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April 16, 2025 • 57 mins

On this episode , Henry Penix, founder of Soaak Technologies, shares his journey from a pastor’s son in Tulsa to a successful entrepreneur focusing on wellness through frequency therapy. Penix discusses his early entrepreneurial ventures, lessons learned from failures, and how he's leveraging technology to aid wellness and mental health globally. His insights on risk-taking, faith, and living one’s dreams offer inspiration and practical advice for aspiring entrepreneurs and individuals seeking personal growth.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
A lot of listeners right on the show. There's some
version of them getting ready to open a preschool. Whatever
that version is, they're scared. What advice do you have
to them about making a move, making a bet on yourself,
taking risk.

Speaker 2 (00:16):
Everything in my life and that my father had taught
me and growing up in the church that that was
supposed to be wrong, you.

Speaker 3 (00:22):
Never do it. So it was.

Speaker 2 (00:25):
It was probably one of the hardest things in my
life to kind of get victory over. Live your dreams,
do do what you know, your your your higher power
puts in your heart to do.

Speaker 3 (00:38):
Nothing is ever a failure.

Speaker 2 (00:40):
You only learn and you use that learning on your
next lesson.

Speaker 1 (00:52):
Today Today on the Sino Show, we are diving deep
dive into the future of wellness and the power of freak.

Speaker 4 (01:00):
Would see intention and.

Speaker 1 (01:02):
Innovation with a man who's not just thinking outside of
the box. This brother is building an entirely new one.
Henry Pennix is the founder of Soap Technology, is a
cutting edge wellness platform using frequency, sound and affirmation to
help people heal, focus, sleep, and show fooling their life.

(01:22):
He's a global entrepreneur, a hearts centered leader, and a
man who's been in the trenches, both in business and life,
from boardrooms to brain waves, Henry's mission is clear. He
wants to help people align with who they really are
and who they're meant to be. Whether you're skeptical, curious,
already on your wellness journey, this conversation might just.

Speaker 4 (01:43):
Rewire something in you. Brother. Welcome to the Sino Show.

Speaker 3 (01:47):
Hey, so you know, I'm so glad to be here.

Speaker 2 (01:48):
I've heard so much about you through a mutual friend,
and I'm excited to get started.

Speaker 4 (01:54):
I'm excited.

Speaker 1 (01:55):
Well, I think we should speaking of somebody on a
high frequency. The Reverend Michael back with mcgappi in his
intimate wisdom, said YouTube, brothers need to talk. And it
was like, whoa, you were kind of make time out
of your ridiculously busy schedule and it's like, oh okay,
and so here we are. But you let's do We'll
be where you came from. You're a son of a pastor.

Speaker 2 (02:18):
Yeah, yeah, I've been called the son of a lot
of things, but yeah, son of a pastor.

Speaker 3 (02:25):
I'm very proud of that.

Speaker 2 (02:27):
I'm from Tulsa, Oklahoma, the Buffle of the Bible Belt.
But it was very difficult growing up being the son
of a pastor and having the energy and the curiosity
that I had.

Speaker 3 (02:39):
So I was always into things.

Speaker 2 (02:41):
I was always you know, testing boundaries and borders, total
polar opposite than my sister, who was perfect and everything that,
everything right, always asks permission, and so there was quite
my mom and dad had a really black and white
experience for two kids that were totally different.

Speaker 4 (03:04):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (03:05):
And if I understood correctly, you had, even at a
young age, quite the entrepreneur mind, quite the work ethic.

Speaker 4 (03:11):
Correct.

Speaker 2 (03:12):
Yeah, I tell people I've never I can't remember ever
not working. So when I was, you know, five six
years old, I would help my dad stacked tires at
a place that he worked, because he would work and pastor.
Most pastors can't make it on a pastor's salary and
raise a family, so he always had a job and

(03:32):
he would pastor and we would stack tires. I got
fired three times before I was seven from that job.

Speaker 3 (03:42):
By my father.

Speaker 2 (03:45):
Had had kind of a reset, and then I went
into Moynyards. I would, you know, mowe yard for twenty
bucks and did that for long enough to save up
money for my first motorcycle fourteen years old, Almaha DT
one five, I was a bad boy yellow got all
the girls on it, took them for a ride, and

(04:09):
uh yeah, just just had a had a great time,
kept saving money for my first car, and just you know,
I always made this relationship of you know, hard work, determination,
finishing things that you start, and then there being a reward.
You know, there's always that thing at the end that
you're you're striving for. You know, without a vision, we perish.

(04:32):
So I always had that vision, always stride toward my
goal and and many times, uh hit it hit the
nail on the head.

Speaker 4 (04:41):
Once you walk me through kind of your life and
how we end up.

Speaker 1 (04:43):
You did a bunch of incredible businesses and how we
we'll get into soak.

Speaker 3 (04:48):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (04:49):
So, so I got to figure out where to start
because there's there's been so many Uh I'll take you
to when I when I got out of college, graduated
University of Oklahoma, I had a business management pre law.
I was going to be an attorney, took the lsat
past it, and then found out that I was going

(05:10):
to have a family, start my family a lot sooner
than I thought, So I went ahead and kind of
switch gears a little bit. I worked for a clothing
store for a while because I was going to build
my wardrobe and uh, you know, be ready for a
fortune five hundred job. You know, that was the that

(05:32):
was the path. You go to college, you get dressed,
you you get it, you know, a good job. I
had high aspirations, and so I kind of did that.

Speaker 3 (05:42):
I I got the job at the clothing store.

Speaker 2 (05:45):
There was a women's section, so when I was done
selling suits, I would, you know, get to look at
the women's section, see what they were doing and all that.
And one day the owner came to me and he said, hey,
would you like to now see you know, I don't
know if I've filled this story on a podcast, and
I don't even know why I'm going down this road.

Speaker 3 (06:03):
So go I got an exclusive.

Speaker 4 (06:04):
I love it.

Speaker 2 (06:05):
So everything will will matter in the end when you
see kind of where this path took me. I believe
our footsteps are ordered for sure. Even the bad ones,
you know, sometimes they'll teach us things. And I know
you're amazing past, but yeah, I've had that attitude all
my life that even the bad ones are going to
teach us something we could learn from and prepare us

(06:25):
for the next thing that God has for us. So
so yeah, so I was. I was over in the
women's like makeup section. The owner of the company came
and he goes, we're gonna have this this makeup line
called Ernold Laslow. It's like this exclusive thing. Only Miss
Jackson's had it, and this store was going to get it.
And they were super excited. And instead of letting the

(06:46):
women that had been there for twenty years represent this line,
they wanted this twenty three year old guy to go
rep and draw in the girls to show how beautiful
they see.

Speaker 3 (06:58):
You know, they taught me how to put on makeup
on women. There. There was I'll never forget the name.

Speaker 2 (07:03):
It was a shn you color line, and I would
do women's eyes and tell.

Speaker 4 (07:08):
Them how much I love it.

Speaker 3 (07:11):
Dude.

Speaker 2 (07:12):
It was like totally opposite of what I thought I
was going to start doing.

Speaker 3 (07:17):
But again, you know, all things work together for the goods.
So so I got it.

Speaker 2 (07:20):
I finally got my job, graduated out of that, got
my job with a Fortune one fifty Corporation, the Pitney
Bows Corporation. They make the little indises on the postage
on the envelope when we used to mail letters that
instead of putting a stamp on you would just get
this in Dysha and we had about eighty percent of
the market. Globally, they were doing about three and a

(07:42):
half four billion a year. I wrote in the top
one percent of the company. They sent me to Hawaii
on this leadership thing and they said, you did so
well in Tulsa, we'd like for you to move to
Dallas from New York or LA and like, if you
could do this across the entire company from Little O Tulsa, Oklahoma,
You're going to be a superstar into these other cities.

(08:04):
And that's when I kind of started itching to be
an entrepreneur agan you know, all those years of mowing yards,
shoveling snow, paying for my motorcycle, you know, like having
a direct effect of what I did, and I could
see I wanted to get back to that. So a
very long story short, my wife wanted to start preschool

(08:28):
and early learning centers. She had had a bad experience
in a daycare center. Wanted to correct that, and that
kind of put us on the path of buying our
first building. It was a dilapidated building that had rats
in the corner, and you know, we were you know,
twenty four twenty five at that time, telling people that

(08:49):
we were going to take care of their kids, and
like we look like kids. And we lost about everybody
the first week, including the teachers.

Speaker 3 (08:58):
We had one teacher that.

Speaker 2 (08:59):
Stayed with us, worked hard, kept improving, and within about
five six years we built that to three hundred teachers,
multiple locations in the region. One about every business award
you could win, Top fifty Businesses, Entrepreneur of the Year,
SBA Entrepreneur of the Year, all this stuff, and we

(09:20):
you know, I didn't go out for any of those.
I was just doing what I knew to do, and
that drive that I had as a kid, you know,
speaking of your footsteps are ordered, I implemented it in
doing these preschool and early learning centers. And by the way,
so you know, out of the three hundred employees that
we had, two hundred ninety nine were women. So all
my time of putting women's makeup and talking to women

(09:43):
taught me how to talk to women, you know, and
I love that how to you know anyway.

Speaker 3 (09:48):
A lot of lot of I love that.

Speaker 2 (09:50):
You never know, I see, you know, I didn't think
in a million years that putting makeup on women would
ever serve me in my future. But it did, and
it did it wonderfully. I knew how to talk to them.
I wasn't embarrassed. I you know, all that we built,
that company had a very successful exit.

Speaker 3 (10:08):
I paid off some of our employees' homes.

Speaker 2 (10:11):
I did like we we just gave, gave, gave, and
you know, really really had a great time doing that.
And so when I when I sold, and this is
the reader's digest version, but when I sold at thirty five,
I was retired. So I'd done everything I wanted to do.

(10:33):
I had all the finances I need to do. Everything's
paid off. I've got a large amount of money coming
in because all these schools that they paid off with
the real estate, I also owned the real estate.

Speaker 3 (10:43):
I built the buildings everything.

Speaker 2 (10:45):
They were leasing them back from me, and they had
no debt, so they leased them back from me.

Speaker 3 (10:50):
I was making money on that.

Speaker 2 (10:52):
And then after when their lease came due, you know,
I would sell them, and a couple we sold failed
and so we bought them back, resold them. Just crazy,
just a crazy path all before I was thirty five.
But everything that I did from a young kid, coming

(11:12):
up very poor, very appreciative of every penny, every experience
with money, with relationships, with work, all that you paid
off and put me in a position to retire at
thirty five.

Speaker 1 (11:28):
A lot of listeners, right Henry on the show, there's
some version of them getting ready to open a preschool.
Whatever that version is, they're scared. What advice do you
have to them about making a move, making a bet
on yourself, taking risk.

Speaker 3 (11:44):
Yeah, so even if you're scared, do it. Scared.

Speaker 2 (11:49):
I literally on the deals that I would sign, so
you know, there's no way on earth I had the
assets other than the school and the land to back
what I was signing.

Speaker 3 (12:00):
In other words, if I took out a million.

Speaker 2 (12:03):
Dollar loan to put in a school, like it was
up to me to make those payments. And sometimes at
the closing table, I would come to the closing table
and literally say, if I'm in over my head, it
doesn't matter how deep, So screw it. I'm gonna sign it,
you know, Like like I just went for.

Speaker 3 (12:19):
It, and I had that.

Speaker 2 (12:22):
It was a it was a balanced, a balanced attitude.

Speaker 3 (12:28):
But it was always more on the aggressive.

Speaker 2 (12:32):
And because I grew up in the church, I was
trained that all things are going to work for my
good and that everything that I touched is going to
turn to gold.

Speaker 3 (12:39):
My mom used to quote that over me all the time.

Speaker 4 (12:41):
Wow.

Speaker 3 (12:42):
And so I went into it with confidence.

Speaker 2 (12:45):
But I would tell people even without confidence, you never
want to wake up ten, fifteen, twenty years from now
and say, what if I would have signed that deal?
What if I tried that business idea that I really loved.

Speaker 3 (13:00):
What if? What if?

Speaker 2 (13:00):
What if instead I went to work at a nine
to five, Which there's nothing wrong with that, But unless
you've got a calling in your heart to do something greater,
and if you've got that calling in your heart to
do something greater, you're doing yourself a disservice if you
don't do it, and you'll always regret it. So from
somebody with experience, I mean there's deals I passed on,

(13:23):
so you know that I regret to this day. I
was just conversation with somebody about it that became you know,
multimillion dollar things in themselves, and I.

Speaker 3 (13:31):
Passed on it.

Speaker 2 (13:31):
I mean I I had guys come to me when
bitcoin first came out, wanted me to mine it and
invest in them mining the internet for bitcoin and blockchain,
and I would have had maybe I don't know, one thousand,
two thousand pieces of bitcoin, which which just for doing it,
and you know, it ran to you know, what is
it now, one hundred and sixty bucks or something like that,

(13:52):
it would turn into billions, yeah fast, and and and
I passed, you know, and I and I. But also
so being in the family of non regrets, I knew
that if I had gone that route, it probably would
have kept me from something or someone that I needed
to meet and minister to or have a relationship with

(14:14):
or whatever. So I'm cool with it, like I'm okay.
You know, God bless the people who did it. It was
there calling, it wasn't mine. But I try not to
have no regrets. And I would encourage your audience that
if they're at a pivotal point in life, and if
it's fifty to fifty or even sixty forty that they're

(14:36):
not thinking about doing it, go ahead and push the
button and do it, because you'd rather do it and
not have regrets later than not do it and be
kicking yourself in the butt that you know, what if?

Speaker 3 (14:46):
What if? What if?

Speaker 4 (14:47):
Amen? Now, let me ask you this, good brother, what's
your counsel?

Speaker 1 (14:50):
You know? You get the business. You go in there,
it's rat infested. Everyone's like, we're not working for these kids.
Everybody quits. How do you maintain your faith?

Speaker 4 (15:00):
Help people?

Speaker 1 (15:00):
They get in there, they're like, this is scary. What
the heck did we do? What's that? You've been in
a lot of those walk people through that, not quit,
not giving up having the faith.

Speaker 2 (15:09):
Yeah, you can be motivated by faith, and you can
also be motivated by fear if you use it right. Like,
fear can be a tool, like sometimes it debilitates people
and makes them quit. But if you can let faith
fuel your fire for success and dig in and say,
because I had just resigned from this pitney Bow's job

(15:32):
that I was getting I wrote in the top one
percent of the companies. You know, I was making more
money than I've ever made. I bought myself a Porsche
that was worth more than my house then, because I mean, dude,
I was I was just like living life.

Speaker 3 (15:47):
But being an entrepreneur and.

Speaker 2 (15:49):
Following my heart was greater to me than having a
job that didn't fulfill me. So when I when I
made that that leap, and I would I would tell people,
I mean, you don't have to go cold Turkey. You know,
like I worked on my deal kind of after hours
and in the back room, I was still setting records

(16:10):
with Pitney Bows, but I was also working on my dream.

Speaker 3 (16:13):
And when my dream.

Speaker 2 (16:14):
Was ready to launch and I kind of it was
able to take off and I could make money with
it or whatever, I knew it was time to leave
my other job. But this is the point I'm getting at.
So with the new thing, when the you know, kids left,
teachers left rad infested all that, I kept thinking, Man,
if I have to go back to Pitney Bows and

(16:36):
ask for my job back, oh right, if I have
to like swallow my pride, tell people I failed, you know,
because because I mean think about it, I was right
in the top one percent and like I had my
stuff together, you know, like I knew where I was going,
what I was doing, and there was so much momentum
that carried me into being an entrepreneur and putting in

(16:58):
the schools that like there's no way I could go back,
Like I see, you know, I had dreams that I
was having to go back to my region manager.

Speaker 3 (17:07):
And as for my job back.

Speaker 2 (17:09):
I mean for like a year into in the school,
so every morning I would wake up and say, you know,
I'm not going to live in fear. I'm going to
let this fuel me to show up every day do
all I can. You know, good things happen to good people.
I think when you keep that in your heart and

(17:29):
it's something that you know you really love, that God really.

Speaker 3 (17:33):
Put in there.

Speaker 2 (17:33):
And I've got something to say about that here in
a second. But when you know that God really put
that desire in your heart, I think when you do
the best you can, he will then do what you can't.
And I think when you're in that flow motion. You
know I've heard Red teach on flow motion, not slow motion,
but flow motion, where everything happens as you take that

(17:55):
next I think that's what you get into when you're
doing what the desire that God has really put in
your heart.

Speaker 3 (18:03):
And the only way to fail in that sense is quit.
So if you get up, you keep doing.

Speaker 2 (18:11):
The right thing, you deliver more than you promise you.
I could do a whole series just on that. But
as long as you're doing that, and you can look
yourself in the mirror every night and say today I
had a great day. I delivered on my promises. I
didn't tell anyone anything that I didn't do or I
didn't come through with, and you hold yourself accountable.

Speaker 3 (18:31):
This is just a matter of time.

Speaker 2 (18:33):
It may not be the first month, the first six months,
the first year, but you will succeed if you don't quit.

Speaker 1 (18:41):
Beautiful And one of the things, one of the reasons
why I had you on the show, and it's a
long list is like my brother Tony Robbins, like my
brother Michael beck With, Yes, it's great to be successful,
but watching somebody pay their house payment off, getting their
kids into college because you provided, right, that's the greatest

(19:01):
high in the world. Man, right right now, it's the best.
It's just the best.

Speaker 2 (19:06):
Yeah. When when when the Bible says it's better to
give than receive, I don't think you fully realized that
until you got some money. You know that you can't give. Yeah,
but it's not just money, it's even your time. Like
if you don't have money to help somebody or give somebody,
but you go over and help them move or help
them paint their house, whatever, do what you can do.

(19:29):
You really get that feeling that's unlike any other feeling
in the world.

Speaker 4 (19:33):
It's the best.

Speaker 1 (19:33):
So now you've made a few bucks. You've done something.
You've helped your wife out. Hope she had a healing
around that, starting the schools the way that they should
have been done in the first place. Perhaps, And you're like,
maybe getting a little bored. I don't know what's happening.

Speaker 2 (19:47):
Yeah, of course you've already helped my personality.

Speaker 4 (19:52):
Yeah, I don't see you at the pool sip in
my ties. Brother.

Speaker 2 (19:56):
No, no, no, no, no, I'm not building the pool,
not sipping my Yeah.

Speaker 4 (20:00):
But no.

Speaker 2 (20:01):
I always had a desire to get out and help
people and to give back. I was interviewed when I
retired at thirty five, and a guy said, and he
didn't know I had retired.

Speaker 3 (20:13):
He was just doing an interview on me and my life.
And he said, man, he said, if you could.

Speaker 2 (20:18):
Do anything in the world, and you know, you didn't
have to worry about money, what would you be doing.

Speaker 3 (20:23):
And I said, I'm doing it.

Speaker 2 (20:25):
I'm consulting other companies, I'm writing books, I'm giving back.

Speaker 3 (20:28):
And by the way, I don't have to do anything
else in the world. Like I'm putting my money where
my mouth is.

Speaker 2 (20:33):
Like I really was operating out the desire of my
heart and the passion of my life to give back
and help other people. And you know, I know. Tony
Robbins says, you'll always do something more for someone else
than you'll do for yourself. And that's so true, whether
it's your family or friends or whatever. When you do

(20:56):
more for them than you do, you will do more
for them than you will for anybody else. And that
just makes you automatically achieve your own goals. But you know,
and I guess that's another little lesson here, so you know,
is if somebody's having trouble getting motivated, find something that
you can do for someone else, or take part of

(21:17):
your life mission and say, with ten percent of everything
I earn, I'm going to help the homeless, or I'm
going to help those with an addiction, or I'm going
to help you know, single moms or whatever. And watch
how your productivity goes up, watch how your enthusiasm goes up.
And because you're doing it for them, now it's not
just you. So I really believe in that. I think

(21:41):
you should always have a cause and you should always
give back.

Speaker 3 (21:45):
So, yeah, I got bored.

Speaker 2 (21:46):
I wrote a couple of books, I toured Europe, toured
the US, spoke with some of the legends on stage
like zig Ziggler and I actually did a deal with
Tony Robbins. I was at one of the firewalks. I know,
I know your friends with him, and I was there
to kind of debunk the firewalk.

Speaker 3 (22:04):
I thought, this is not a real deal.

Speaker 2 (22:08):
I read all on how the places that the guys
at Fiji, where he's got a place that those guys
heat the rocks from the bottom and the top's really
not hot and you walk across them and it's really
no big deal. So I thought, Okay, I can do this.
I'm gonna go get the T shirt. Blah blah blah
blah blah. And I went there and it was in Dallas, Texas.

(22:31):
There was about twelve fourteen hundred people. And after eight
or nine hours of this teaching, we all go out
to the tarmac and Tony comes up to me like,
I'm I'm looking at these long lanes of fire and
it's you know, they're twenty thirty feet long by about
I don't know, maybe four or five feet wide, and dude,

(22:51):
they're real live coals.

Speaker 3 (22:54):
That they wore on these. They're no rocks. There's not
slippers for your feet, there's not anything.

Speaker 2 (23:01):
You are walking on raw bear coals that are lumped up.
So everybody's in line. Everybody's got their own line. You've
got a line leader. You're supposed to say cool moss
cool cool moss. C O l L moss cool moss
cool moss cool mos. Get your mind off of it.
You look straight ahead. So we're going through this, and

(23:21):
I'm figuring out this is the real deal, like I'm
I'm getting I didn't pay a lot of attention to
all the warm up stuff because I already had it
figured out.

Speaker 3 (23:28):
I was a smart one.

Speaker 2 (23:30):
So so I get up in line and everybody's got
a line leader. Well he happens to be my line
leader and he stops me. And I'm six three two
twenty worked out all my life, and he goes, hey,
little buddy, you know, like he's he towers me. You know,
his head is twice as big as mine, and and
he goes, he goes, let's bring on some new fire,

(23:52):
Let's bring on some new coals. And and he's got
his arm around me, and they bring on brand new
coals on my lane because they were they were kind
of dwindling down, and it was making me feel good
because I was thinking, Man, I'm not gonna have to
walk on these these hot hot coals. They put new
coals in a hole. So now we're in Dallas Fort Worth,
We're at the airport. We're at the back of the airport.

(24:14):
They've got these long lines of fire. It's dark and
these coals are glowing and and all I can think
about is getting burned, you know, Like but but but
Tony's there and he goes, man, go for it. Cool moss,
cool moss, remember your training. And I go whatever. So
that's another it's another feeling like I had before I

(24:36):
would sign a contract, like like that point of jumping
or not jumping. There's that point of walking or not walking.
There's that point of signing or not signing. And I said, dude,
I'm doing it.

Speaker 3 (24:48):
I'm in.

Speaker 2 (24:48):
And I just went and I started saying, cool moss,
Cool Moss, Cool Moss. I may have thrown in God
help me, God help me, God help me. But dude,
I walked. It didn't feel a thing. Yeah, and got
to the other side. And that was a you know,
talking about me being curious and all that was.

Speaker 3 (25:06):
That was one of the best days of my life.
I mean, I love that event.

Speaker 1 (25:11):
What was the lesson for you? Because you strike me
as more of a curious person than skeptical. Being so
skeptical because it sounds like you went on a mission
like this Tony guy's bullshit.

Speaker 2 (25:22):
Yeah, well I liked him, but I and I believed
in a lot of a lot of what he was,
what he had said, or I never would have paid
the money to go to the event. But when I
got there, my skepticism and I'm never skeptical, You're right,
I always see the glass half full. But the thing
about walking on coals, I literally said to myself, there's
no way that people can do this a little alone,

(25:43):
twelve or fourteen hundred people like like this is just
doesn't even make sense to my mind. And so I
wasn't there to like like go against Tony, but I
was there to call bs on the firewalk, you know,
just that it like his all of his teachings were
I've went through personal power that made me resign from

(26:03):
Pitney Bows. Going through the personal power series that he did,
I got up enough nerve to write my resignation letter.

Speaker 3 (26:10):
And and I owe so much to him.

Speaker 2 (26:12):
I I really, I really think highly of him. But
but that that firewalk I was going to do. There's
just no way people can girls, women, you know, men,
big little everybody was walking and uh, and that that's
probably what I was trying to kind of get to, like,

(26:32):
I'm going to.

Speaker 3 (26:33):
Show them and uh and I went and they showed me.

Speaker 4 (26:38):
I love it. It's a very empowering exercise. I love that.
I'm gonna go just curious. I got to ask you something.

Speaker 1 (26:43):
Growing up in Oklahoma, being the son of a pastor,
did you see a lot of false prophets coming in
trying to talk?

Speaker 2 (26:53):
Right?

Speaker 1 (26:53):
So I yeah, tell I just I'd be fascinated to
hear about that, because it's got to be a believer
while you're good at what you do, because you got
a good sniffer on you.

Speaker 2 (27:02):
I've had personal healings that I was going in for
surgery one time on my back for two years. The
chiropractor couldn't do anything. Nobody could do anything. Had pain
shooting down my back so bad. I couldn't sit. I
couldn't sit in the plane. I had to always stand.

Speaker 3 (27:19):
I would.

Speaker 2 (27:20):
I lost like twenty thirty pounds that I did not
have to lose, and I just had it and I
went by my father's chapel to have prayer. And he
said this two minute prayer. And I'm making a very
long story short. There's a lot more color to this,
but he said a simple prayer. And he said, okay,

(27:40):
bend over and see if you have any pain.

Speaker 3 (27:43):
And I didn't.

Speaker 2 (27:44):
And it freaked me out so much that I even
went to the chiropractor and I said, you know, check
my back and he pulled up my back on film
where I had vertebrates that infused and a pinch nerve
and all that, and he goes, Henry, your back is perfect.

Speaker 3 (28:00):
He said, what did you do?

Speaker 2 (28:02):
And that's one of two or three call them miracles
that's happened to me in my life. That gave me
the strength that when I saw some false prophets for
people who were in it just for the money and
their heart really wasn't with it, to call bs on them,
but not let it ruin my relationship with my creator.

Speaker 4 (28:24):
Oh, I love that right.

Speaker 2 (28:25):
And I knew that I that I knew like I'm so,
I was so deep in it with personal experiences that
you could have lined up ten false profits. And when
I say false prophets, people that maybe came to just
raise money.

Speaker 3 (28:38):
They just wanted to buy a new car.

Speaker 2 (28:40):
They just you know, I've seen people try to fake healings.

Speaker 3 (28:45):
I've seen so much all over the glow. As you know.

Speaker 2 (28:50):
I traveled with Carlton Pearson for a while who passed
away last year. One of beck was really good friends,
and he introduced me to Michael and I would see
stuff there, especially in the Black Church, that you know,
you would get all excited about one thing and set
things up and and uh. But but it never and

(29:10):
I made some of my best friends there too. But
some of the stuff that I saw that was you know,
made up or whatever. It never ruined my relationship with
my creator because of the personal experiences that I had
had that I that I know that I know that
I know you could put a gun to my head
and say, you know, deny christ or I'm gonna shoot you,

(29:34):
and I would say pull the trigger, you know, let
me pull the trigger for you, because if I'm supposed
to be here, I'm gonna stay here.

Speaker 3 (29:39):
And if I'm not, it's time for me to go,
like right on. You know that love that?

Speaker 4 (29:43):
So wow, that's thank you for that. That's really interesting. Listen.

Speaker 1 (29:48):
I think if you're a real seeker and you're out
in the world and you're trying to help people, you
must absolutely have extraordinary respect for darkness in the many
shades and size.

Speaker 4 (29:57):
As it comes in. Right, Yeah, part of the deal,
it's going to come well.

Speaker 3 (30:01):
Yeah, until you see dark, you don't know how great
the light is.

Speaker 4 (30:05):
Mm hmmm mm hmm.

Speaker 3 (30:07):
It's a great contrast.

Speaker 2 (30:08):
Like if I'm in my room and the lights are out,
when that light first comes on, it's so bright because
I've been in the darkness. If I'm in light all
the time and I see another light, it's not that
big of a deal because I'm in light. If I
experience a little darkness then I see the light, it's
like it illuminates even more for me. So when I

(30:30):
said all steps, even some of the bad ones, some
of that darkness makes you appreciate the light even more,
that you're there because you love the light, not because
you have to have light.

Speaker 4 (30:42):
Amen. Right on. That's beautiful brother.

Speaker 1 (30:44):
Okay, all right, what inspired you for Soak? How did
that come into your consciousness and when was that?

Speaker 3 (30:53):
Yeah, so Soak was a dream. I had created another company.

Speaker 2 (31:01):
Between Pitney Bows and Soap that was called zomb We
had a product in all the Apple stores all over
the world. It was a big tech company. I'd learned
so much about technology. Uh you know again, my footsteps
are being ordered. That company went for a while, did well.
We ultimately found out that Apple had I've got to say,

(31:28):
allegedly taken our code and put it in their watch.
That caused a five year court battle. Uh so that
that company did well until it didn't. And it's hard
to fight a two trillion dollar giant. But I learned
so much, learned so much about technology. That was another

(31:50):
step in the evolution of you know who I was
and uh and I uh, I experienced a divorce about
that time. I'm so again, this is full me on
this particular.

Speaker 4 (32:07):
That's only that that's the language we've talking only that's
what we want here. Brother.

Speaker 2 (32:11):
I I everything in my life and that my father
had taught me and growing up in the church that.

Speaker 3 (32:16):
That was supposed to be wrong. You never do it.

Speaker 4 (32:19):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (32:20):
So it was.

Speaker 2 (32:20):
It was probably one of the hardest things in my
life to kind of get victory over.

Speaker 3 (32:26):
But I did.

Speaker 2 (32:27):
And and thank god my ex wife now and myself
we still own property together.

Speaker 3 (32:33):
We still have a business together. Everything is good.

Speaker 2 (32:39):
I think it helped her and it helped me going
through this, but it was also me kind of turning
another chapter in my life. So so got through all
of that. I met someone else who who had a clinic,
and this other person was also curious, loved God.

Speaker 3 (33:03):
She was into holistic health and wellness, and.

Speaker 2 (33:07):
She started learning about frequencies from some of the holistic
practitioners that were around her. She had a health and
wellness spa that did like a massage, ivy therapy, sacral work,
just all kinds of things. But the thing that started

(33:27):
to stick the most was sound frequency therapy.

Speaker 3 (33:31):
And it was the sound frequency.

Speaker 2 (33:33):
Therapy of not just getting like four hundred and thirty
two hurts to calm anxiety, but it was a composition
of different frequencies that were put together with a certain
tone and cadence and all of that that when people
listened to it for about fifteen twenty minutes, their anxiety

(33:54):
was going away, their depression was lessening, there insomnia, they
could sleep like a And as we would create these
frequencies and these frequency compositions, we started seeing how everybody
wanted to do that, and we were getting more.

Speaker 3 (34:12):
Positive results from that than anything else.

Speaker 2 (34:14):
So it was so much we took half of the
entire wellness clinic and turned it into a sound frequency spa.
So we had about eighteen to twenty chairs that people
would come in, sit back, pick which frequency they wanted,
frequency composition, you want one for anxiety, for depression, for
low energy, for brain fog, for libido, Which one do

(34:38):
you want? They would plug it in and then they
would go sit in their chair and most everyone would
just fall asleep because it was so relaxing, and then
get up totally refreshed, without depression, without anxiety.

Speaker 3 (34:53):
I'm not for sure how to test the libido.

Speaker 2 (34:55):
I guess they would have tested it that night, but
they started loving that so much. She she said, Henry,
with your background and technology and everything you did with
your you know, your other tech company, can we can
we somehow program a phone to access these frequencies and

(35:19):
get the same efficacy that we did in clinic. That
was the that was the request, And I said, well,
I'm not for sure. We're going to have to do
a lot of work, a lot of testing, you know
all that, And and so after about two years we
were able to get the same efficacy as we got
in clinic.

Speaker 3 (35:40):
You know, we didn't want to put in.

Speaker 2 (35:41):
Five hundred new locations, so expanding by usage through the
mobile phone was a huge deal for us. And since
we were getting getting the same efficacy, then we turned
to partnering with different like celebrity influencers who would go
tell their people about it. We would do like a
commission split. We started doing some writing, some grants to

(36:03):
try to get some military contracts, and just just all
this stuff was kind of hitting at once. So the
celebrity influencers worked out really well. The first time we
had Michael Beckwor he he tried our stuff out for
almost eight months before he would would say, you guys

(36:24):
have got something here, And those were the this felt
like eight years, you know, because I'm an action guy.

Speaker 3 (36:29):
I want it done. You either like him or you don't.

Speaker 2 (36:32):
I would say, Michael, it's been a month, Yeah, Henry,
I'm still looking at Mike. It's been two or three months.
Yeah I'm still Mike. It's been six months. Are you
out there? And and all the way to eight months,
and finally he came back to me said, Henry, do
you really realize what you have?

Speaker 3 (36:46):
Is this is this breakthrough. This is amazing.

Speaker 2 (36:49):
He's got a lot of personal testimonials by using the
frequencies and some of his loved ones that he was around.

Speaker 3 (36:57):
The whole nine yards.

Speaker 2 (36:58):
So so he he helped get it into like over
I think we're in over eighty or ninety countries after
he got behind it, because his reach is amazing.

Speaker 3 (37:07):
Like he's he's a man at his word.

Speaker 2 (37:09):
People know that when he says something that it's the truth,
and that's you know, that's what he.

Speaker 3 (37:14):
Means and and all of that.

Speaker 2 (37:17):
And so when we when he got behind it, we
also just won our first military contract.

Speaker 3 (37:23):
So that push just further. We went on to win
a second military contract.

Speaker 2 (37:28):
We're teeing up for a third one as we speak.
So you know, we're currently in one hundred and ninety
countries and we've done over forty million minutes of frequency
therapy worldwide.

Speaker 1 (37:42):
Oh that's beautiful, congratulations to you. You know, that's amazing, man,
that's incredible.

Speaker 4 (37:47):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (37:47):
And it's not for people, you know, it's it's giving back,
it's it's changing people's attitude, changing their altitude, you know,
doing so much for people that that I I love
how it works.

Speaker 3 (38:01):
I love how easy it is.

Speaker 2 (38:03):
Like you said, initially, we combine them with positive, mindful intentions.
We believe what you think about, you bring about your
frequency is what you think about most frequently.

Speaker 3 (38:14):
So we put a lot of training behind that.

Speaker 2 (38:16):
And when you pair that with the frequency and we
can get into how they work later, but when you
pair that with the frequency and you get you know,
support from the military on a global basis, it's like,
you know, all that work that I've done all my life,
all led up to like this moment in time to
be this effective to so many people.

Speaker 3 (38:39):
And it's not me, it's my team.

Speaker 2 (38:41):
I'm the first course, I'm you know, I'm the guy
that probably pushes people, you know, the hardest to kind
of get things done, get goals accomplished and all that.
But but it's the team, man, It's it's it's an
amazing team. It's everybody's showing up every days. It's underpromising

(39:01):
and over delivering and being honest and truthful and keeping
God first in our life. And you know it's resulted
in in where we are today.

Speaker 1 (39:11):
Well let's get into let me back up a little bit.
You know, also, instead of being so disgruntled with the
alleged you know, injustice of a major corporation, right, like
most people would do, they'd be you know, talking about
it compulsively. You took that and started this other company, right, yes, right,
which you learned a lot from it.

Speaker 2 (39:30):
Right.

Speaker 1 (39:31):
So people are go like, this sounds good, you know, Soino,
I like what you're doing. And here what the heck
is frequency? What is frequency?

Speaker 2 (39:41):
No?

Speaker 3 (39:42):
I know it's uh we all, well, okay, imagine this.

Speaker 2 (39:45):
You know you're you're in in Venice, so you're you're
in an area that accepts most new things. I'm in Tulsa, Oklahoma,
So imagine the middle of the Bible Belt. Trying to
explain that a frequency is going to.

Speaker 3 (39:59):
Help your insid.

Speaker 4 (40:01):
I bet, yeah, I bet.

Speaker 2 (40:03):
Like like if you want to do the hardest thing
in the world, but if it works here, it's going
to work anywhere. So so a frequency, if you break
it down, everything emits a frequency. Your your heart has
a certain frequency, your skin has a certain frequency, your
your your other organs have certain frequencies. The earth has

(40:27):
a certain frequency. I think it's like seven point eighty
three hurts and it hurts is a rotation. So when
something is like four hundred and thirty two hurts. That's
a frequency spinning at a certain evolution.

Speaker 3 (40:43):
So so.

Speaker 2 (40:46):
When we started dealing with the frequencies, you can you
can think of a frequency composition.

Speaker 3 (40:53):
I compare it a lot of how it works through.

Speaker 2 (40:56):
Sympathetic resonance to a tuning for it. So, if you
have a tuning fork and you strike that tuning fork
and it's it's it's going to sound off in the
key of D, and you hold another tuning fork up
next to it, the one you held up next to
it without even touching it is going to start playing

(41:17):
that key of D. Because of sympathetic resonance, it's going
to resonate what it hears.

Speaker 3 (41:22):
You do the same thing with a guitar.

Speaker 2 (41:23):
I played guitar all my life, and I can play
a D chord on a guitar and you have another
guitar setting there, and if you stop the dcord on
your guitar and put a microphone up to the other one,
it's playing a D chord, it resonates what it's what
it's heard. So at Soak Technologies, what we've done is
we've harnessed the power of frequencies and compositions where you

(41:47):
can hear them through your headphones, you can hear them
straight out of your phone, you can hear them through
a speaker system in your house. And those frequencies are unrelenting.
So that means when you play that frequency, it's not
gonna change in sympathy with anything else because it's digital,
it's unrelenting, it's unchangeable, it can't vary. So you're you're

(42:10):
listening to that frequency composition. But your cells can change
because you have mind, will and emotion. So if your
cells can change and through sympathetic resonance like a tuning fork,
when you hit this fork, which is we call it
a soap, let's use an anti anxiety frequency and you

(42:31):
hold it up to your body and you're listening to
that particular sound. Your cells that can change are going
to start resonating and your anxiety is going to start
to melt the way because it's resonating with an anti
anxiety frequency.

Speaker 4 (42:46):
M beautiful. Yeah, and it works. I mean, it's it's
really works. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (42:52):
So wow, Okay, you got contracts with the military. I
know you can talk about some things, not things, but
the pilots are using your technology. Can you talk whatever
you're allowed to talk about Henry because it's I love
that part of what you're doing.

Speaker 3 (43:06):
Yeah, yeah, I'm a I'm.

Speaker 2 (43:08):
A little limited, but through different like Zibber programs that
we use that encourage entrepreneurs to do business with the
military and help do research and prove things in the
military that can also be commercialized, which is perfect for us.
Like I said, we won our first one a couple

(43:30):
of years ago, and we won one last year training
pilots in the US Air Force for mission readiness.

Speaker 3 (43:38):
So the one of the four star generals came out and.

Speaker 2 (43:41):
He said, I want something that if my pilots are
called upon in a twenty four hour notice and they've
got a two or three day mission with little to
no sleep, when they do sleep, I want them to
have sound sleep, you know, their rem sleep, restored sleep,
because they may have to take off in you know,

(44:03):
three or four hours again to stay on the mission.
So our sleep well frequencies come into the picture. And
because they're accessible via your mobile phone twenty four to
seven from anywhere in the world, when those pilots need
to sleep, they can listen to our frequency and it

(44:23):
will put them in that deep, meditative, relaxed state to
get you know, say they only have three or four
hours to sleep, but they wake up feeling they've slept
eight hours.

Speaker 3 (44:33):
Wow, it's amazing.

Speaker 2 (44:34):
And then once they get out, they really like our
focus frequency as well, so to kind of you know,
kind of stay true to the mission, get focused. You know,
maybe you've been flying over water for you know, four
or five six hours and you're getting ready to go
to the theater to perform. They want to be focused,
they want to be ready, and you know, we provide

(44:59):
We provide that. So it's a great honor to give
back to people, and it's a great honor to give
back to our nation, uh, you know, making our our
military strong and.

Speaker 3 (45:15):
You know secure, secure the lives of people. Here.

Speaker 2 (45:19):
We see a day where we'll also be using frequencies
with a lot of veterans who've come back that may
be mentally hard or or it's hard for him to
get back in the swing of things.

Speaker 3 (45:31):
Where you know, we've always got that in the back
of our mind.

Speaker 2 (45:35):
But but if you know, if I can, if I
can give you something that will uh make you a
better person, thus making the world a better place to live,
I'm all in on that.

Speaker 3 (45:49):
And and so far.

Speaker 2 (45:50):
In my life, this has been something that can literally
get out to one hundred and ninety countries and help
people all over the world. So that's that's you know,
if I'm thinking what has all this experience done and
taught me? If it's brought me to this place to
offer this to the world, then I've done my job,

(46:13):
you know, like I'm happy with that.

Speaker 1 (46:17):
You've absolutely done your job, and you should be unbelievably
happy with that.

Speaker 4 (46:20):
And you know, one of the re another reason why
I wanted you on the show.

Speaker 1 (46:23):
And if I got this right, I think I did,
because you know a lot of my listeners struggle with addiction,
have a lot of trauma. I believe a general came
in and was insistent on meeting you because he got
off of Ambien.

Speaker 4 (46:36):
Did I do I have that story correct?

Speaker 3 (46:38):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (46:38):
Yeah, we had a general come down and he was
he wasn't just any general, but he was first boots
on the ground at nine to eleven. He was a
brown zero, the president caldy Man, and he was to
assess what went on, help people that were hurting, you know,

(47:01):
just help help restore order. And so he flew into
Tulsa and and he said Henry. Over the years, he
was just retired, but he said, over the years, I've
seen things that I can't unsee. And he said it
very hard for me and a lot of my comrades
to sleep and get a full night sleep. But he

(47:23):
said he wanted to come to Tulsa to meet us,
to see the people that that got him off ambient
because he had been taken ambient for all these years.

Speaker 3 (47:31):
And and and.

Speaker 2 (47:34):
I'm not a doctor. I don't give medical advice. I
know you're not supposed to quit ambient cold Turkey, so
nobody do that. This guy did. Uh, he's a I
think he's a one star general. He did, he quit
cold Turkey. And when he got to Tulsa, he said,
for the last thirty days, all I've done is listened
to this sleep well frequency was soaked, and he said,

(47:57):
I've slept like a teenager. I'm sleeping eight hours every
every night. I'm not waking up through the middle of
the night like I used to. I used to only
sleep two and three hours at a stretch. Now I'm
sleeping eight I'm not waking up. I'm waking up restored.
And he said, thank you. So that was a huge
huge thing for us in our company.

Speaker 4 (48:18):
Oh that's beautiful, man.

Speaker 1 (48:19):
Let's talk about how you've your experience, how this can
help my people overcome addictions.

Speaker 3 (48:24):
What is it?

Speaker 4 (48:25):
What would they do? How does it work? You know?

Speaker 3 (48:28):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (48:28):
So, I think when you have an addiction, and I
think we've all had parts of addiction to something, whether
it's food or whatever it is, you know, and it
gets deeper to alcohol, drugs, sex, you know, the whole
nine yards, runs the whole gamut. But I think the

(48:49):
premise of addiction is, you know, I think your one
decision away from stopping it. And I remember hearing something
that you had said. I think it went to one
of the twelve step meetings or something, and I think,
I think, I'm not for sure, but I think you
said on your first meeting, you made a decision to

(49:12):
become sober, and you've been sober ever since.

Speaker 4 (49:15):
That's correct, Okay.

Speaker 2 (49:17):
So when people if they can get to that point
with support and help and all of that, to make
that decision to stop something, I see SOAK is that
tool that can help them get there. So as part
of our app, we have what we call twenty one
day programs, and these are stories of people who started

(49:39):
with things overcame obstacles and it helped them and the
frequencies they were listening to the whole nine yards. Grace
did one with us about addiction because she too has
been sober for a lot of years.

Speaker 3 (49:53):
She believed in what we were doing.

Speaker 2 (49:55):
So for somebody that has an addiction, I would if
they want to use our there's a lot of ways
to get to get healed from that. Everybody's got their
own personal journey. But if they wanted to get our
app and go to her program and listen to that,
listen to the frequencies that she used to listen to,

(50:16):
and get the.

Speaker 3 (50:17):
Positive, mindful intentions pushed to you every day.

Speaker 2 (50:20):
For being a member and being in our app, I
can't guarantee it, but I can say it's a great
first step and for a lot of people it's been
a very big help. So I would encourage people to
use it that way. If you're feeling anxious, our anti

(50:40):
anxiety is one of our number one listened to frequency compositions.
If you're feeling depressed, our anti depression is one of
our top four or five. Our sleep well frequency is
our number one listen to frequency. In one hundred and
ninety countries. And just to give you a little stat
I learned the other day ninety seven percent of everybody

(51:02):
that we've surveyed that uses soap has said it's made
a positive measurable difference in their life ninety seven percent.

Speaker 3 (51:09):
So we can't make claims.

Speaker 2 (51:11):
We're not doctors. We're sure all that, and I'm not
trying to say that. I'm just saying that from the
people that have used our technology and the things we
have in the.

Speaker 3 (51:20):
App we're at our clinic.

Speaker 2 (51:22):
It used to cost one thousand dollars a month, like
people would pay in or to a thousand a month
to come in two or three times a week and
you know, get there, get their frequency therapy. Now you
can do it from your phone, and we've got a
couple of ways you can get in. There's like a
twenty nine dollars a month deal, cancel any time, and

(51:42):
then there's a four dollars ninety nine per cent if
you want to come in and just use the sleep frequency,
come in for nothing and use it, see that it works,
and move on up, you know, to our other thirty
frequencies that we have in our library.

Speaker 3 (52:00):
But this is not a sales pitch. But I'm just
I'm going to tell you what we did for you.

Speaker 2 (52:05):
We made a promo code that said cino sc a
n O and we want to kill everybody listening to
this thirty days free oh my God time to our
top tier program. So you can go in and listen
to the Grace program. You can listen to the frequencies.
You can meditate with it. You can use our dual
audio and play frequencies behind any music you already listened to.

(52:28):
There's so much in it you'll just have to go
check it out. But we gave your listening audience free
thirty days to our time oh my God program. No,
you cancel it if you don't want it, get out
of it, whatever you want to do, or keep it
and tell other people about it when it works, like
I think it's going to work in your life.

Speaker 3 (52:48):
But yeah, we wanted to do that for you and
your audience.

Speaker 4 (52:51):
Well you know what I want.

Speaker 1 (52:53):
Thank you, because I was just going to say, I
so believe in what you've done, and I would say,
whoever are the skeptical Firewalkers out there? Whoever is the
whoever the first people the dm ME when the show
I'm going to sponsor you to get this because I
so believe in this man's vision.

Speaker 4 (53:10):
But you made it even better than that man. That's
very kind.

Speaker 1 (53:14):
I really you have no of that. Really, thank you, brother.
That's like, I just want to help people. And it's
not a sales pitch.

Speaker 4 (53:21):
Tried.

Speaker 1 (53:21):
If it doesn't work, what the heck? You tried something
that's free, you know.

Speaker 3 (53:25):
Yeah, thousand percent. And I believe in what you're doing
as well.

Speaker 2 (53:29):
I We've only we've only talked one other time, but
in that conversation we talked for probably forty five minutes,
and I felt, like you said, my sniffer's pretty good.
I felt so right and so free, and so you
were like a breath of fresh air. And and given
what you've been through in your life, you just gave

(53:51):
me the highlights to be here wanting to give back
to other people. So, you know, is a miracle in itself.
So everyone that comes out of your mouth, dude, I'm
I'm also behind.

Speaker 3 (54:03):
And believe in and believe in.

Speaker 2 (54:05):
You and what the best for you in your life
and everything you touch.

Speaker 4 (54:11):
I really thank you, brother. That's well received.

Speaker 1 (54:14):
And let me just close with this addiction in its
simplest form is it's it's protecting the light from coming in.
You have these bad messages, you have these stories, your
different things that are coming in, these loops that run,
whatever it may be. What I believe is your technology stops,
puts a halt on some of that dark and gives

(54:35):
you twenty minutes just to open the gates for a
different experience. And then we got, you know, maybe a
little trick to get in there for something bigger to happen,
you know, So I want to thank you for that.

Speaker 4 (54:47):
You know, I host meeting. I've hosted meetings.

Speaker 1 (54:50):
Here at my at Shell for about twenty five years,
and people always come in. There's something different about this room,
and it's a frequency. Yes, yes, and we open the
meeting with let's invite something higher into this room. Let's
raise the frequency. Yes, and man, you really raised the
frequency at one ninety two five Shell Avenue today. Brother,

(55:13):
I don't know if we can even measure and it's
that big.

Speaker 2 (55:16):
Five six seven years ago, people fought frequencies were kind
of the wooy, the new age, you know, whatever label
you want to put on it. But now with quantum computing,
we can actually measure the frequencies and we can measure
the change in a person's cellular makeup, so it's not
wooy anymore. It's scientifically proven. And you can actually change

(55:41):
the frequency of standing next to somebody because now they're
measuring three four, five, up to six feet outside of
you your frequency.

Speaker 3 (55:51):
So you know, when some people walk in a room,
it like lights up the room.

Speaker 2 (55:55):
You change you like there's something about that guy, like
I feel something good or bad, Like it could be
good or bad.

Speaker 3 (56:02):
That's the frequency that's omitting from you. You're when you
came on.

Speaker 2 (56:06):
At the top of this show, and you came on
with the energy and the high frequency and the high vibes,
and you truly wanted a good show, like I felt that.

Speaker 3 (56:14):
Like that, that's a real tangible.

Speaker 2 (56:16):
Thing that people used to think was wooy because it
wasn't measurable.

Speaker 3 (56:20):
You can feel it, but you couldn't explain it.

Speaker 2 (56:22):
Now we can explain it with quantum computing and we
can change people's lives with it.

Speaker 4 (56:28):
Woo beautiful. Any final thoughts for the listeners, Good brother,
live your dreams.

Speaker 2 (56:33):
Uh, do do what you know your your your higher
power puts in your heart to do.

Speaker 1 (56:39):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (56:39):
Nothing is ever a failure. You only learn and you
use that learning on your next lesson. In my life,
from when I was five or six to this point
in my life, I've I've learned so much. I've tried
to get better, not bitter ever over anything, and keeping
that attitude will take you to a new altitude where

(57:02):
you can truly do anything you put your mind to.

Speaker 1 (57:06):
Boom, Amen, brother, all right, thank you so much God.
The Sino Show is a production of iHeart Podcasts, hosted
by me Cina McFarlane.

Speaker 4 (57:16):
Produced by pod People in twenty eighth. Av Our lead
producer is Keith Cornlick. Our executive producer is Lindsay Hoffman.
Marketing lead is Ashley Weaver. Thank you so much for listening.
We'll see you next week.
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