Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Now here's a highlight from Coast to Coast am on iHeartRadio.
Speaker 2 (00:05):
And welcome back to Coast to Coast. George Nori with you.
We've got a great program for you tonight. Doctor Andrea
Seltzer with us is an intuitive healer and natural medium.
He combines his natural gifts in decades of research and
as the founder of the Frequency Energy Medicine Group, an
intuitive system of healing techniques that measure and influence the
(00:25):
natural frequencies around all living things. Doctor Andrea, Welcome to
Coast to Coast. Welcome back.
Speaker 3 (00:33):
It's nice to be back, and good to me, my friend.
Speaker 2 (00:35):
How have you been?
Speaker 4 (00:37):
Really good, but very busy. There's been a lot of
dejavoo going on this year.
Speaker 2 (00:42):
Explain what deja vu is to some people who may
not know what it is.
Speaker 4 (00:46):
Well, the wood dejo vou is the French word and
it means already seen. And one of the things that's
been happening in this world is that we've been I
think people have been shut off for a long time
to a lot of these these sensations and feelings, and
dejav vous is kind of creeping back in. It's something
we talked about many years ago, but it's becoming a
(01:08):
real topic to talk about today, literally because everybody seems
to be experiencing dejah vous.
Speaker 2 (01:17):
We have these feelings but coming on. I know, in
my particular case, you have that feeling that comes on
that you know you've been there before, and you even
can predict what they may say or do the people
that you're with. It's bizarre, isn't it.
Speaker 3 (01:32):
Well, I think there's levels.
Speaker 4 (01:33):
I think there are some things that are familiar, things
that can be explained by psychology, simply things that you've
seen and forgotten about. But the deja vu that we're
talking about is this It's something that you could not
have experienced before. It's literally you find yourself just for
a glitch, almost like a wrinkling time, as if you've
(01:54):
seen into the future. And I think this is becoming
a lot more common, and I think people are wanting
to understand, especially people that are having a lot of
dreams that are becoming very lucid and then turning into
dejau vu.
Speaker 2 (02:11):
Remarkable, and now premonitions are wide, so.
Speaker 4 (02:15):
I think premonitions are an extension of deja vus. I
think dejev vou is like a little wrinkling time, so
they're just the glitch. You just see them for a
few seconds and they disappear. Whereas premonitions can sometimes come
in threes or fours. You can have a dream about
something that's going to happen, or even during the day,
just get a sense that things SNE's going to happen.
(02:36):
You're going to feel it, you can feel like things
going to change and then it comes true. So premonitions
are much more solid, and they're the ones that are
probably the most researched. I don't think deja vu has
been really well researched over the years, but it's beginning
to become something that I mean, everybody's going to see
a psychiatrist right now, or is seeing somebody a therapist,
(02:58):
or people like myself, they're talking more about having these
moments of deja vu.
Speaker 2 (03:05):
Originally, I would think years ago that dejah vou had
something to do with some kind of brain malfunction. What
do you think of that?
Speaker 3 (03:13):
I agree, the frontal lobes of the brain.
Speaker 4 (03:16):
We've noticed that when people have things like Alzheimer's or dementia,
they have a lot of deja vous and certain head
injuries as well. But this is a little different in
the sense that I think there's definitely some medical conditions
that can cause these types of semi premonitions of deja vous,
But these dejah vous moments are so distinct and so
(03:39):
detailed that the person has the experience is really shocked
by what they're seeing, what they feel. So I think
that we have to look at these different layers. So, George,
I think there's different layers of this, of this of
deja vus.
Speaker 2 (03:53):
Have you had levels of deja vu yourself?
Speaker 3 (03:57):
It's a daily occurrence.
Speaker 4 (03:59):
Since age of about four, I've had deju vu and
a lot of premonitions before I could re understand what
they were, and I would say for me, it's a
day thing. Almost every other conversation I have, I have
a little flash of dejus vu. To the point where
I thought it was normal to have that much aje view,
(04:20):
but apparently it's not unless you're an artist, a psyekicker, healer,
or somebody that is in foreign The mystical path.
Speaker 2 (04:28):
And the premonitions, how close are they to clairvoyance.
Speaker 4 (04:33):
I would say that claire voyants and premonitions are the
same thing, just that clairvoyance is something that's if your
coins some a clairvoy it's more constant and more controllable.
Premonitions just come out of the blue, and people that
have premonitions can't always predict them. They just happen, whereas
clevoyance can actually allow themselves to see into the past,
(04:56):
the present, or the future.
Speaker 2 (04:58):
Do people come to you for assistance and help with
either deja vu or premonitions all the.
Speaker 4 (05:04):
Time, and dreams as well, if you tie dreams into this.
If you consider the brain as being more like a
quantum computer, and maybe there's not a single thought in
our heads, but we're a processor, so we're picking up
on energy around us and maybe even cosmic energy, and
we're processing it. So if this is the case, the
(05:26):
mind is constantly reading things that it can't see, so
that your thoughts could surround you. There could be not
so much stored in your head, but stored in your
in your biofield, and it could be interactions. So when
people come to see me, there's normally some of it
doesn't go away. It's a constant premonition or it's a
constant deja vu, and they're trying to understand it. And
(05:48):
sometimes George, that leads people to changing their lives or
it's help and guide them to be different in their
lives or even to a better future.
Speaker 2 (05:58):
I think dreams are powerful and if if you could
use them effectively, you could do some incredible things with them.
Speaker 4 (06:03):
Doctor Well, dreams are so complex and often have reverse meanings.
But once you begin to understand your dreams, and I
say to everybody, keep a dream journal when you first
wake up, write down your dreams. Your dreams are natural,
that a gift, and I think a lot of people
at daydream become great artists, producers, directors, even billionaires. The
(06:27):
day dreamers are the ones that change the world.
Speaker 2 (06:30):
Does it seem that deja vous is on an uptick?
Speaker 4 (06:34):
Absolutely? I would say in the last two years, I've
seen a lot of cases, but I would say this year,
almost every person I've spoken to or I've seen has
had some kind of deja vu and shocking things that
have really caught them by surprise, people they've never met before,
knowing details about them, meeting them for the first time
(06:56):
and saying do you have two kids? And the person's
how do you know that it's bleeding over? Dejo voo
is bleeding over? Or maybe the first step into becoming intuitive,
becoming a clairvoyant or even a medium.
Speaker 2 (07:14):
I have a friend Andrea who goes through episodes of
deja vous, but when it's over with, he feels nauseous.
What's that all about?
Speaker 3 (07:24):
What kind of work does he do?
Speaker 2 (07:27):
Just general office work?
Speaker 3 (07:30):
Right? Okay?
Speaker 4 (07:31):
So what happens is if you're a creative person as
deja vu, you do something with it. If you're someone
that general office work or works in as an accountant,
you might ignore that deja vu. And I think when
people do that, it makes them a little sick, It
makes them tired, and they feel drained. So I normally
(07:52):
say when people have deja vu, write it down, try
and find out why you're getting deja vu? What is
the universe trying to tell you? Are your spirit guys
tapping on the shoulder and telling you, hey, you need
to be a musician or you need to be an
exotic dancer, or you need to go build space rockets?
And I think that deja vu is the universe tapping
(08:13):
on the shoulder a most instances.
Speaker 2 (08:16):
And you can generally feel it coming on, can't you?
At least I.
Speaker 3 (08:20):
Do, yes and no.
Speaker 4 (08:23):
A lot of them, the stronger ones tend to catch
people by surprise, but the ones when you start the
film come on. What you're doing is you're starting to
understand your intuition. You're becoming more advanced, You're probably more spiritual,
and you probably are not questioning it, and you trust
your intuition more so you tend to feel it coming.
(08:45):
It's almost like it's a friend that's coming by your
sense it.
Speaker 2 (08:50):
Can you use these as tools deja vu, premonitions, intuition.
Speaker 4 (08:56):
Well absolutely. I work with a number of operations and
companies that have a lot of creative people. Actually like
to work with creative people, and I would say that
anybody that's creative, anybody that it has success, has to
understand that it doesn't just come from their skill set.
It comes from their ability to send things that other
(09:17):
people miss. And deja vous and intuition play huge part
in this. If you look at very successful people, they
take risks that other people don't and they'll say the
same thing over and over again. It just felt right,
my intuition told me to do it. So I think
intuition is a superpower that we should all practice and
(09:39):
learn more about.
Speaker 2 (09:40):
Well with doctor Andre Shelter, the book that's coming out
next year, their Frequency Reset Journal. When does that come out?
Speaker 4 (09:47):
So that will come out probably this month, hopefully the
end of this month. And the book is basically a
journal that you flee every day and helps guide you
to understand your intuition, how to manifest things, but also
to keep a record of your life, because isn't every
day of your life important?
Speaker 3 (10:07):
And I wonder how much we forget.
Speaker 4 (10:09):
I think that our lives are like a library and
an emmanual, and everything that happens to us he's teaching
us something, but we just don't always listen. So my
hope is to get people to listen to themselves a
lot more.
Speaker 2 (10:23):
Where would be the best place to order this book
or pre order it?
Speaker 4 (10:27):
This wonderful place called Amazon, so that would be the
best place to go to for it super and.
Speaker 2 (10:33):
Your website is linked up at costcostdam dot com. Since
since you been doing this, which I think is marvelous work,
what has astounded you the most?
Speaker 3 (10:45):
Georgia? So many things.
Speaker 4 (10:47):
I think spontaneous healing do the work I've been doing,
it really uncovers people's ability to heal themselves, and I
think I have seen a good example would be I'll
give you an example of what two things that have
saved my life. I used to live in Monterey and
I lived in an apartment that was kind of upstairs
(11:09):
with this older building, and one night I woke up
and I had this terrible dream, this premonition there was
going to be a fire. So I kind of got
up and I was all sweating and I just didn't
feel good. And that was such a strong feeling. I
decided to move pretty quickly within two weeks and move out.
The two weeks after I moved out, the whole place
(11:31):
burned down and the fire started right under where I
used to live, and there was only one exit from
that place, so I would have probably not have survived.
But that was a premonition. And then I started having
dejovou throughout the day. I'd walk into a place and
I'd feel like there's there's something not quite right here,
(11:52):
and I'd look and there'd be somebody sitting in the
corner staring at me. I had all these kind of
weird dejavou things, and I listened to it and moved
out of the place, and it saved me. And the
second time I was supposed to be in New York
on September eleventh, two thousand and I would have been
stayed in the Marriott and every morning I used to
go up to the windows of the World of the
(12:13):
World Trade Center. Well, things kept happening that stopped me
from going. And it was first it was dreams, and
then it was premonitions, and then it was tons of
dejou vous, just meeting people, and then we'd start conversations
and they'd be talking about oh, it was almost an accident. Oh,
there was also almost in this. I took all that
(12:33):
as a sign that maybe I'm not going to go
this year. I didn't predict what was going to happen
on September eleventh, but I didn't go because of my intuition,
because of deja vous, and because of premonitions. So I
wonder whether the universe is trying to protect us, and
that it gives us these things to help us steer
(12:54):
away from danger. And maybe it's a natural instinct that's
built into us that we just lost over time.
Speaker 2 (13:02):
It's dramatic, it really is. Of every area that you've
worked in deja vu, premonition, intuition, is there one area
that you would think would be the gift you wish
you had all the time.
Speaker 3 (13:18):
Oh, that's a hard one.
Speaker 4 (13:19):
I think intuition I pretty much have all the time,
but I wish I'd listened to my intuition more. But
I think deja vu is something that is a friend,
that's always there, and I think we probably misunderstand deja vu,
and I think we should study it more, especially for ourselves,
(13:40):
and find out what it really means. Is it a
warning for us? Is it helping us find the right partner?
Is it teaching us or showing us that we can
do better for ourselves? So I think that deja vu
would be the one that I would like to have
more of and also understand it better.
Speaker 2 (13:57):
My dejav would be the premise of a medical condition.
Speaker 4 (14:03):
Yes, people can sometimes predict their own illnesses and even
their own death, and I think this is something that Look,
we're beginning to really understand ourselves. You know, science is
helping us understand who we are AI especially, and the
more we delve into quantum physics, the more we understand
that we're all entangled because we all come from a
(14:26):
single source. So anybody on this planet is connected to
another person in some way, shape or form. And if
qtum entanglement is a fact, which I believe that it is,
it means we are reacting and responding to every other
person on this planet, and maybe every animal, every tree,
every brain of sand. So wouldn't it make sense that
(14:48):
if this is true and there's an entanglement, that we're
also entangled in energy as well, and that we're feeling
things that we don't yet understand. But we may be
greater than where we think we are. And if you
look back in history and you look at some of
the greatest Archimedes, for instance, and what he was able
to develop and create the Egyptians, how we lost that
(15:12):
contact with what we consider to be wou the intuition,
the deja vu, and the connection to energy. Or do
we need to go back in time and understand that
maybe our ancestors had more knowledge than we do today,
certainly about those things.
Speaker 2 (15:31):
Why are some people better intuitively than others? Andre I think.
Speaker 4 (15:35):
It's the same with playing the piano. My son is
a great pianist. I am terrible. I can't play the
piano to say for topic, I think you are tuned.
Each one of us has tuned individually to be able
to do certain things, as if as if, as if
you think of a tribe, but think of a group
of people. Maybe in a group, everybody has to have
(15:58):
a part in that group. And I think that intuitives,
with the doctors, with the with the medicine people were
the guides. And I think a lot of the philosophers
of the past, such as Socrates, were very intuitive, and
actually Socrates didn't.
Speaker 3 (16:14):
Believe in writing things down. It was Plato.
Speaker 4 (16:17):
Socrates really believed in intuition and learning and using the mind.
And I think the Greeks have shown us just how
much they use their minds so differently to where we
use them today. So I just have the feeling that
we need to look into our history and look into
who we are, and maybe we're all more unique than
(16:40):
we realize.
Speaker 2 (16:41):
Do you think djevo or intuition or premonition is some
kind of a tool that the body creates.
Speaker 4 (16:52):
Yeah, I think it's a defense mechanism. I think it's
something that is there to protect us, because I've talked
to people that special forces and people in military situations,
and their intuition becomes very heightened in danger. But also
they have a lot more of these spontaneous dreams of
deja vu, and they have a lot more premonitions as well.
(17:15):
And the ones that do are the ones that survive.
Speaker 2 (17:20):
It's pretty dramatic. It really is.
Speaker 3 (17:24):
Well, if you think about it, if you're driving.
Speaker 4 (17:25):
If you're driving and all of a sudden you slow down,
you just feel like, oh, I need to slow down
and there's an accident in front of you.
Speaker 3 (17:34):
Did you sense that? Did you see it happening? Were
you aware of it?
Speaker 4 (17:37):
Or did you have a moment of deja vu? That
just just something doesn't feel right here. I think I
dreamt about this thing. I think I felt this. So
you slow down, And isn't it your psyche protecting you?
Speaker 3 (17:51):
Isn't a form of self preservation?
Speaker 4 (17:53):
Is it not possible that we have these things built
into us that allow us to protect ourselves.
Speaker 1 (18:01):
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