Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Welcome to the iHeartRadio and Coast to Coast AM paranormal
podcast network. Now get ready for us Strange Things with
Joshua P. Warren.
Speaker 2 (00:13):
Welcome to our podcast. Please be aware the thoughts and
opinions expressed by the host are their thoughts and opinions
only and do not reflect those of iHeartMedia, iHeartRadio, Coast
to Coast AM, employees of premier networks, or their sponsors
and associates. We would like to encourage you to do
(00:34):
your own research and discover the subject matter for yourself.
Speaker 1 (00:56):
Had ready to will be amazed by the Wizard of Weird.
Speaker 3 (01:00):
This is Strange Things Wimen Joshua Warren.
Speaker 1 (01:09):
I am Joshua B. Warren, and each week on this show,
I'll be bringing you brand new my blowing content, news exercises,
and weird experiments you can do at home, and a
lot more. On this edition of the show, listen Earth's
Heartbeat Human Resonances. You may recall that on October thirteenth
(01:38):
of twenty twenty one, the actor William Shatner, most famous
for playing Captain Kirk on Star Trek, flew into outer
space at the age of ninety I think he at
that time was the oldest person to do that, but
some older folks have gone since then. When he returned
(02:01):
to Earth, William Shatner was awe struck, and he said,
when I looked into space, there was no mystery, no
majestic all to behold. All I saw was death. And
(02:22):
that's funny because you wouldn't expect someone to say that.
But I understand. I think exactly what he's saying, and
you might also if you are a person with the
big imagination. What I mean is that one time I
had this experience. I don't know if this was just
(02:44):
an extremely vivid dream or if it was a true
out of body experience. Sometimes it's impossible for me to
tell the difference, but I know I was sleeping and
then all of a sudden I realized I was out
of my body. I was hovering. This has happened to
me more than once, and I've always been a big
fan of Superman. So I went flying. And it's a
(03:06):
very strange feeling. It's not effortless. It takes a little effort,
but I went flying, pass through the roof of my house,
went up into the sky, looked down upon my neighborhood,
flew around the community. It was a lot of fun.
And then at a certain point I turned directly upward.
I looked at the sky and I just started flying
straight up, straight up, straight up, straight up, straight up,
(03:29):
straight up. And at a certain point I stopped and
I looked down, and I was stunned because I saw
the Earth as a big blue ball. I didn't realize
I'd gone that far. And then I looked around me
and all I saw was that absolute black void of space.
(03:51):
And I never felt so alone it was. It was terrifying.
It was a terrifying feeling being out there all by myself,
and so I panicked and snapped back into my body again.
Was that a real experience or my imagination? It doesn't
matter really, because it allowed me to understand when I
(04:13):
think that William Shatner was talking about that when you're
out there in this in space, I mean it's dead space,
and you look down at Earth and Earth is compared
to space, this warm, beautiful, radiant, living thing, and it's
(04:38):
very very easy for all of us to forget that.
Right now, you are on a rock that is swirling
constantly through the darkness of outer space. That's happening to
you right now, and if you always keep that in mind,
it might help you to make decisions about what's important
(05:01):
in life and how you live your life. But if
you take that point of view and you think about
what I just said, that the Earth it operates like
a big living being. And you know, I used to
have well, let's see, I had a friend who used
to say, we people are We're like, we humans on
(05:26):
the Earth are like fleas on a dog and one
day that dog is just going to shake us all off.
And you know, the Earth breathes, it has all the
elements that we have. We're connected to it, we depend
on it, we're extensions of the Earth. So it seems
like that the Earth as almost a living thing with
(05:49):
its own heartbeat, even you know, without getting too technical,
at any given moment, there are about two thousand thunderstorms
all around the globe, so signed to say that every
second there are at least fifty lightning bolts striking the Earth.
(06:16):
And basically what they're doing is they're they're playing the
Earth like a big drum boom boo boom boo, boom
boom bo it alo. It almost reminds me of how that,
you know, if you look at a brain. You have
the synapses and there are these flashes of electricity that
are passing from one cell to the other, and that's
sort of what's happening around the Earth. The Earth is
(06:37):
kind of like a giant brain. And so when all
these lightning bolts are hitting the Earth and they're pounding
the Earth, they produce a beat. And the thing is,
you know, it's not one hundred percent consistent, it's a
(06:57):
little bit erratic. But the frequencies that they produce are
known as the Shuman resonances. In fact, just to be
more specific here, says the Online the Shuman resonances are
a set of spectral peaks in the extremely low frequency
(07:22):
portion of the Earth's electromagnetic field spectrum. Shuman resonances are
global electromagnetic resonances generated and excited by lightning discharges in
the cavity formed by the Earth's surface and the ionosphere.
It says. The phenomenon is named after physicist Winfried Otto Schumann,
(07:46):
who predicted it mathematically in nineteen fifty two. And what's
interesting is that there are a number of these different
kind of outstanding resonances that we can now measure around
the Earth. But there is one that seems to be
sort of well, they call it the fundamental one. There's
one that just stands out, and I don't know if
(08:07):
you could consider this an average mathematically. I'm not an
expert in this field, but there is one human resonance
that is considered like the fundamental one, and that is
seven point eight three hurts. Now, just to give you
a reminder, if you don't remember what a hurtz is,
(08:28):
basically a hurtz is however many beats you get within
one second. So within one second, if I clap my
hands three times, that's three hurts. And of course we
have radio signals that you know, you get millions of
(08:49):
pulses per second, and that's just unimaginable. But apparently if
you look at the Earth as a hole, then every
second there there is this collective resonance, this collective beat
that happens at about seven point eight three hurts, and
that's easy to measure. Everywhere you and I live within
(09:14):
this field. You were born within this field that seven
point eighty three hurts. You're in it right now, you
will live your life in it, and you'll die in it.
And the question becomes, is there something about this frequency
(09:37):
seven point eight three hurts, this fundamental human residence that
is mystical when it comes to producing life energy itself,
because there I've read for years that there are people
who say that, Okay, if Earth is this beacon of life,
(09:58):
and Earth is is producing is emanated by it, I
guess if Earth is producing and emanates this frequency of
seven point eighty three fundamental hurts, is that key to
the life force, the bio energy is the thing that
(10:19):
we're all trying to tap into that we talk about
all the time, that she the key, the prana, the
oregon is that is there a connection there between that frequency?
Because right now, even though you may be bathing in
this invisible pulse of seven point eighty three herts, it's
very weak because it's dispersed all around this giant globe.
(10:44):
So what happens if you take some speaker or something
similar and you play that seven point eight three hurts
close to you so that you get it more strongly.
Is that going to be benefit? Is this going to
help you? Is this going to give you some bio
(11:04):
energy boost? Well? I decided to experiment with this because
people have been saying for years, if you do this.
If you subject yourself to the human residence is seven
point eight three hurts, It's going to make you feel better,
it's going to make you healthier, it's going to give
you energy and clarity and all these things. So when
(11:25):
we come back from this break, I'm going to tell
you about the experiment that I just did. I'm going
to tell you how you can do it. I'm going
to tell you what happened to me, and I even
have kind of a version of the human resonance of
seven point eight three's and I'm going to play for
you that may or may not come through on some
(11:47):
of your speakers. This is a fascinating topic and it
might even be life changing, especially after you hear what's
been happening to me. You know, this is a free podcast,
and if you enjoy it, support it. Go to Joshua
Pewarren dot com click the link to the Curiosity Shop,
(12:08):
And remember I have a limited amount of time here.
I can't talk about everything I want, so sometimes I
only tell you about special surprises. If you subscribe to
my free and spam free e newsletter and if you
go to my website Joshua Pewarren dot com there's no
period after the P. When you type that in, you'll
(12:31):
find on the homepage where you can put your email
address in there. Hit submit takes you two seconds. You'll
instantly get an automated email from me with some free
online goodies. I hope you'll do that right now, if
you haven't already. I am Joshua pe Warren, and you're
listening to Strange Things on the iHeartRadio and Ghost to
Coast am Paranormal podcast Network, and I will be right back.
(13:29):
Welcome back to Strange Things of the iHeartRadio and Coast
to Coast a M Paranormal podcast Network.
Speaker 3 (13:37):
I am your host, the Wizard of Weird, beaming into
your wormhole brain from my studio in Sin City, Las Vegas, Nevada,
where every day is golden and every night is silver.
Speaker 1 (13:48):
A gietato zume, and I must tell you I get
emails from time to time from people who say, what
does agia tato zume mean? And I don't answer that question.
Here's the best I'm going to give you. Agiatato zume
(14:11):
is a magical word that I invented, and if you
want to learn what it's about, go back and listen
to this podcast called Strange Things, episode number one two
four one twenty four. That episode is called a New
Magic Word. There is magic in this world, and there
(14:32):
are many things we cannot explain. You've heard me talk
about the Brown Mountain Lights in western North Carolina. I
have studied the Brown Mountain Lights, oh, since I was
a teenager. And we're talking about this low lying ridge
in the Pisga National Forest where these multi colored balls
(14:52):
of light often appear at night, sort of floating around
the landscape, and nobody has ever been able to really
explain what they are. I've always felt that they were
an electrically oriented phenomenon. You can go back and listen
to me do podcasts about that in detail. But one
night I was up at the Brown Mountain overlook and
(15:14):
I was met by a reporter I guess a writer
for a well known magazine, and she was knowing a
story about the lights, and she was intrigued because she said,
do you know that there is this one place on
Earth that just gets constantly struck by lightning. It's the
(15:34):
most lightning struck place on the planet. I said, no,
I never really heard about that before. She said, yeah,
I just got back from there it's in Venezuela. It's
called the Katatoombo lightning, and she said it's an atmospheric
phenomenon that occurs over and around this lake called Lake
(15:55):
marek Haibo in Venezuela. This is kind of a bog
where the Katatumbo River flows into the lake. Katatumbo means
house of thunder in the local language, and it originates
from a massive storm clouds at an altitude of more
than half a mile. And they say that this occurs
(16:18):
anywhere from one hundred and forty to one hundred and
sixty nights a year, nine hours per day, and the
lightning usually flashes around sixteen to forty times per minute.
So she went down there. She said it was just insane.
She said it was scary as heck, insane, and that
(16:40):
it's not necessarily consistent. She said that, for example, sometimes
it varies year to year. That it ceased a little bit,
I think at twenty ten, and there was a drought
in the area during that year, but nobody knows for
sure what causes it. Was reading about this and says
(17:03):
this Russian researcher Andre Zavrotsky, he studied it and he
suggested that it was due to cold and warm air
currents meeting around the area, which is kind of like duh,
But then he goes on to say the study also
speculated that an isolated calls for the lightning might be
the presence of uranium in the bedrock. That's interesting. I
(17:25):
don't know exactly how that connects. And then there were
some studies done in between nineteen ninety seven and two
thousand saying that methane produced by the swamps were part
of the phenomenon. So, you know, so there are all
these different theories, but nobody knows for sure. That would
be a heck of a place to go visit, you know.
(17:46):
I guess I'll look up a YouTube video and watch
it about that. But you know, there's a lot of
mystery about how lightning behaves and how it affects us.
I mean, if you've ever read, for example, like Ripley's
Believe It or Not, or maybe the Guinness Book of
World Records, you've probably heard about this guy named Roy Sullivan,
(18:08):
and apparently, according to Guinness Book, he was struck by
lightning more than anybody else in history, in authentic history.
Let's see, he was born in nineteen twelve, died in
nineteen eighty three. He was an American park ranger in
Shenandoah National Park in Virginia, and between nineteen forty two
(18:33):
and nineteen seventy seven, he was claimed to have been
struck by lightning on seven occasions, surviving all of them.
For this reason, he gained the nickname the human Lightning
Conductor or the human Lightning Rod, and he is recognized
by Guinness Book because they said that each time that
(18:56):
this happened, it was documented by the superintendent of the
Shenandoah National Park. Sullivan's wife was also struck once when
a storm suddenly arrived as she was out hanging clothes
in their backyard. Her husband was helping her at the time,
(19:17):
but escaped unharmed. And so this guy gets struck, Like,
the odds of this are you are unimaginable. I don't
know if you ever played the latto or not, but
if I know, if I were him, I would at
least go to Vegas for a week and see what happened.
And you might say, well, how did he die? You know? Well,
(19:41):
in nineteen eighty three, he was seventy one, and he
died from a self inflicted gunshot. Wound to the head.
So I wonder if that had to do with the
trauma that he experienced after all these years of being
struck by lightning. Nobody can explain how he survived. Two
(20:03):
of his Ranger hats are on display at Guinness exhibits
in New York City and South Carolina. I'm looking at
a picture of him wearing one of those hats right
now with the big black scorch mark. It's terrible to
you know, to chuckle about that, But I mean, I
don't know. It's just I guess it's like the old
days where it's you think of the person who has
(20:26):
bad luck and the rain cloud just follows them in
the comic strips. Very very weird. But anyway, let's get
back to how lightning creates this human residence. So I
told you that all all life evolved in this field,
(20:51):
which is created in part by all of these lightning
strikes pounding the earth. And so you are, you are
within that field right now, but it's kind of weak.
So if you focus this field on yourself, is it
(21:11):
going to do something beneficial for you? And so I've
been reading about all these things that people say, well
happen good things if you just listen to the human
resonence through headphones or even play it on a big
speaker next to your bed while you sleep. So here's
(21:32):
just a rundown of some of the things that people
say will happen. One enhanced mental clarity and focus. Second
is stress reduction and relaxation. Third is improved sleep quality.
Fourth is physical healing and well being, cellular regeneration, et cetera,
(21:57):
boosting the immune system. Uh, spiritual connection and intuition, you know,
resonating with the Earth's heartbeat, connecting to the universe. Uh,
protection from electromagnetic pollution. Okay, Uh, emotional balance and mood improvement. Uh.
(22:19):
So you know, these are all things that are a
little bit vague, but they all sound good. And of course,
you know there's skepticism of you know, obviously this is
kind of a mystical concept. But studies on brave wave
synchronization like by neural beats do you know, show potential
for relaxation. So anyway, I said, well, heck, I'm gonna
(22:44):
try this out. And see, here's the thing about there
are there are different ways you can go about this.
So I figured what I would do is I would
just go ahead, and I would get one of my
favorite speakers, and I would just put it near my
bed and hook it into a computer that's playing a
(23:10):
tone that's seven point three eight hurts and just leave
it there there while I was sleeping. Now, you have
to understand something. Human ears cannot really hear something that low.
The typical human can hear twenty hurts up to twenty
thousand herts. So, in other words, if something is pulsing
(23:33):
twenty times per second, then that triggers the human ear,
or up to twenty thousand times per second, that triggers
the human ear. But you can't really hear something per
se that's seven point three eight hurts. So it's not
like if you play this next to your bed, it's
going to be some noise that's keeping you awake all night.
(23:55):
But nonetheless, that vibration should be moving through the room.
So I I have this boom box and I'm just
and I'm just going to tell you what I did.
There's no strict guideline on how to do this. I
have a and I'm not being paid to promote anything.
This is a JBL boom box two. I like this
speaker so much. I have two of them. They cost
(24:18):
about four hundred dollars and they are they have a
very very powerful base, and I knew that that was
going to possibly be you know, important for playing something
like this at seven point three eight hurts. We got
to take a break. When we come back, I'm going
to tell you what happened when I slept with this playing.
(24:42):
And then also I do have some audio that I'm
going to play for you that will maybe give you
an idea of what the Shuman. The seven point three
eight hurts Shuman resonance might kind of sound like if
you could hear it through normal speakers, and maybe you'll
(25:04):
even get something out of this when I play it
for you. I'm Joshua P. Warren, and you're listening to
Strange Things on the iHeart Radio and Coast to Coast
a M Paranormal podcast Network. I'll be back after these
important messages. Welcome back to Strange Things on the iHeart
(26:00):
Radio and Coast to Coast AM Paranormal Podcast Network. I'm
your host, Joshua pe Warren, and this is the show
where the unusual becomes usual. Like I said, you can't
you can't hear something that's seven point three eight herts
(26:21):
per se, so you may never know exactly what the
Shuman residence sounds like. But I came up with a plan.
As I mentioned, humans can hear between twenty and twenty
thousand herts. So I decided that I would take that
seven point three eight herts just for this show as
(26:44):
an example, and I would I would bump it up
to I would increase the frequency by ten times up
to seventy three point eight. So just scale it up
within the human hearing range so that you can hear
(27:04):
an example of some kind of an example of it.
So again I took a frequency that seven point three
eight hurtz bumped it up by ten times to seventy
three point eight. So I'm going to play this clip
for you right now. And so this is not the
human resonence, but again this gives you an idea of
what it would sound like. This is a twenty second clip,
(27:28):
and it might not work for all of you even
at this frequency seventy three point eight. It depends on
how you're listening, if your speakers can handle this properly,
if you have headphones, earbuds, I don't know, But even
if you don't hear anything, I'll be back in twenty seconds,
all right, So all right here it is all right.
(28:10):
So maybe if you can hear that, or maybe if
you even couldn't hear it, maybe you got something out
of that. Maybe that did something for you, just some
kind of a representation of the fundamental Shoeman resondence. But regardless, Okay,
let's get back to what I actually did. I took
this JBL speaker and well, like I say, it's got
(28:33):
great base on it, and I actually you can go
online and just do a search for like online tone generator,
and you can find different options where you can punch
in a frequency and hit a button. And as long
as you plug your speaker directly into to your computer
or I guess you can bluetooth it nowadays. You know,
(28:54):
I'm old session. As long as you can connect them,
then you can play that frequency through your speaker. But
also you can go onto Amazon. I did this, and
they will sell these little tone generators. One of them
is actually called a human resonator or something along those lines.
But it doesn't matter how you do it, as long
(29:14):
as you get some kind of an electronic device that
will produce seven point three eight herts. So you get
that connected to your speaker, and you know, you pump
up the volume. So I decided to put the speaker
at the foot of my bed, and when I turned
it on just before I went to bed, I actually
could hear a little bit of kind of electronic noise,
(29:40):
something like that, almost a little bit of a dolphin sounds,
but nothing at all that would be annoying. So I
went to sleep and the first thing that happened was
I craped my pants. And no, I'm I'm joking. I'm
(30:03):
joking about that side note Nikola Tesla. Nikola Tesla actually
claimed that he did create a frequency that could make
that happen. And I'm sure you've heard of the brown note,
and you know, I looked it up the other day
(30:23):
to see, like, what's the latest science on that, the
brown note, And I'm searching it right now, and basically,
let's see Tesla's brown note. I think what I found
was that, like supposedly, MythBusters and shows like that had
tried to recreate this phenomenon and they had not succeeded,
(30:46):
but they gotten close. But anyway, I slept very well,
and what surprised me. What surprised me is that I
woke up after about five hours, and I usually sleep
(31:07):
at least eight, sometimes a lot more, and I felt
like I had slept a full eight hours. And I'm
telling you the truth. I actually did feel refreshed. And
you know, I'm forty eight, so I'm no spring chicken.
I do have physical ailments that I deal with from
time to time. And I actually felt surprisingly good, surprisingly good,
(31:33):
and so but I decided to go back to sleep
and try to finish out my normal, like eight hour thing.
And but when I woke up after a few more hours,
I felt just a little bit nauseated. Now that could
have had something to do with the whiskey I was
drinking the night before, But nonetheless, I was surprised, like
(31:56):
it almost seems like that that maybe if you're exposed
to it for the right amount of time, it might
be beneficial for you, but you don't want to go overboard.
So I thought, Okay, there might be something to this,
and I decided to wait a couple of days and
then repeat it. So a couple of days later, I
(32:16):
did it again, and once again, the same exact thing happened.
After about five hours, I woke up, I felt very refreshed.
I felt physically good, and at that point I didn't
even want to go back to sleep again. So I
(32:37):
cut my eight hour sleep time down to five hours
and felt better and more refreshed, and physically I felt better. Now, look,
I'm not trying to sell you a product. I don't
have an interest in this financially or anything like that.
I'm just telling you this is what happened to me. Now,
I don't know if this is what would happen to you.
(33:01):
Maybe it would hit you the wrong way and you
would just feel you would feel kind of bad. But
I started thinking about, you know why this might work,
And here's how I kind of imagine it. What if
you physically your body, What if you are kind of
like a sand castle that's been packed into a form.
(33:24):
And that makes sense because you're always shape shifting as
you get older, your body's always changing. So what if
you are like a sand castle, and over time your
body erodes and these frequencies, these human resonances, the fundamental
frequency of earth. Here, it shakes all that up again
(33:46):
while you're sleeping and kind of freeze up the particles
so they get nice and fluid and they start bouncing
around and they can return to a more natural, clean state,
literally a kind of sympathetic resonance. It's like cleaning the
etches sketch, you know, shaking up all the madness into
(34:11):
a nice, clean slate again, and it gives you kind
of a physical reboot. I mean, this is what I
think might be happening. And after having done this two
times in the past five days, I am thinking that
I might do this every night. Maybe that's a bad thing.
(34:34):
Maybe you can overdo it as well. That's why you know,
I have to experiment. Maybe you know every other night
is a good thing. I don't know, but all I
can tell you is that on this show we talk
about experiments that I do and things that you can
do at home, and I've told you how I've done this,
and you should try it out for yourself. But I
(34:56):
think that you definitely are going to need a speaker
that's got enough based on on it so that you
feel like when you put something as low as seven
point three herts through it, that it's going to actually
be able to emanate that through your room, even though
you may not hear it. I mean, your body is
absorbing that vibration. We are already up on a break,
(35:17):
and when we come back, I have, well, I have
an update for you on my portal opening experiment out
in the desert. I've got some mental manna for you.
Maybe even time for some listener emails. Sometimes I just
like to talk about useless trivia, like For example, you
ever thought about why why do golf balls have dimples
(35:40):
on them? Right? That's a weird phenomenon, isn't it. Actually,
you know, I'll just go ahead and tell you I
totally miscalculated what I'm doing right now because I played
that tone for you and it messed me up. Okay,
I'll tell you that one, golf balls have dimples to
reduce drag and increase lift, allowing them to travel further
(36:04):
and with more control. Dimples create a turbulent boundary layer
of air that clings to the ball, delaying airflow separation
and reducing the size of the wake behind the ball.
That's interesting, isn't it. This is the kind of stuff
I like, useless trivia like that. But oh yeah, Also,
(36:28):
when we come back for this break, because now we
actually are coming up on a break, in addition to
my portal update, I'm going to tell you what happens
if you go to play the lotto, or let's say
you live near a casino and you're playing something like
Keino or something like that where you pick numbers. What
happens if you go to AI and you say to AI,
(36:53):
calculate all the numbers that are hitting today all around
the world, on all the games of the world, and
tell me what numbers to pick. What happens if you
do that? Well, you know me, I live here in
Las Vegas, so I try I'll try anything at everything.
And so when we come back from the break, I'll
(37:14):
tell you about that, and I'll just squeeze in as
much other crazy stuff as I can, because that's what
the show is all about. It's a distraction making you
think about what's extraordinary, unusual, high strangeness. I'm Joshua pe Warren.
(37:34):
You're listening to Strange Things on the iHeartRadio and Coast
to Coast AM Paranormal Podcast Network, and I'll be right back.
(38:19):
Welcome back to the final segment of this edition of
Strange Things on the iHeartRadio and Coast to Coast AM
Paranormal Podcast Network. I'm your host, Joshua P. Warren, and
you may or may not know that because of how
the system works here with iHeart. Sometimes I have to
(38:42):
record a podcast weeks before it comes out, and in
a few days I am going to finally go out
into the desert with some very close associates and well,
the plan is to finally fire up the prototype of
(39:04):
my portal opening machine. So what that means is by
the time you hear this podcast, that, if all goes well,
should have already happened. So that also means that on
the next show I should have some kind of an
(39:24):
update for you. I guess if something goes wrong, there
will be a best of. And I swear I'm not
setting this up. This is not to be dramatic for you.
I mean, I'm just telling you honestly that if I
should have an update, and if I if there's a
best of next time around, you'll know that something is up.
(39:50):
And you know we're gonna We're gonna try to open
a portal. We're gonna open the doors, you know. Val
Kilmer he recently passed away, and my wife Lauren and
I we watched The Doors. What a great movie. Val
Kilmer was a really wonderful actor. I loved him as
(40:12):
Doc Holiday and tombstone. But you know, one thing I
thought was kind of funny speaking of mental mana, is
that a lot of people don't realize that. At a
certain point in his life, Val Kilmer decided to go
on the stage and reenact Mark Twain telling jokes. And
(40:36):
I watched a news story about that. And anytime I
find something kind of humorous or interesting, I'll squeeze it
in here to some mental manna. But here's one of
the things that Mark Twain apparently said, at least was
in this Val Kilmer presentation. Imagine Mark Twain there with
his crazy hair, his blushy mustache. He says, when I
was in class, the teacher stood up one day and said,
(41:01):
if you feel like you're an idiot, stand up. And
I stood up. And the teacher said, why did you
stand up? And I said, well, I felt sorry. I
didn't want to see you standing there all alone. I
thought that was funny. Also, living here in Las Vegas,
(41:26):
he said, the difference between praying at church and praying
at the casino is that people in the casino mean it.
That is the truth. I can tell you that is
the truth. And you know, Lauren and I were talking
about how I just have this truly unnatural, paranormal, supernatural
(41:49):
level of luck with gambling. And I think it has
to do with psychic phenomena. And Lauren was saying, you
should have scientists come and study you and document this statistically.
How do you win as often as you do? And
sometimes people ask me, have you gone to AI and
(42:11):
asked for help? And I said, of course, that was
as soon as AI was available. I said, well, let's
just see how smart AI is. AI has got crawlers
all over the all over the world. So I would
go to various AI like Grock and say, what are
the numbers that are most likely to hit? And then
I'd take those numbers and play them. And they've never hit.
(42:37):
Never has AI given me numbers that hit. But I
can go sit down and play numbers that I feel
are going to hit, and very very frequently they hit.
And so I guess that may have some something to
do with the difference between humans and AI, that there's
some instinct that AI is just not able to get.
(43:00):
You can crunch the numbers all you want, but that
maybe at the end of the day, the you know,
the cyborg, I go, I'm more like the robots. The
terminators are not going to just outright takeover. I don't know.
That might give us some hope. How about some listener emails.
I got this one from a lady named Emily. Hello,
(43:26):
mister Warren. I'd like to thank you for your podcasts
and posted content. My family and I are huddled on
generator power with possibly a week or more to wait
for normalcy here in good Heart, northern Michigan. We are
luckier than most. We have more snow and ice to
(43:49):
come tonight. Unfortunately, at night I'm able to get a
cell signal from Wisconsin across Lake Michigan. We're right on
the lake shore, and we can stream your podcasts. We've
been listening as a family for entertainment, to have something
to talk about other than the weather and the lack
of Internet. Kids are hard to please in the digital age.
(44:14):
Our favorite so far is the podcast about George and
the Portal and the carnivorous mollusks, although your reviews of
historic and little known cryptid creatures are also pretty fun.
My girls have been trying to capture Veggieman and others
in drawings without looking up pictures online. Thanks for bringing
(44:38):
some thought provoking entertainment during this rough time. Sincerely, Emily
and family. Wow, see the emails like that make it
all worthwhile. Thank you, Emily. You know it's so funny because,
like she's saying, we get so wrapped up in this
digital age and we forget about the of old fashioned radio,
(45:03):
the days when there was no TV in the evening
people would huddle around this miraculous contraption in the living
room and that they would twist that knob and suddenly
they were connected to the rest of the world. And
often these shows that would create this sense of theater
of the mind. And when reality kicks in and the
(45:29):
power goes out, well, you're kind of like snapping back
to the magic of those days. And I love the
fact that her kids are sitting there listening to these
descriptions of these bizarro creatures and the girls are letting
(45:50):
their imaginations run wild with weird art. I mean, I
guess I need to see some of these drawings. Thank
you for that, Emily. One more email I think I
can squeeze and hear from Frank he is in Canada. Hello,
mister Warren. Thank you very much for all your podcasts.
As I've listened to every single one of them, sometimes
(46:12):
some of them twice. I recently purchased the Wishing Machine,
and let me tell you, not only was it exciting
to get it, it was very exciting to use it.
I've used it a couple of times now after getting it,
and it has worked amazingly well. And let me tell you,
on top of all that, after buying it, I had
a few issues with trying to set it up now
(46:34):
and after emailing doctor Molder, he replied to me within
minutes and he has helped me through everything to make
sure that I was using the machine properly. I just
want to say that the listeners of your podcast should
know that after buying a machine, if they have any
issues with regards to setting it up or using it,
(46:58):
doctor Molder will help you in the way he can.
And he replies to you right away, thank you again,
thank you for listening, and thank you for being you
much appreciated your friend in Canada, Frank, Thank you, Frank.
And you know how many people listen to the show
(47:21):
and enjoy it and and and don't don't take the
time to sit down and write something like that. And
I'm not I'm not encouraging you to do it because
I get enough emails as it is. Trust me, I
can't reply to them all. But I mean I get
tons of emails, but every time I get, you know,
an email like that, uh, it touches me because I
(47:43):
feel like that he represents many, many other people out there,
and I like to share those those thoughts with you
from time to time. All right, well, uh, if I
vanish into the portal, been nice knowing you, uh, and
(48:04):
maybe maybe there will be a way for me to
broadcast you from the other side. So I want all
of you to have positive thoughts for all of us.
We're one big, happy family here. And so if you can,
let's uh, you know, let's if you close your eyes.
(48:26):
If you can't, you don't have to take a deep breath.
Let's all meditate together on trying to make this next
week the best week ever for everybody listening, all connected
non locally through the quantum field. Here is another twenty
second tone for you. It is the one, the only,
(48:47):
the original, the world famous good fortune tone. That's it
(49:17):
for this edition of the show. Follow me at Joshua P.
Warren Plus visit joshuapwarren dot com to 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 Joshuapwarren dot com. I have a fun one
lined up for you next time, I promise. So please
(49:40):
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
(50:03):
Coast to Coast AM Paranormal Podcast Network.
Speaker 2 (50:20):
Well, if you like this episode of Strange Things, wait
till you hear the next one. Thank you for listening
to the iHeartRadio and Coast to Coast AM Paranormal Podcast Network.