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November 8, 2024 53 mins

This edition takes you on a journey as The Wizard discusses his Philly trip, his cheese steak tour, the 10-year date, the tallest human skeleton and much more! 

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Speaker 1 (00:05):
Welcome to the iHeartRadio and Coast to Coast AM Paranormal
podcast network. This is the place to be if you're
ready for the best podcasts of the paranormal, curious, and
sometimes unexplained.

Speaker 2 (00:17):
Now listen to this.

Speaker 3 (00:23):
The thoughts and opinions expressed by the host our thoughts
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sponsors and associates. You are encouraged to do the proper
amount of research yourself, depending on the subject matter and
your needs. Yeah, ready to be.

Speaker 2 (01:01):
Amazed by the wizard of Weird. This is Strange Things
with Joshua pe Warren. I am joshuaape Warren, and each
week on this show, I'll be bringing you brand new
mind blowing content, news, exercises, and weird experiments you can

(01:24):
do at home, and a lot more on this edition
of the show. Using Einstein's Brain for Power and the
Mystery of Father Time. Back in twenty fifteen, my book

(01:45):
called Use the Force, a Jedi's Guide to the Law
of Attraction was published, and of course you can read
that book for free in multiple languages through my website,
Joshua Pewarren dot com. Well, it was very exciting when
that book came out. I had never written anything quite
like it, and so I went around the country doing

(02:05):
some big promotions. And I had never been to Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania before, and this big book signing was arranged for
me in Philadelphia at a Barnes and Noble and it
was a huge success. I mean, I couldn't believe how
long the line was. I mean it never ended. People
came from, well, it seemed like all over the country

(02:26):
for this particular book signing. It was a beautiful time
to be in Philadelphia. It was in the summer, and
since I had never been there, of course Larene and
I had to go out and do all the touristy stuff.
See the Independence Hall where the Declaration of Independence was signed,
which just gave me goosebumps to be in that room.

(02:48):
Of course, the Liberty Bell was there. I've always been
a huge fan of Philly cheese steaks, much to my detriment,
but so I took myself on my own phillyak tour
to see what was the best Philly cheese steak pats
or Gino's or Gem's, and I believe I chose Gems. Now,

(03:10):
if you're a Philly cheese steak officionado, don't hate me.
I'm not from Philly, but I do think I chose Gems.

Speaker 4 (03:18):
Well.

Speaker 2 (03:18):
Anyway, on that trip, it was even better because some
of my good friends showed up to hang out with
me for a few days. One of them was filmmaker
c Eric Scott. You should know all about him. The
other is my friend Dean Warsing, and you should know
all about him. We've all been friends for many years
and we're all we all run in the same circles.

(03:38):
We've done all kinds of TV shows and projects together.
And at one point we were walking down the street
together and Dean he is, he's into cigars, and he
saw this really nice cigar shop and he has, hang
on a second, let's go into this shop. So we
all walked in there and Dean knew exact actly what

(04:00):
he was looking for. He found this big, expensive, high
quality box of cigars. He bought it, and then after
that he found the magic marker and he put the
date on that box and Dean said, I'll tell you
what in ten years exactly on this date, let's all

(04:23):
get back together here in Philadelphia and smoke the cigars.
And I thought that sounds awesome. I've never had a
ten year date like that before, so we all made
a pack that we were going to do that. Well,
that's going to be next year, twenty twenty five. So
at some point next year twenty twenty five, I will

(04:45):
be in Philadelphia. I don't want to give you this
specific date because I want to preserve my privacy while
I'm there. But you know, if any of you know
of anything cool in Philadelphia I might want to check out, Yeah,
let me know. I'm telling you all this because the
while I was in Philadelphia, one of the places that
was I just had to visit that I'd wanted to

(05:07):
visit for years is called the Murder Museum. Now, the
Murder Museum is this. It's a medical history and science
museum right there in the middle of Philly, and it
contains this massive collection of anatomical and pathological specimens, wax models,

(05:28):
antique medical equipment. I mean, I believe they have over
thirty seven thousand specimens, and this huge, majestic, venerable old
building and which I'm sure goes back to the eighteen hundreds.
And I must tell you that walking through this museum

(05:51):
is an unforgettable, unforgettable experience because frankly, it's fascinating, but
it's also kind of nightmarish because you get to see
specimens of the most bizarre and unbelievable human Let me

(06:17):
just put it this way. You see a lot of
anything you can imagine that could that could happen to
deform a human is somehow represented in this museum. And
I don't want to get I mean, I'll just give
you like some famous specifics they have. I mean, they have,
for example, the tallest human skeleton on exhibit in all

(06:38):
of North America, which is seven feet six inches tall.
They have got a malignant tumor that was removed from
President Grover Cleveland's mouth. They have the liver of the
Siamese twins Chang and Ang. They have a piece of
tissue from John Wilkes Booth, who assassinated President Lincoln. And

(06:59):
those are just like some pretty docile examples. I'm talking
about two headed people, three headed people, people with every
type of condition on their body. I mean, it's some
people just could not tolerate that sort of thing. But
and it's a very somber thing as you're going through it,

(07:19):
as you can imagine, but it's just absolutely fascinating. If
you've not been to the Motor Museum in Philadelphia, you
have to do it, by the way. As a side note,
some people they ask me if you can see the
Elephant Man's bones there, and actually no, John Merrick the
Elephant Man, his skeleton is preserved in a private room

(07:42):
at Queen Mary University of London's Medical School. It's in
a glass cabinet just for medical students and medical professionals
to view by appointment. And the family, of course had
to agree to all that. They buried his soft tissue
remains in the same cemetery that has a couple of
the victims of Jack the Ripper, I think. But so

(08:04):
you can't just go and see the Elephant Man's bones.
And I just wanted to bring that up because people
ask me about it. Well, look, as I was going
through the Motor Museum, one thing that I was just
absolutely astounded to see was a display that had slices
of Albert Einstein's brain. And that's the kind of thing

(08:26):
you just never think about seeing that you just never
curged you that at some point in your life you're
going to be gazing at directly at pieces of the
brain of Albert Einstein. Now I'm going to tell you
in a minute this bizarre story, this amazing tell of

(08:47):
how that Albert Einstein's brain ended up going on this
incredible adventure after his death, of course, and ended up
in this display case. And know Einstein, one of the
things that was so great about him is not only
was he not only did he change the way that

(09:08):
we view the world in terms of physics and math
and just reality in general, but he also had a
lot of very common sense information he passed along that
that's relevant to everybody. I think my favorite quote by
him is the most important decision we can make is
whether we believe we live in a friendly or an
unfriendly universe. If you think about that, that is the

(09:34):
closest thing to a general theory of law of attraction
that you're going to get. It lays the fundamental framework
the most important decision we can make is whether we
believe we live in a friendly or unfriendly universe. That
can change your whole demeanor, your all your expectations, and

(09:56):
that will change what you manifest for yourself in life.
He also said, another great quote by him, you cannot
solve a problem with the same mind that created it.
And again that's profound. It's so simple, but people don't
think about that. Everybody wonders why we get caught in
these patterns and history keeps repeating itself when we get

(10:19):
into these negative cycles and the poor get poor and
the rich get richer and all these things. Well, you
cannot solve a problem with the same mind that created it.
You have to think differently. Another one he said that
I think is a lesson to all of humanity. Apparently
at one point a reporter asked him Dr Einstein, how

(10:42):
do you think that World War three will be fault,
to which he replied, I don't know how world War
three will be fought, but World War four will be
fought with sticks and stones. Let that sink in. Einstein

(11:04):
died on April eighteenth, nineteen fifty five, at the age
of seventy six. He had what they call a ruptured
abdominal iortic aneurism. Okay, so something popped in there. He
was in Princeton Hospital at the time he died. And
when we come back from this break, I'm going to

(11:25):
tell you a little something about how he died, what
they think his last words may have been. We're going
to get into this incredible epic tale of what happened
to his brain when it was more or less stolen
from his corpse, and then we're going to get into
some of my thoughts on how you and I might

(11:47):
be able to tap in to the power of Einstein's
brain and use it for ourselves. It's going to be
one of those shows. I hope you stick around. Hey,
you know what, if you like this show, it's a
free one. Do me a favor if you want to
keep this show. If you want me to keep doing it,
you got to support it, all right. Go to Joshua
Pwarren dot com and the Curiosity Shop. You will find

(12:10):
some cool stuff there that you will not find anywhere
else in the world. I guarantee you buy something cool
for yourself or a gift for a friend or a
loved one. There are things in there that you can
just blow somebody's mind with the kind of thing that
you're not going to find at the store or on Amazon.
Something really special for somebody who will really appreciate it.

(12:31):
Joshua P. Warren dot com Curiosity Shop. Also, while you're
there on the homepage, please sign up for my free
and spam free e newsletter and you will receive an
instant automated email from me with some free online gifts.
Joshua Pewarren dot com. That's me. You're listening to Strange
Things on the iHeartRadio and Coast to Coast AM Paranormal

(12:55):
Podcast Network, and I will be right back. M H.

Speaker 3 (13:09):
Don't go anywhere.

Speaker 5 (13:10):
There's more Joshua pee Warren and Strange Things coming right up.

Speaker 3 (13:20):
M H.

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Hey the Coast to Coast to Coast to Coast AAM
dot com for more information.

Speaker 2 (13:32):
Hi, this is George Norian.

Speaker 1 (13:34):
You're listening to the new iHeartRadio on Coast to Coast
DATAM Paranormal Podcast Network.

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Now let's get back to strange Things with Joshua P.

Speaker 4 (13:41):
Warren.

Speaker 6 (13:43):
Mm hm.

Speaker 2 (14:08):
Welcome back to Strange Things on the iHeartRadio and Coast
to Coast AM Paranormal Podcast Network. I am your host,
the Wizard of Weird, JOSHUAA. P. Lauren, beaming into your
wormhole brain from my studio in Sin City, Las Vegas, Nevada,
where every day is golden and every night is silver

(14:31):
Gietato Zume. Yes, the Great Einstein died in nineteen fifty five,
aged seventy six, from a ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm. Now
I look that up for you, because that I was
never good at anatomy, which is why I went out

(14:54):
a while back and bought this big, thick, hardback anatomy
book that medical students have to use in college. It
costs hundreds of dollars and it has the transparent pages
where you can overlay the different body parts and it's

(15:15):
like slices of the body anyway, So obviously this is
this is not good. The the A order is uh, well,
let's see here. It says, this is a life threatening
condition that occurs when the A orda tears and blood
leaks out. The A order is the body's largest blood vessel,

(15:39):
carrying oxygenated blood from the heart to the rest of
the body. So when that thing pops or starts leaking,
I mean, yeah, you're you're in real trouble. And Einstein
he knew that he was about to die. Uh and
in in fact, they told him we need to do

(16:03):
emergency surgery on you immediately, and we might be able
to save you. Einstein refused the surgery, saying, I want
to go when I want to go. It's tasteless to
prolonged life artificially. I have done my share. It is
time to go. I will do it elegantly. Well, I

(16:25):
understand that, very well, said. He also, of course, had
apparently made it somewhat clear that he wanted to have
his body cremated. He didn't want his body to be
idolized and worshiped in some way. Well, he died. I
think it was like maybe one in the morning. I

(16:46):
can't remember exactly, but there was a nurse there and
she heard his last words. And when I was young,
I read this book, this bio of his life, and
they said that it was very frust frustrating because his
last words were in German and the nurse did not
speak German, and so we'll never know what his last

(17:09):
words were for sure. However, since then, I've read about
other researchers who claimed that they were able to get
a sense of what they thought he was saying, and
that I don't know how all this works out, but basically,
if he did say something, they say that it probably
was similar to I am at the mercy of fate

(17:32):
and have no control over it. That's what they claim.
So we'll never know again what his last words were.
But anyway, he passed away there in Princeton. And then
and just several hours later. The pathologist who was working
there was named Thomas Harvey, doctor Thomas Harvey, and so

(17:58):
several hours later he started the autopsy, and it was
just him in the room with the body of Albert Einstein.
He removed Einstein's brain, he removed Einstein's eyeballs. Said the
brain weighed one two hundred and thirty grams, and I

(18:20):
did the conversion on that for you. That's two point
seven pounds. I don't know if that's that's probably normal.
Let's see what is the weight of a normal brain.
I guess human brain. Okay, approximately three pounds, all right,
so nothing too special about that. But you see, here's

(18:45):
the thing. When doctor Harvey took Einstein's brain out, and
of course he just cut the top of the skull off.
When he pulled the brain out, he was just overcome
with this almost spiritual experience. He could not believe that
he was holding in his hands the greatest brain of

(19:06):
our time. And he immediately thought, if we could study
this brain properly, then perhaps we could we could find
some magic physiological key inside here that would be our
doorway to genius. We would understand what the key to

(19:26):
genius is, and maybe we could somehow make geniuses out
of ourselves. And I understand that. I mean, I think
almost anybody would have that filling. But he was so
overcome by this that he did something where he crossed
the line of ethics and some even say law. He
knew that he was not supposed to take that brain,

(19:50):
and apparently the idea was that the body was going
to remain intact and be cremated, but there was not
a lot of legal consistency consisten consensus on that. So
here anyway, here's what he did. He put the thing
in his lunch box and he drove home with it,
and he walked in and said, honey, you're never gonna

(20:12):
believe what I got. And the next thing you know,
he has this brain and basically a giant I think
it was first like a big mayonnaise jar, and then
later it became a big mason jar. And as soon
as word got out that he had done this, oh
my gosh, you can imagine a lot hit the fan

(20:33):
because their family members were freaking out. His employers were
freaking out. I'm sure they were contacting law enforcement, but
there was some lack of clarity over I mean, because
this was the doctor doing the autopsy, and anyway, it
became very cloudy. And regardless, Harvey said, I'm not giving

(20:57):
this brain up. I'm protecting this I am now the
custode of this brain. And he ended up getting some
advice from a colleague and he injected these chemicals and
soaked it and all this stuff that actually did a
decent job of preserving it. He lost his job over this.
Everybody's trying to figure out how to get this brain back,

(21:20):
and he becomes so obsessed with it that his wife
finally gets fed up and his wife divorces him. He says, fine,
he takes this brain and he slices it into two
hundred and forty blocks. And his idea was that he
would travel around the United States and see if he

(21:42):
could give blocks to certain people and see if they
could study these pieces of the brain and figure out
you know what happened. So he bounced from institution to
institution to finally he lost his medical license, and I
mean he drove around the country with this with Einstein's
brain for like twenty years, and eventually he ended up
getting a job, and I think at plastic factory, nobody

(22:05):
even knew at a certain point where he was or
what had happened to the brain. For a while, it
was kind of a mystery, like where did this guy
run off to with Einstein's brain. Well, eventually, like I say,
after about twenty years, long story short, there was a
journalist who tracked it down and found that for all
these years of the specimens had been preserved an alcohol

(22:29):
and two large Mason jars inside of a cider box.
And I mean this thing had been driven across many
states and all the way into Canada, and finally, in
twenty ten, Harvey's Airs. From what I understand, they took
all of these remains and they sent them to the

(22:52):
National Museum of Health and Medicine, including photographs of the
whole brain prior to the sectioning that had never been
revealed with public, and so various scientists were able to
start studying these pieces of the brain, and forty six

(23:12):
of those portions were acquired by the Motor Museum. And
that's where I got to see them, these slices of
Einstein's brain. All right, quite a crazy story, huh. Well,
so what happened when these scientists started studying it? Because
Harvey was not a neuroscientist and he wasn't capable of

(23:35):
really looking at this thing and deducing anything for himself.
So when the real neuroscientists at these big institutions got
ahold of these pieces and they started looking at it,
they said, you know what, there actually is something different
about Einstein's brain. He does have something, at least one
thing that the rest of us don't have. He has

(23:57):
more of these cells in his brain than we do.
They're called glial cells. That's spelled g l ia L
and I think this was first discovered by a University
of California, Berkeley professor, and he said that these glial cells,

(24:19):
they used to be thought of as not very important
because they don't produce a lot of electrical activity. But
what they do do is they nourish the cells that
produce electrical activity. They provide support and nutrition in the brain.

(24:39):
They play a key role in the transmission of these
signals and are basically the other integral component of the
brain besides the neurons, and Einstein's brain had more glial
cells relative to neurons in all the areas studied. I

(25:01):
mean we're talking at least three or four times as
many of these cells as you or I would have
in our brain. Now, when we come back, I'm going
to tell you a little bit more specifically what that
may mean about how Einstein's brain worked. But then I'm

(25:22):
going to get into this experiment that I want all
of us to do, seeing if we can tap into
the power of Einstein's brain and these extra little cells
using radionics. Anybody can do it. It won't cost you

(25:44):
a penny. You'll hear about it in a minute. I'm
Joshua P. Warren. You're listening to Strange Things on the
iHeartRadio and Coast to Coast AM Paranormal podcast Network, and
I'll be back after these important messages. Don't go anywhere.

(26:05):
There's more strange things coming right up.

Speaker 6 (26:11):
Before the Art Belvault has classic audio waiting for you.
Now go to Coast to Coasta m dot com forward details.

Speaker 2 (26:31):
And we're back with Strange Things and Joshua P.

Speaker 5 (26:34):
Warren, we welcome back to Strange Things on the iHeartRadio

(27:05):
and Coast to Coast AM Paranormal Podcast Network.

Speaker 2 (27:10):
I'm your host, Joshua P. Warren, and this is the
show where the unusual becomes usual. You know, Albert Einstein
learned to speak very slowly. They say that he wasn't
really talking until he was about three to four years old,
but he then still would only kind of whisper. He

(27:33):
wasn't talking like a normal kid up until age seven.
When he was around five years old, his father gave
him a compass as a gift, and that was when
some kind of well, light bulb went off, because when
five year old Einstein saw that that needle was being

(27:56):
affected by some kind of greater invisible force, then he
was hooked on trying to understand how the universe in
reality is all connected by that invisible force. And when
we consider that he had more of these glill cells,

(28:20):
it's it's a question of chicken or the egg. Was
this guy sort of like an athlete who kept training
his brain so intensely throughout his life that he developed
these extra cells in order to support the neurons, or

(28:40):
was he born with more of these glill cells which
gave him a genetic advantage in order to mold himself
into this great genius. We'll never know, but sure enough
they say that all around his brain you had different ratios.
In some areas it's you know, at least seventy three

(29:01):
percent more. It varies around the parts of the brain.
But here's what's especially impressive is that around the part
he had he had the most of these glill cells.
Around the part of the brain that is associated with visualization,

(29:22):
you know, the I guess the I'm not sure if
it's the visual cortex. I can't remember. Again, I'm not
good at anatomy. But there's this part of the brain
that lights up when you start visualizing things, you can
imagine things, and that was where he had most of
this pact, most of these extra cells. And it makes
perfect sense because Einstein always said that he would solve

(29:42):
problems by trying to visualize them and in a more
tangible way. So, for example, he said that he was
able to understand what it means to discuss the speed
of light because he would visualize himself sitting on on
a beam of light and riding it through space. Or

(30:04):
if he was talking about the theory of relativity, then
he was able to make sense of that by envisioning
two trains side by side on parallel tracks, moving at
the same rate of speed and seeming like they are
still to one another, and then one pulling ahead of
the other, and then the other pulling ahead, and the

(30:27):
relationship between the two. He would always visualize these things,
and then I think the math probably came later. He
would probably see the vision, and then this guy would
spend months, sometimes in isolation, hardly eating, trying to get
the math down. Pet Well, regardless of what's going on here,

(30:49):
Einstein's brain is a very special thing. And when I
saw his brain, parts of his brain, there are these
slices in the moonor museum, I thought to myself, well,
how interesting it was just to look at the sheer
design of this man's brain that's different than everybody else's.

(31:09):
And recently I started thinking about that again because I'm
about to go back to Philadelphia next year. But now
I've done so much more work in the past ten
years with sigils and radionics and psionics. I made a
lot of advances. You know that, and you know radionics.

(31:30):
It just really indicates that images represent patterns of energy
and information that transcend space and time. For lack of
a better word, Symbols act like antennas that transmit the
power of what they represent. This is why we have

(31:55):
flags and badges and low goes, et cetera. What if
we looked at Einstein's brain as a radionic sigil instead
of slicing it up and just looking at it under
a microscope? What if those of us who practice these

(32:17):
types of energy manifestation techniques, what if we what if
we look at the brain as an artistic form and
you see, it can easily be a sigil. Sigils could
be made of a brain and these types of cells.

(32:40):
And if you were exposed to that, would would it
bring you more wisdom? Would it make you somehow smarter,
more intelligent, perhaps even wiser. Now I have to pause
here and say, how smart do you want to be?
I remember when I was taking philosophy in college. My
professor said, had you rather be a rest Abraham Lincoln

(33:02):
or a happy pig? And I had to think a
lot about that, and I'm still not exactly sure what
I would pick. I probably would pick the happy pig, frankly.
But on the other hand, you have the story, like
I was telling you on a recent podcast, about Solomon
in the Bible and Solomon, you know, King Solomon was

(33:23):
visited by God and God said, I'll give you anything
that you want. Just tell me the one thing that
you want. And he said he wanted to be wise,
he wanted to be smart. And God said that was
the right answer, and he said, because you did not
wish for superficial things, more money or whatever. Because of that,

(33:44):
I'm going to make you the smartest man who's ever lived.
And because you're smart, you will be able to attain
all those other things. And so, sure enough he became smart,
and then he got all the riches of the world
and became the most powerful king ever. And so that
was maybe, if you're very smart, then that gives you

(34:07):
an opportunity to figure out how to make yourself happy,
how to solve your problems, because you know, I've always
felt like, if you have a problem, whatever it is,
no matter if it's a relationship problem or an employment problem,
or a health problem, a mental problem, whatever you your
problem is. If you go out there and you try

(34:30):
to find help and everybody says, I'm sorry, there's no
help for you, well, then your last resort is to
see if you can somehow attain the wisdom to solve
that problem for yourself. It goes back to the whole
idea that God helps those who help themselves. So maybe
being smarter is not just a bad thing that has

(34:52):
to make you necessarily depressed. You can use that however
you want, whatever, to do, whatever you feel it's important. Einstein,
he seemed pretty happy, and he went through some very
rough times in World War two. I'm sure he had
a lot weighing on his mind with his work regarding
nuclear physics and the atomic bomb, but he seemed to
enjoy himself. He laughed a lot, he had a good

(35:13):
sense of humor. He played the violin. All right, So
here is what here's what I propose we do if
you want to participate in this. I took an actual
photograph of Einstein's brain, one of these that was kept
away from the public for a long time, and I

(35:34):
turned it into a sigil. If you go right now
to thesigil lab dot com. Sigil is spelled s I
G I l vsigil lab dot com. Scroll down, and
by the way, as I record this, we are accepting
requests today if you would like to get a personalized

(35:56):
sigil just made just for you. But aside from that,
and I hope you will aside from that, scroll down
and you will see a brand new section called Sigil
of Einstein's Brain and boom, there it is. You can
look at this. And I created this myself directly from
an image of the great Doctor Einstein's brain. And then

(36:20):
I created a second sigil which is below that, and
it is a sigil of glile cells. There are I
think three or four different types of glial cells, and
I have represented each one of these types of cells
for you as a sigil. So here's what you do
if you want to see if this gives you a

(36:41):
boost of wisdom and intelligence that you can use to
make your life better. The most basic way to use these,
of course, is to just experiment for a while by
saving it to your phone and looking at it as
often as possible, or saving it to your computer or
your tab or whatever looking at it as often as possible.
Or you can print it out and put it somewhere

(37:03):
where you will see it as often as possible throughout
the day, like your refrigerator, your steering will, your bathroom mirror.
Just being exposed to either one of these, that's the experiment.
Is this going to help you? Are you going to
start becoming smarter? Are you going to realize things you
didn't realize? Are you going to be able to solve
problems you couldn't solve. But if you are a person
who uses manifestation tools, put this on the input plate

(37:26):
of your wishing machine. Put this thing on your miraculous
prayer board, h put this down on your master manifestor
kit or your crystal shamangrid. Put this in the center
of that thing that you're using right now to manifest
with and let's just see what happens. Thesigil lab dot com.

(37:49):
And you know, this is a guy who was a
master of the concept of time, space time. Might you
even be able to somehow get his visualization, be able
to look back in time, maybe look into the future,
give you some advantage that way, you know what we
come back, I want to tell you something else, really

(38:11):
bizarrow about the perception of time. And then also I
started wondering recently as I was thinking more about this,
you always hear people talking about father time. Who is
father Time? Where did that come from? What's the story

(38:31):
behind father time? All that and more? When we come
back I'm Joshua Pee Warren. You're listening to Strange Things
on the iHeartRadio and Coast to Coast AM Paranormal podcast Network,
and I will be right back.

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Speaker 2 (40:23):
And now back to the iHeartRadio and Cost to cost
AM Paranormal Podcast Network and Strange Things. Welcome back to

(40:56):
the final segment of this edition of Strange Things on
the iHeartRadio and Coast to Coast AM Paranormal Podcast Network.
I am your host, Joshua P. Warren. And the more
I think about it, the more perfect I think this
experiment may be. Because Einstein, of course, was the person

(41:23):
who popularized non locality, that is, spooky action at a distance,
the idea that two things can be connected in a
physical way even though there may be an infinite amount
of distance between them, and so that is really exactly

(41:44):
what also fundamental radionics and psionics is about the idea
that your brain is a point of consciousness and it
is capable of directly tapping into or connecting with any
other thing in the universe if you go about it
the right way. So if we were going to experiment

(42:05):
with the brain of Albert Einstein, then it doesn't matter
if you literally have his brain physically sitting there in
front of you. He would be the first to tell
you perhaps that through non locality spooky action at a distance,
having a visualization a sigil of that brain and the

(42:27):
types of cells within it, maybe just as good, if
not more powerful, than literally being in the presence of
that thing. You're tapping into an energy and information pattern.
That's the key, and it really nicely ties in and
to his work in dovetails with everything. Here's something else

(42:49):
that's kind of interesting. Einstein slept at least ten hours
a night, plus took regular daytime naps. And this is
all most one and a half times as much as
the average American today who sleeps about six point eight
hours per night, and apparently a lot of other great

(43:12):
achievers and inventors and thinkers did. They also slept a
long time. Let's see here said two. I don't know anyway,
I won't go down the list of how long everybody slept,
But anyway, you might consider if you do this experiment,

(43:33):
taking the sigil and putting it on your headboard of
your bed, or putting on the ceiling over your head
while you're asleep, or under your pillow, or you know,
in some position like that, so that maybe subconsciously it's
affecting you as you sleep as well. It might be
a particularly powerful tool for doing that, and maybe it'll

(43:56):
even bring you some solace in your sleep. I don't know,
but when I think about time and the mystery of time,
I'll tell you this. First off, my friend Jason Saracci
contacted me recently and he said, have you heard about
this guy named Michael Siffrey? And I suppose I'm pronouncing

(44:19):
his name correctly. He just died this year in twenty
twenty four, at age eighty five. He was a French
underground explorer, adventurer, and scientist, and he has a lot
of achievements. He had a lot of achievements, but one
of the things that really makes him stand out is that,
especially during the nineteen sixties and seventies, he produced these

(44:43):
really elaborate experiments where he all by himself would go
down into a cave, hundreds of feet down into a
cave and stay there for months, never ever exiting. So
that he would have no cues whatsoever as to what

(45:06):
was happening in the outside world. And every once in
a while, at least what he thought was like once
a day, he was able to call in I guess
he had a cable or some kind of line run
he was able to communicate with a research team and
give them some data about like how he was feeling

(45:29):
and what he was thinking, and how much time that
he thought was passing by. And of course they would
never tell him what their version of time passing was,
and he was just seeing what kind of a rhythm
he naturally fell into. And a lot of weird stuff
happened to this guy. But one of the things that's

(45:51):
especially outstanding is that he did this. I think if
he did this in Europe, he also did this in Texas,
and he would get into a forty eight hour cycle.
Now he had no idea what kind of cycle he
was on. That's why he would just call in to
his team and they would make note of it and
they'd figure that out. So when the experiment was all done,

(46:13):
he would come out and he discovered that instead of
having like a twenty four hour cycle that the rest
of us are on with the sun going up and down.
He ended up on a forty eight hour cycle, so
he would have thirty six hours of continuous wakefulness and
then he would sleep for twelve hours. Now why is that,

(46:36):
I don't know. He said that there were other people
that he had do this experiment, and they also got
into this forty eight hour cycle. And then they also
they would when he would call in and have a
phone call, and at the end of the call, they
would say, well, how long do you think this call
has been? And he would say two minutes. It turns

(46:58):
out the call was five minutes, so it almost seemed
like that the call was I guess that from his
point of view, time was speeding up. Is that right?
And that's also interesting to me because that when I
have been into places that are considered vortex is, I've
noticed that. You know, I've been working on broadcasting for decades,

(47:20):
and I'm pretty good about timing stuff. I mean, if
you tell me, Josh, do a thirty second commercial without
looking at a clock, I'll probably get it pretty close
to thirty seconds. But all that changed when I moved
to Puerto Rico in the middle of the Bermuda Triangle.
My timing got off. Everything seemed to slow down when
I was there, and now, of course that's a vortex,

(47:42):
and now here I am, and then of that a triangle,
which is another vortex here in Las Vegas, and the
opposite has happened here. Time seems to speed up. And
there are pros and cons either way. But we're why
is this? I don't know. It has to do with
you know, time is a flexible and your perception of
time is a flexible thing. And it got me thinking

(48:03):
about this figure that you hear about Father Time. Where
did that come from? Well, here's what I've been able
to find. Father Time is a personification of time. In
recent centuries. He is usually depicted as an elderly bearded man,
sometimes with wings, dressed in a robe and carrying a

(48:23):
scythe and an hour glass or some other time keeping
device as an image. Father Time's origins are curious and
somewhat unknown. The ancient Greeks themselves begin to associate Chronos,
their word for time, with the god Kronos, who had
a harvester's sickle. The Romans equated Cronos with Saturn, who

(48:49):
also had a sickle and was treated as an old man.
Often with a crutch. The wings and hourglass were early
Renaissance editions, and he eventually became a companion of the
Grim Reaper, often taking his scythe He may have as
an attribute a snake with its tail in its mouth,
an ancient Egyptian symbol of eternity that are aboros like

(49:13):
the hoop snake. Of course, around New Year's Eve, the
media often uses the trope of Father Time as the
personification of the Old Year, who typically hands over the
duties of time to the allegorical baby New Year. And
in these depictions, Father Time is usually depicted wearing a

(49:34):
sash with the old year's date on it. That's about
all we know. We think it has something to do
with how that the Greeks and the Romans associated time,
starting with cronos with this image of an old man
saturn and all that. It's one of those odd things
that just kind of fell into place over time. So

(49:57):
if you've ever wondered, well, there you go, speaking of time.
I think we have enough time for me to squeeze
in a short email from a listener, because I told
you that I just mentioned the Nevada Triangle. The Nevada
Triangle goes from Las Vegas up to Reno, Nevada, and
then over to Fresno, California. And I recently did a

(50:19):
show where I was telling you about the Fresno Nightcrawler
as well, and how I was saying, there's a lot
of weird stuff that's happening there. I'm going to have
to make a trip to Fresno at some point. Here's
the email I got. The guy wants to remain anonymous.
He lives in California. He says, mister Warren, please stay
away from Fresno, California. There is a deadly spore slash

(50:42):
fungus in the dirt that, when disturbed, gets into the
lungs and can kill you. Only people who live there
or have visited there on business over the years are
immune to this stuff. I'm doing my job helping you
to stay out of trouble. Okay, I've never heard that before,

(51:02):
have you. I haven't had time to look more into this,
but if any of you listening know more about that,
shoot me an email. Let me know. Go to Joshuapewarren
dot com. You'll find my email address there on the homepage.
All right, my friends, the clock has Goddess. So now
it is time for you to take a deep breath.

(51:23):
If you can, close your eyes, relax, and let's meditate
on the good fortune tone. That's it for this edition

(51:53):
of the show. Follow me at Joshua pee Warren plus
visit Joshua Pewarren dot com. This sign up for my
free e newsletter to receive a free instant gift, and
check out the cool stuff in the Curiosity Shop all
at Joshua p Warren dot com. I have a fun
one lined up for you next time, I promise, So

(52:15):
please tell all your friends to subscribe to this show
and to always remember the Golden Rule. Thank you for listening,
Thank you for your interest and support. Thank you for
staying curious, and I will talk to you again soon.
You've been listening to Strange Things on the iHeartRadio and

(52:38):
Coast to Coast AM Paranormal Podcast Network.

Speaker 1 (52:50):
Thanks for listening to the iHeartRadio and Coast to Ghost
A and Paranormal Podcast Network. Make sure and check out
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