happens in you know in western cultures and things like this where it's not so much part of the
            • 57:30 - 58:00 vernacular is past lives a thing I've had regressions done like I don't know a lot of it is imagination but then I'm thinking maybe it starts as imagination and then I'm pulling data I don't know Okay. Yeah, I can talk about that. There is this database that starts as that the system needs it in order to do the rendering of the virtual reality. The system needs to know what
            • 58:00 - 58:30 uh is possible. What are all the possibilities to happen next? This is in the future. What happens next and what's the probability of that happening? Right? Okay, that's important because the way the system tells what happens next because it's a probability based system and not a deterministic system is it takes a random draw from a probability distribution of the possibilities. Now that's not a random draw from the possibilities. It doesn't just randomly draw a possibility but from the probability distribution of the
            • 58:30 - 59:00 possibilities. So the things that are more probable and more likely to be drawn. Okay. That's how it decides what happens next because it doesn't have a a deterministic history to say what happens next. Like anything could happen. Yeah. So it could bring out that one in a million could happen. Okay. But it won't happen very often because it's not going to draw that but might be once every million times. So that's how it determines what's next. So in order to do that, it needs a database that's
            • 59:00 - 59:30 basically of all the things that could happen and the probability they would happen. That's that's how the probability is designed. Yes, that's that's how that's the database it needs. So that when you dig a hole in your backyard, what's going to be in there? Roots and rocks. That's a highly probable. A gold balloon in California maybe, you know. So there's a certain probability. Your grandfather's pocket watch, you know, he lost it. It's possible. There's a lot a lot of possibilities. So one of them gets drawn out and that's what you find in a hole. Okay? So that's the way reality works.
            • 59:30 - 60:00 That's how you tell what happens next. Now that database is a couple of things about it. One, the further it progresses out, the rattier it gets because you're saying given the last one was true, what's the next one? Given that one's true, what's the next one? So now the system as somebody does something that's unexpected, you know, and we humans go off on wild hairs enough that we do things that are unexpected, then it has to recalculate the things that are downstream from that particular action. But it doesn't have to recalculate
            • 60:00 - 60:30 everything. So anyway, as time goes by, what was in the future becomes the present goes into the past. So now you've got this big database that goes into the past of everything that could have happened and the probability that it would have. And through that big database is a thread that defines what actually did happen. But it's got all the possibilities and all their probabilities go with it because that was part of the future probable database. It just gets old and now it's past. So you do have this database of
            • 60:30 - 61:00 everything that has happened. Everything that could have happened, everything that could have happened and a thread of what did happen. So that's this big database that people talk about. Now, yes, your past life is in there and it's there with the data. Your past life at some point was a future possibility. Exactly. That didn't happen. Your past life is was at one time a future possibility that that didn't that did happen. That's the thread of what
            • 61:00 - 61:30 actually did happen. And there's a lot of things that didn't happen, right? But they're all carried here, right? So now you can go into that database and you can say I'd like to see what would have happened if I had have married Susie instead of Sally. Okay, I married I married Sally, but I want to know what would happen if I had married Susie. And I could say I'd like to know that let's say give me little vignettes every five years for 50 years and then you'll get that
            • 61:30 - 62:00 information. Now, this is probability, not necessarily that it would have happened because you weren't making choices, but it would just go through the probabilities. And then you could say, instead of instead of giving me that as the most probable things that would have happened if I married Sally or Susie instead of Sally, you say, I want the third most likely thing that would have happened. Then you'll get a different thing. That'll be the third most likely happened. All the data is in the database. You have to tell the database what it is you're looking for. So when people go back into that
            • 62:00 - 62:30 database, they don't understand that they need to have their intent make a query that is specific to what actually did happen. There's lots of probabilities in there. And if they don't know that, then they tend to wander around in probabilities rather than actually get the information that they're looking for. So that's one problem. Now, also children aren't necessarily choosing this. No. Like it's dropping in like it's been downloaded. Exactly. And there's a couple of reasons for that. Um the most the most common
            • 62:30 - 63:00 reason for that is you know there was a there's a good example was a little boy that was a airplane pilot that got shut down someplace and he knew the plane. He knew the kind of injury he knew the kind of injury he knew the guy's name I mean he knew everything about it and it all turned out to be true. All right. Now why does that happen? Why does this happen to this little boy mostly? And there's there's various reasons, but the the major reason is that the larger
            • 63:00 - 63:30 consciousness system is using this little boy's memory to help wake up a whole bunch of people and give them the message that life isn't as as simple and straightforward as they thought. There's other attributes to it and it has to do with beyond the physical. That's just opening people's minds because we're getting to this fast part of the curve and people need to be aware of that. So, there's all kinds of things the system does to help wake us up. Basically, it's
            • 63:30 - 64:00 a wakeup call and it just says reality is more complicated than you thought. It's not necessarily that this kid was that person or anything like that. They're using him as a messenger. Yes. So, they can use him as a messenger to do that. He's got the right parents who are going to take it seriously. They're going to write it all down. They're going to check it out. They go to ABC News and so on. They're going to call all the news. So, it's possible that that was his experience, but it doesn't
            • 64:00 - 64:30 have to be that way. He's just remembering something else. He is remembering. He's got all the memories. He's got all the details. All the data. They come right into his head. When people ask him, "Well, what kind of plane was it?" Comes right out of his head. He's not remembering it. He He's He just knows it. He just knows it. Exactly. And that's what's going on for the most part. There's other things like that going on at the same time. What about people who have like a really intense sense or knowing that they have experienced other lifetimes or memories
            • 64:30 - 65:00 with someone in this form? Is it that they really did reincarnate from a different time period in history or they're just remembering other possible timelines where their consciousnesses have interact in different forms? E could be either one or it could be that the system is just putting that in their mind to tell them that life is more complex than they think or telling them that hey there's something special between there's something special between this increasing the weight of
            • 65:00 - 65:30 the importance. Exactly. So, it's some sort of thing like that. I like that because it actually kind of lessens the the need to convince people it's true or it's real because kind of whatever information we have is true and real because it exists in our consciousness. But you wouldn't want to say put that on a on a young child who is in a situation where instead of making the news and being a you know an amazing thing he gets put in in an asylum or a home you
            • 65:30 - 66:00 know for people who are having hallucinations and given drugs. So you wouldn't want to just let that happen to anybody. You'd have to pick the situation where it was going to turn out to be better. So I had a very interesting experience with my son when he was I want to say about two and a half between two and a half and three and a half and I I don't quite remember because it's and the timeline's important because his language was somewhat limited and so I don't remember
            • 66:00 - 66:30 when the language developed enough for him to not have this experience but there were I don't know how many times a week it was like three four times a week that he would go to bed be sleeping and then he would wake up like wildly upset, but he was like still asleep while he was upset and he was kind of screaming and he would he would be saying he can't breathe and we would try to wake him up and tell him he's safe and and whatnot and you know his mom is on the uh energetic
            • 66:30 - 67:00 spectrum. Yeah, she's she spends a lot of time exploring that that realm and believed that she had been his mom once before and she had dates and times and we did some creative exploration both together actually and kind of got different pieces of a puzzle that put me and his life as a caregiver. Him as uh her son in a different lifetime or a different time frame and that there was a fire and that he actually died in that
            • 67:00 - 67:30 fire as a young child. And this is over the course of like several weeks or even months where we're getting little pieces of this information. He's still having these night terrors and they keep getting worse. And at one point uh he wakes up and he's screaming, "I can't breathe. I can't breathe." And he's gasping. And we tell him the story. And this is an old memory. And at one point you were in danger and you're not in danger now. and
            • 67:30 - 68:00 we're both here for you and you're came to us and we love you and we're going to protect you." And we tell him this whole story and he quiets down. His eyes are never open during this when he's waking up at night. Goes back to sleep, never has another incident again. Yeah. Well, sounds like you fixed the problem. Sounds like you fixed the problem. You know, again, you can't be 100% sure why anything happens or the reason for
            • 68:00 - 68:30 anything happening. Could be any number of things. The the fact that it fixed him then would make me think that there was some truth to that and just giving that to his mind so he could locate it. in his mind he's maybe in a fire but now this locates it as oh that was some time in the past and d and suddenly for him it's a it's like it comes into focus now he doesn't have to be so terrified of it it's a it's a memory and he gets that
            • 68:30 - 69:00 even if he's asleep so it may be something like that and indeed that was that was what it took to fix it and that you and your wife were getting information to help him fix that problem because you were aware that it was a problem and of course it's your child and you don't want the children to be in terror like that. So your mind is inquisitive. What is it? What could it be? And when your mind goes out like that, it pulls information in. So the
            • 69:00 - 69:30 information may or may not have been accurate. That's not the point. The point is that whether it was accurate or not, it worked. I mean, I'm getting extremely emotional because there's another piece to this. Uh oh. uh as a as a kid myself, my parents had a cottage north of the city that we we grew up in. And for no reason that I can remember, when I would go to sleep in one of the bedrooms, I would constantly think about the large tree that was
            • 69:30 - 70:00 outside of that bedroom and think of what would happen if a fire came, how would I escape the house and crawl down this tree? And the tree was, you know, really big. And I would every in a time only in that bedroom would I imagine myself having to escape. And I have like I wouldn't say irrational fear of fire, but I am like it really bothers me when there are wild wildfires. I'd say it's it's there's paralysis. There's emotional paralysis.
            • 70:00 - 70:30 I get very significant. It's like I have an issue like I think we should have clean air and I think that's important to be able to breathe. Then I lived in a town that you know there was it's in a m was a mountain town and it was in a little valley and smoke would come into the valley and it often would not blow out and you know you would have aqi of 150 and it's seeping through the walls and everything smells like and you know you get a headache and it's really unpleasant. Um, and I had to, you know, I couldn't never felt settled in that town because I I loved it. But every summer I would have this experience. And
            • 70:30 - 71:00 I never had the the fear of being burnt up. But now when I think about I I never put all three of those pieces together, the fear as a child, the past memory of that experience with my son and the information that came in, and then my present um fire terror. And I'm not I don't know. I just it all sort of like I all of a sudden all three of those blocks just became clear to me and I was like, "Oh, wait a second. I'm turning off my intellectual brain." Yeah. Often
            • 71:00 - 71:30 the things that happen, you'll find there's a lesson in there for all the participants, not just the one. It wasn't just the son. Perhaps it was also something for you, maybe something for your wife, too. Often there's a lesson for everybody in that. That's just basically the way the system works. It's trying to optimize the possibility of you making better choices. It also is optimizing your your son not, you know,
            • 71:30 - 72:00 being so afraid. But it just tends to work that way. Things that things that happen, the system's very efficient. And if it can if it can get three birds with one stone, it'll do that. It'll come up with a way that that works because it's got all the information. It knows every thought and emotion that you've had. And it knows what emotions and thoughts you're likely to have. And it knows what your past was like. It's got all the information. So, it's not that hard for
            • 72:00 - 72:30 it to come up with something that will be a a positive. And even if it takes you 20 years to figure it out, that's all right. The information's in there for you to use when you're capable of using it. Before we let you go, what are the signs that entropy needs to be reduced or that you are on the right path to reducing entropy? I think of it like as we move towards a more expanded consciousness life, are
            • 72:30 - 73:00 there, for example, synchronicities or moments that show us we're on the right path to to help us continue? He gives different data than I do. But let's uh let me go with the last one and then you can ask the other one again if I didn't address it. Yes. As you evolve, as you grow up, and that's not act better, but are better. Okay? You will
            • 73:00 - 73:30 find that one, your decision space, decision space is all the decisions you're aware of. Now you may get to a fork in the road and there'll be a decision of this way or that way but I'm talking about decisions in general in your life like there may be five possibilities that you see and you have to decide which road you're going to go down but there actually may be 20 possibilities but you only see five of them because there's others are outside of your experience base. So out of those
            • 73:30 - 74:00 five define your decision space in that problem. Okay. So decision space is what are the choices I have? And it doesn't matter if you're in jail for life. Okay, you can't go home for Christmas, but there's other things you can do. So you always have decision space. You don't, you know, that's your free will to make those choices. That's basically what free will is that you get to pick something that's in your decision space. Even if your decision space is small because you're in prison, it's not as
            • 74:00 - 74:30 big as it was if you were out. Well, you still get to pick from the ones that you've got. Now, as you grow up, I say grow up for means, you know, increase the quality of your conscious, lower your entropy, all that. As you grow up, your decision space grows. The information that you get grows. I said, you walk into a room and you understand it. You understand the people, where you're going, what you're going to do, and you feel comfortable with it. So, that's more information than most people get. If you know somebody comes and
            • 74:30 - 75:00 says, "Oh, my grandmother's having a hard time doing something something." You immediately know what's wrong with your grandmother. What's wrong and is she going to get better? Is it going to kill her? You get this information just because your mind goes, "Oh, poor grandma." And in comes the information. So, you live in a different world with different amounts of information. And you tend to live in a world where you don't set your intellect working on that information. You just keep it in your,
            • 75:00 - 75:30 you know, in your in kind of your own space. It's in your own intuitive space that you know these things. You don't really operate on it. You do in the beginning because you're curious. Oh, does your grandmama have this? You know, because you want to know if you got the right answer or not, but eventually you get over that and you just live in that space. You find that um your life is good. Synchronic synchronicities is a way of life. Things that are not normal
            • 75:30 - 76:00 happen to you daily, even hourly. Things just work out. It's one of those things, you know, if you were to fall into a cesspool, you'd probably find a gold brick at the bottom of it. You know, it's that sort of thing. life just works for you and you kind of rely on that and you don't really bother too much about how is this all going to work out because it'll work out however it does and it'll be fine. So you're relaxed, you don't have much stress. So yeah, you
            • 76:00 - 76:30 have all of that. The life gets more positive, gets better, your life is generally full of joy and happiness and you feel satisfied and you just go through each moment when it happens. You make your best choice. No, this is the way this is the way learning takes place. Stuff happens and you get to make a choice. Now, most people try to manipulate the stuff that happens so that it happens in a way they like. That's where they spend their energy,
            • 76:30 - 77:00 trying to manipulate to have things come out the way they want them to come out, the way they know it's going to be best for everybody. So, they they do that. But rather than spend time trying to manipulate things to come out the way you want, you just let them happen however they do. And when they do happen, you do your due diligence, which means you think about it, you feel about it. You know, sort of like your two different kinds of protein. You feel about it and you make a choice and then you look back at that choice and say,
            • 77:00 - 77:30 was it a good choice or a bad choice and why? And then you learn something and then you go on. So some people have a problem of making choices. Well, I don't know the right answer. What is the low entropy path? I've got five choices and I don't know which one's low entropy. Of course, you don't. You never will. Get over it. You don't have to make the right choice. That's not the life is not about making the right choice. Life is about learning, about growing up, and becoming more. So, you
            • 77:30 - 78:00 do your due diligence. You think about it. You get all the information. You try to think what's the low entropy choice and then you make it. and then you see what happens and if it doesn't work out well you learn from it and that lowers the probability you'll do it again because you're aware and you learn from it. So you should never feel like I don't know what the low entropy choice is. You don't have to you just make a choice learn from it. The worst thing you can do in this reality is make a choice and not learn from it. It's a bad
            • 78:00 - 78:30 choice compulsion. Yeah. If you don't learn from it, then you just get to do it again. And you keep doing it again and again and again for as many days or as many lifetimes as it takes for you to get it. So that's, you know, kind of how things work. So yes, the, you know, now I live mostly in intuitive space. And if you're aware of that sort of thing, you know, you send you tend to be turned into that. You'll notice that I'm here and I'm gone and my mind is kind of else
            • 78:30 - 79:00 and it comes back and it comes back with information and it's not something I intellectually do. Oh, I have to go out and find that information. As I need it, it comes and it comes as as I need it, when I need it. And for me, it's just the way life works. if you need some information and it's available to you to help you make the choice. But you only get there by getting rid of the fear and the ego and the beliefs because those things
            • 79:00 - 79:30 scramble what you know. They make you come to wrong conclusions and then they take your information and garble it basically because your interpretation of that information is now twisted to fit your fears, twisted to fit your beliefs and comparisons, disappointments, wanting something that didn't work out. We should really be seeing anything that doesn't work out as, oh, that's wasn't supposed to happen and it wouldn't have been good for me if it did. Yeah. For the most part, you you
            • 79:30 - 80:00 know, you do that, but it doesn't matter. You know, you don't have to justify everything. Stuff happens because it happens. Stuff may happen to me because somebody else made a decision to do this. I may have an accident out in a car cuz somebody made the wrong turn or thought it was a two-way street and was only a one-way street. So, stuff can happen to me. But my point is, I don't take it personally. It's just stuff happens and I deal with it. So, if I get a broken leg or something, then I wait for it to heal. And I'll probably learn something from the process of not
            • 80:00 - 80:30 being able to walk for a while will be a learning thing. Learn to be patient. Learn to depend on others. Learn that you can't always do everything for yourself. So you turn everything into a learning situation. There's almost no experience you can have that you can't learn something from. So life best becomes a series of learning. Now you're the person you were talking about. They said it was a series of tests. Well, yes. Everything's a test. You get a broken leg, it's a test. What do you do?
            • 80:30 - 81:00 Feel sorry for yourself? What was me? That jerk did this and that and you blame it on people and you feel miserable. Well, it'll take your leg twice as long to heal and you'll be unhappy and miserable and so on. Whereas, if it's, oh, my leg and I hope it heals well and good and you put positive energy, suddenly it heals twice as fast as anybody thought it would and you're back up again and everything is fine. So it's it's not blaming others. It's not judging others. It's just accepting life as it comes and making your best choices. And it's very simple.
            • 81:00 - 81:30 It's just a very simple way to go through life. And the more you grow up, the more information you have in order to make that work better. The more ego and fear and beliefs you have, the more you you twist that process into something that is nonfunctional. So that's that's kind of how you get through life. It's just simple. Let stuff happen. Think, you know, do due
            • 81:30 - 82:00 diligence, make a choice, learn from it, and go on. Before we let you go, are you a fun person? Like like do you like music, movies? Do like what do you what's your Okay. Am I a fun person? Yes, I am a fun person. Can't you tell that I'm a fun person? Well, like what what kind of movies do you like? I don't watch movies very often because I don't find them very good. Okay. For the most part. And I'll have to tell you, I've
            • 82:00 - 82:30 never seen a single issue of the uh um Yeah. You know, Big Bang. Big Bang Theory. Bang. I haven't watched commercial TV for probably 45 years. Wow. Wow. Do you like music? I love music. What do you like? I like almost everything except Okay, go ahead. Except I don't like so much country music. Okay. You and cows. Cows don't like country music. Cows
            • 82:30 - 83:00 don't like country music. I don't particularly like the country music. I find it a little whiny and and very simplistic. Okay. I tend to like music that's more complex. Okay. I tend to like fusion jazz and rock. Okay. I like my m my my uh rock kind of loud and screamy. Uh, I like classic rock or what we used to call classic rock. I like like Are you like a Fleetwood Mac person? Are you a Grateful Dead person? See, I don't know any of those names. Beatles.
            • 83:00 - 83:30 Yeah. Well, I like all of that. Okay. Okay. I like music that's emotional. Okay. The music music that it's all about the words. Yeah. I never listen to words. When I listen to music, there are no words. The voice is just another instrument. Interesting. I hear the voice and it does whatever it does. You like classical music? I like classical music. Got it. I like classical music. I don't like all of it. Some is very repetitious and it just kind of cycles, you know, it's it comes in cycles and goes around and sometimes it's, you know, it's tends to be busy. Yeah.
            • 83:30 - 84:00 Without being interesting. Okay. Other classical music I like if it's not simple. Most folk music is you got a little tune. It's a little tune and it just repeats over and over again. Um, I don't mind not being complex if somebody is really I like blues. Okay. Okay. Blues are great because it's that's just three chords. It's a it's a it's emotional music. It's simple and it's repetitive in its form,
            • 84:00 - 84:30 but it is emotional. It's about feelings. It's about something that means something important to somebody and that's significant to me. So yeah, when I say loud screaming rock, I don't know how to tell you that. You know, uh remember James Brown, do you remember uh Ray Charles? Yeah, sure. You remember all those? I mean, those are also blues, you know. Yeah, they're kind of bluesy kind of bluesy rock. So blues, rock, and
            • 84:30 - 85:00 jazz. Okay. I like I like jazz music, contemporary jazz. Okay. But mostly that that's that has the feeling in it. Like if you pull up Miles Davis and get his album Sketches of Spain. That's a beautiful work. My older son is Miles for Miles Davis. Yeah, that's a beautiful piece. That album is wonderful. It's one of my favorite albums. And it's not because Miles's very good about hitting every note just right. Sure. He doesn't. He mangles a lot of them, but there it's got a lot of
            • 85:00 - 85:30 feeling in it and you can just disappear into that feeling very easily. So that's the kind of music that I that I like. But uh yeah, you remember the the song uh Bad to the Bone? Yeah. Remember that? I had a I had a lady who was living with us at the time taking care of children and cooking meals and cleaning house and stuff and and she came up to me one day and said, "If have if have if have if have if have if have if have if have if have if have if you heard that song and I hadn't because I was real busy then
            • 85:30 - 86:00 and I didn't. If I listened to music in the car, it was because I had a CD player in the trunk of the car. I listen to that. But anyway, I said, "No, I never heard it." And she says, "Well, somehow it reminds me of you. You and that music you and that music just go together." So I said, "I have to I have to hear that." So she found it and she played it for me and I thought, "What does that have to do with me? What does that have to do with me?" But then I played it for Eileen,
            • 86:00 - 86:30 who's maybe back here someplace. I don't know. And she said, "That's you. M so but it's me not in a way that I'm bad to the bone but just uh you know I'm a physicist and I seem to be very intellectual that very maybe um I wouldn't say conservative that's the wrong word these days but uh like most intellectuals are. Yeah. But do you cry? Yes I do more and more than I ever used to when I was younger.
            • 86:30 - 87:00 Never never a tear would leave my eyes, but now I cry at everything. It's a sign of maturity. Yeah, I cry at everything now. But uh in any case, uh I tend to be I have a good sense of humor. I love the joke. The book is Your book's very funny. I mean, your writing is Yeah. Every couple of pages or something chapters, it has some humor in it. Very playful. I I am that way. Mhm. I tend to joke around a lot and I tend to be a
            • 87:00 - 87:30 little wild and crazy. That's I don't find that hard to believe. You're good. But uh I do in this situation I'm very button down and business and intellectual and we have to say things. But in a private environment, I'm u I don't get up on tables and put lampshades on my head. I'm not that kind of guy. But uh I will almost everything comes out of my mouth is humor. Mhm. I don't I'm not very serious about
            • 87:30 - 88:00 anything. Well, you are the favorite rabbi I've ever had on this podcast. So, thank you so much. Um I do recommend By Big toe. Um it is it is dense. It's worth working through and obviously it's a trilogy as well. Um please tell everyone where they can find your binaural beats and everything else about you. Well, go to my website which is www.mmy- bigigentoe and com right.com and you will find everything there. If you want to actually get what the theory is
            • 88:00 - 88:30 about, you'll find most of that there. You'll find packages to buy like binaural beats and there'll be lots of them but they're not expensive. So, buy a bunch of them and compare them because a binaural beat that works great for you today may be one that doesn't work for you tomorrow. It depends. What you bring to the table is one of the very big variables. It's not just that everybody's the same and these binaral beats will do everything for everybody. It's very personal and you're different.
            • 88:30 - 89:00 You're different hour to hour, much less daytoday. So, play around with them. I also have some u a thing there called uh exploring consciousness and everything paranormal where I teach you how to do everything paranormal all the things we've talked about. I teach you about remote viewing, mind-to- mind communications, talking to your dead uncle Fred, uh all the things that you might want to do, healing, all that. and I explain them how they work, why they work, how you can learn to do them, what
            • 89:00 - 89:30 not to do, what to do. And again, that's not really expensive. It's a fiveweek training course that's intensive. If you take it over five weeks, it'll be five intensive days, but you can take it over five months or five years if you want. You just learn faster if it's intensive than if it isn't. But you can do it. So, if you're interested in paranormal, that will explain to you what the paranormal is and how it works. I have a couple of other products there. Tom's Park is one. If you're a hard If you have a hard time
            • 89:30 - 90:00 meditating, this will give you it'll give you a something to put in your mind that's productive that leads you to be able to do the paranormal things at the end of it. So, that's another thing. So, that's where you can get stuff. I've got a YouTube and my YouTube has probably 2,000 videos. way too many videos for you to figure out which ones to watch. So I also at the website I have a search
            • 90:00 - 90:30 tool that will search those thousands of hours of video by subject. I also have at the website a tool that is called AI. Now you haven't gotten to a AI guy yet in the books. You've just looked at book one which is no more than an introduction. The serious stuff is in book two and book three. But in any case, AI guy is a character in in my book, too. And this AI guy has my voice. It has been trained on all those
            • 90:30 - 91:00 thousands of videos. It has been trained on the books and everything I've ever said. So, it is about as close to me as you can get. Amazing, but not as fun. But not as fun. It doesn't make jokes like I do. Anyhow, it it will be it will answer your questions. very much like I did. We've tested it many times. You know, they have a whole bunch of questions and I answer them and then they put them on the AI guy to answer them and I'd say, you know, 98
            • 91:00 - 91:30 99% gets them right because it's not just any AI, but it's one's been trained on my stuff specifically. I could do a spin-off show with his AI. That's right. You could just talk to him all day. You could. But it's good. So, that's another thing we have. Um, but in general, it's a community, you know. I'm I don't have millions of people following me, but I have 100 thousand or so. And we have a community that has its own newsletters and things that go out. We have meetings. This this May, I'm going to
            • 91:30 - 92:00 Spain for four or five days doing events. I've been around the world a time or two. Been to Germany five or six times. And everywhere they speak English because otherwise I have to do it with an interpreter. So I speak to places that there's English. actually had a German interpreter when I was there. But one of my biggest uh audiences is in Germany. The people who are very rational. My my books I intended them it was written by a physicist. I intended them to be an on-ramp for leftrainers.
            • 92:00 - 92:30 People who live by logical process don't have an on-ramp. Yeah. To the spiritual or to the non-physical or any of that. So my books are made to be logical and they drive right brainers crazy because they're too they're too logical, too much process. They are not an easy read. Yeah. And you have to read them very slowly. Well, I really I really enjoyed um the first. So I'll tackle the others as well. Yeah, I think you'll like them even better. There's more and better
            • 92:30 - 93:00 information as you as you go. But anyhow, this has been fun. Thank you for inviting me. It's been a pleasure. I thought maybe we'd talk more about mental health, but that's all right. We had too many other things to talk to you about. So, maybe we'd do it again. Oh, we would love that. You know, people ask me about, well, a lot of those people get locked up. Is that because they're having real connections to the larger conscious system and just nobody believes them and yeah, that's that's a problem. If you have that connection,
            • 93:00 - 93:30 you need to keep it to yourself. It's also about can you integrate it or does it sort of take you over, right? If you're channeling an enormous amount of information and you don't know what to do with it. Yeah. Well, then you have to kind of back up again. You don't want to overwhelm your own free will to deal with it. Yeah. So, you have to back it off and say, "Okay, what does this mean?" If you just open yourself up to it and now you're a channel and you're just blathering things that nobody can understand, that's not going to be helpful to you or really to other
            • 93:30 - 94:00 people. So, you do need to make sure your free will is in control of what's going on. And if it if it's more than you can handle, then make it stop. It will obey your free will. You can make it stop. You know, like those people that are too empathetic. Can't go into a Walmart because it drives them nuts all the time, too. Yeah. Yeah. And you can turn that off. You can turn it off selectively. not only turn it all off, but you can say, "I only want to be able
            • 94:00 - 94:30 to hear those people who have a birthday this week." And then the crowd will disappear and you'll only hear from the few people have birthdays this week. You can open and close those portals with your intent. And most people don't know that, but you can. It just takes a little practice of developing your your intuitive side. It has a lot of things that it can do. It's your mind. It's the it's the core function of your mind is
            • 94:30 - 95:00 this intuitive spot. The intellect is kind of something grafted onto the side so you can deal with the world. But dealing with being a human being with other people mostly comes out of your intuitive side and we don't develop it at all. We just let it sit there in language. We were smarter intuitively when we were three years old than we are now as adults mostly. But yes, you can turn things on. Turn on more to talk about for sure. Thank you so much. I don't even know what to say about what just happened. You would have to say
            • 95:00 - 95:30 everything about the entire universe and its construction and how to live your life. I hope people will go and check out the resources that uh Tom has on his website. Um the books are very dense. I'm not going to lie. But I just feel like we got him to share so much of his wisdom. We're so grateful for people um listening to this episode and if you missed the first one, go back and listen to it. Also, after the episode, I got maybe one of the best hugs of my life. Yeah, he uh definitely
            • 95:30 - 96:00 there was a deep connection uh between uh us and Tom. And yeah, he's a hugger. Who knew? Um you know, if you're watching the video, I'm wondering if people can pick up his presence. There was an intensity about him. It's very intense. You you can feel people who have changed their frequency. You know, he's been meditating for how many years? Decades. And there is a level of presence. He sat for over three
            • 96:00 - 96:30 hours without a restroom break without saying an um or an ah like he barely paused. There was like two moments in three hours where he didn't have just a stream of consciousness that he was able to to share with us. And like I I'm really kind of amazed. It was really very very powerful episode. He did remind me of some of the more mystical guests we've had. He reminded me of Michael Singer. That's what I was going to say. Very heavy Michael Singer vibes, which um you know, not what you'd expect
            • 96:30 - 97:00 from a physicist. Michael's an economist. And I remember when we spoke to him, you could feel his presence through Zoom cuz he wasn't in person. And like that's what I imagine it would be like. I mean, look, I Yeah, it's uh I don't even know what else to say. From our breakdown to the one we hope you never have. We will see you next time. It's my breakdown. She's going to break it down for you. She's got a neuroscience PhD or two fiction and now she's going to break down. So, break
            • 97:00 - 97:30 down. She's going to break it down.