Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
You're listening to the Law of Attraction Radio Network.
Speaker 2 (00:06):
Welcome to manifesting your dreams. Join renowned Grammy Award winner,
jazz pianist and Amazon number one best selling author John Novello.
Each week as he uncovers the secrets of the Invisible Architect,
the quantum intelligent energy that permeates everything even us. Discover
how to tap into this inner power to use it
(00:28):
to design the perfect life you deserve. The Invisible Architect
as Within So Without is your guide to achieving your
dream life. And now here's your host, the jazz philosopher
John Novello.
Speaker 3 (00:43):
Hi, everybody, John Avello, here, the Jazz Philosopher. Welcome to
my Invisible Architect As Within Without weekly radio podcast on
the incredible Law Attraction Radio Network, which I'm really excited
and honored to be a part of Who We Am.
I learned along time ago that true enlightenment is really
only achieved through service of others. So when I was
(01:06):
asked to do this, I thought, Wow, what a great opportunity.
So the first part of my life, this lifetime, was
inspiring and entertaining others through my God given musical talents
in the area of jazz and composing and playing the piano.
But I never figured in my twilight years that I'd
be directly helping others as a personal and spiritual servant
(01:26):
of the Creator of all, who I have named the
Invisible Architect. And I released a book called The Invisible Architect,
How to Design Your Perfect Life from Within. For my
story details check that out. Nevertheless, here I am, and
so welcome back all subscribers and especially big welcome to
all new subscribers and listeners. My vision is to significantly
(01:51):
transform the quality of your life by raising your mindset
frequency towards the Invisible Architect God frequency your true inner power,
and as well teach you the spiritual mechanics of interaction
with this inner power so as to achieve your highest
divine self so you can serve others as discussed in
my book. So it's for those who want to send
(02:12):
to their next level and achieve their highest self in
personal and spiritual development by embracing their unique genius and
continue further on their path of self realization and serve humanity.
And I do one on one elite perfect mentoring in
this area, and I'm always looking for guests that do
(02:33):
similar things or in our similar areas. So this week,
I'm really excited about something that spirit sort of sent
to me through a I think I was an email
that I got from the service you were on or
something right podcast services or something like that, and I
saw her profile, and so I asked her to be
my guest. So this week's guest is Simona Mango. Hey,
(02:56):
mango is one of my favorite fruits and tastes, So
that's a great name. As a certified life coach, health coach,
and spirituality coach, Simona helps women. So you don't want
to help us men?
Speaker 1 (03:10):
Oh, I certainly do.
Speaker 3 (03:12):
John, Okay, we'll get into we'll get into that. But
I guess she focuses on helping women free themselves from
the traps and change that society, family, the schooling sister, religion,
and tradition use to manipulate them and keep them obedient
and disempowered. Her approach to life is holistic. She sees
(03:33):
the human being as a sovereign energy being. I totally
concur and guides people on their quest for freedom, balance,
and the five pillars of listful life, namely, a healthy body,
healthy relationships, healthy finances, fulfilling activities, and connection to one's own,
so her main focus is on life purpose mentoring. So Simona,
(03:58):
welcome to my as Within with Out radio podcast.
Speaker 1 (04:01):
Thank you so much, John, It's a real pleasure to
be here. I'm very excited to talk about you, you know,
when you're invite came. I checked out your podcast and
I listened to the episode where you tell your story
and who you are and your background, and it all
(04:22):
resonates with me a lot. I think we have lots
in common.
Speaker 3 (04:26):
Yeah. I think it's an accident to hook up with people,
no matter how it hooks up, whether that's right, advertisement
or a friend, It's meant to be serendipity things.
Speaker 1 (04:36):
So that's right, that's right, And I think we have
quite a few things in common. What you just mentioned
a minute ago is your background in entertaining people through
your you said, God given gifts, and that's my past
(04:57):
as well. I've been professional classical singer for twenty five
years before similar to you, I think I transitioned to yeah,
to live coaching, I guessed, and you confirmed that we
have Italian roots in common. That's another thing. And yes,
(05:22):
and I really from everything I heard you say, I
gather that we have a very similar take on how
the universe works. So really looking forward to this conversation.
Speaker 3 (05:34):
I think we do. And why don't you tell the
listener you started but now just by saying your background.
But I always find it an interesting story. Especially musicians
and singers and people in the arts, we all sort
of I don't know how you but on the side
(05:56):
while I was trying to master music. If there is
a thing I always on the side as a hobby
from day one, was you know, reading every philosophical and
metaphysical book and spiritual book and all these authors. And
I didn't know that forty or fifty years later all
(06:16):
that was going to come into focus in fruition and
I would actually sort of quasi be doing it as
a living, and it just never dawned on me. If
I would have went to a psychic and she would
have said, oh, yeah, you're going to be a real
famous musician and you're going to do this and this
and win awards, and I'd say, yeah, that sounds like
(06:36):
my journey. But then if she would have went, oh, also,
you're going to be doing this, You're going to be
sort of a spiritual little prophet guru help people, And
that's no no, no, no, no, that's not me, you know,
so to have that happen was interesting to me how
it happened, So I'd like to have the listener, what's
your story, like, how did you then eventually get into
(06:58):
doing what you're doing now?
Speaker 1 (07:03):
For me, it was it was a very organic transition
because I think I was I was born to be
a coach. That's what I started doing as a small kid.
I started coaching, you know, other kids. For some reason,
they would trust me and they would come in with
their problems and secrets and uh, call me to make
(07:29):
peace and all of that kind of stuff. And so
I was always put in a situation where I was
advising others. I don't know how that came about. People
just thought that I would be able to help, and
apparently I was. And you know, when I started teaching
(07:50):
singing alongside my my performing activity, I really felt that
I was in my element because I loved getting the
best out of people. And as you know perfectly, when
you tackle mastering, as you say, music, you are mastering
(08:16):
yourself every day more and more versus absolutely, and I
think music, any art, actually is an incredible way of
getting to know yourself and to express yourself to bring
out what's in you, and I think as musicians we
(08:37):
have quite a few ways we do that. One is
obviously with our art, when we perform and we make
people feel happy, lighter, inspired, you know, it's just the
beauty of what we do. There's also another aspect that
I find really really powerful, and that is that when
(08:59):
we when we perform in a good, refined way and
with the right kind of intention, and when our music
is you know, really has our heart and our art
in it, what it does is it actually quite physically,
(09:19):
really on a purely physical level, these vibrations interact with
everyone's cells at a really at a cell level. Good
music played live in a good atmosphere is something that,
to say, it really really simply strengthens your immune system.
(09:40):
It improves your health. It's something that makes you feel good,
not only because it's you know, your mood is is
influenced by it, but at a cellular level, these these
beautiful frequencies of loving music, not sure about every style,
but the the stuff that both you and I would do,
(10:05):
they have like undiscussed health benefits for us who play
and for everyone who's in that hole that is holding
that these vibrations.
Speaker 3 (10:18):
Well, you know, it's interesting to say that I had
on my show. I remember the energized health. Have you
ever heard of that? I think John Jubilee he has
a whole program that energizes and detoxifies human bodies on
a cellular level. And somebody told me about him, and
(10:40):
the part of me went, well, his is more physical,
this is spiritual. But we started to talk on a
Discovery call and we realized that, you know, he actually
fit on the program because my program has within so without,
and so he's working on the physical part of helping
people become harmonious and equilibrium on the cell your level.
(11:04):
And of course that conversely affects our spiritual life. And
as we know, our spiritual life impinges and affects our
physical life. And so I like your word holistic, because
you can't really be whole. If one of those is
not doing well, it'll bring the other one down. Either way,
(11:26):
the body will bring the spiritual part of us down,
and at the same time, the spiritual part, if it's
not in harmony, we'll impede upon the body and stress
and all kinds of things happen that way. And so
I think music is God's language. I once was given
a lecture and it just came to me and I went,
(11:48):
you know, somebody asked me about what do you enjoy
about performing, and I said, well, from a selfish point
of view, it just makes me feel fantastic, I said,
But the amount of people that come up to me
after a performance that are inspired made me realize one
day that I think music, especially high frequency music. We
(12:12):
won't get into discussing the types of music, but I
think jazz and classical are extremely high frequency type music's
in the area of vibration. I think that type of
music reminds us of our spiritual self, our divinity. Because
we all incarnate in a lifetime, whether we know it
(12:33):
or not. It's our own personal groundhog day to kind
of find out and who we are. And the other day,
I'm writing a new book called Beyond the Architect, and
I got into the concept of you know, everybody talks
about personal growth during a lifetime, but maybe it's more
of a remembering who we are, which is yeah, is
(13:00):
defined as growth. So I got into a whole chapter
on that was really kind of fun. So I totally agree.
So then, yeah, because I mentored on the side. But
my mentor in juring my music career was only musical
sounds like you were already sort of mentoring, not necessarily
you weren't You weren't a vocal instructor, or were you?
(13:22):
I was.
Speaker 1 (13:22):
I was a classical vocal coach. I was just teaching
people to sing opera. So I was working with both
professionals who wanted to you know, whatever, refine or whatever,
and also people who wanted to start from scratch, and
no matter at what level, no matter really from the
(13:43):
beginning beginner who's coming to the very first lesson to
the professional who's already done things and wants to step
up a notch or sort. It's always a matter of
some technical skills, some you know, some things that are
(14:04):
are really of the discipline, like the style or whatever,
some some some heart skill. But I find that it's
always accompanied by a huge mindset growth, mindset shift. And that's,
isn't it. And then you find yourself teaching someone when
(14:28):
you sing. When you sing, this is this is also
so immediate. You don't even go over, you know, via
an instrument. It's like your own body producing the sound.
And this is exactly so direct. Yes, yes, but it's
(14:53):
it comes out of you so with no mediation, so
that it also brings it just carries with a lot
of emotion. Obviously every every musician brings out their emotion.
But here it's so your voice is is that instrument
that quivers when you're getting emotional, that cracks up when
(15:16):
you have to cry or laugh or you know that
you can get a noot in your throat, and your
instrument is silent. So it's an instrument that is very
very attuned to your message, to your everything, to your personality,
(15:37):
to your mood, to your you know. I often, I
often say talk about freeing the voice of your soul.
And the voice of your soul is not only your
physical voice that can become beautiful. You can train it,
you can, but it's the message of your soul. It's
what you bring into humanity no matter how you press it.
(16:00):
I talk about the voice, but it doesn't have to
be the voice.
Speaker 3 (16:03):
It can be.
Speaker 1 (16:05):
Anything you do. You can write or rescue animals, or
it doesn't matter what you do to bring to bring
out the voice of his soul.
Speaker 3 (16:14):
Yeah, I call that a person's melody, you know. Yes, Yeah,
in a lifetime, we all have to find our melody,
and you can always tell when somebody find it. And
you know, if I go to an auto mechanic, I
can tell if he's really an auto mechanic. He decided
that that's his melody, and that's one of his ways spiritually,
(16:35):
he expresses himself. And then the other guy and the
other stall is just an automacannt. He doesn't really care
too much about his job. He's clocking in his time.
He's got a certain level of confidence, but he's not
really in the zone, which is in the jazz fact.
Speaker 1 (16:48):
He's just waiting for five o'clock.
Speaker 3 (16:50):
And yeah, in the jazz role, we always talk about
being in the zone. And a good player can always
tell another good player because they're instantly communicating in that
spiritual thing. And I think that's what gets the audience
more inspired and excited. Obviously, the technical expertise is important
(17:11):
and can drag the performance down. But good technical expertise
alone without the soul coming through, the melody coming through,
it's sort of mundane, don't you think, absolutely well, when
you were teaching, it's going.
Speaker 1 (17:27):
To become your go ahead, No, no, go ahead.
Speaker 3 (17:32):
No, Paul, wasn't asking when you're teaching vocal lessons where
you always on the side trying to help nourish your
students in that other area other than the vocalese kind
of stuff.
Speaker 1 (17:43):
Yes, it goes hand in hand. It's very difficult unless
someone is really closed. I've met one person like that
who was like, you know, just just wanted a couple
of things, teach me that. How did that? Goodbye? But
this is very rare. I've met one person like that.
Everyone else feels and knows what a big part of
(18:09):
them the voice they're singing is.
Speaker 3 (18:12):
And so.
Speaker 1 (18:15):
I think the more your voice develops, the more what
it represents, what it sings, what it says develops, it
becomes bigger and bigger. So your your expression becomes bigger
and bigger. The better your voice becomes, the better your
self expression becomes, obviously in an artistic way, musical way,
(18:40):
but way beyond that. It helps you really bring your
soul out. And this is what this is what makes me.
It's a lot of life sounding voices.
Speaker 3 (18:50):
You know. That's what makes the difference between a very spiritual,
soulful performance. I've always been a part of my critiques
and valuations during my keyboard life is that I play
very soulful. And somebody asked me once on a not
a podcast. It was a long time ago. They weren't
even podcast, it was just an interview whatever. And I
(19:16):
was living in Boston studying at Berkeley College of Music,
and somebody told me about Madam Shaloff was this very
spiritual keyboardist instructor, and they said she was very woo
woo and spiritual and past life and all this kind
of stuff. Right, my kind of person, So I wanted
to go talk to So I walk in to have
(19:38):
a lot, and it was supposed to be a piano lesson,
mind you, and I could already play, but I wanted
to go to a higher level of the study. So
I walk in the door and she looks at me
and shakes my hand and she goes, oh, you really
need me. I'm so glad you came. A part of
me was like, what are you talking about? But she
(20:00):
didn't mean it any way other than altruistically. She really
sincerely was reading my life and whatever. So I sat
down and normally when you go to a piano teacher,
the first thing you know, they want you to play
a little bit so you can find out where you're
at and so she started talking about my background and
asking me questions about my struggles as a musician and
(20:20):
stuff like that. She goes, yeah, I can see that.
She goes, well, i'll tell you what. I want you
to play these five notes with five fingers. Right. I'm
in front of her stein Way and I go, I
hit three notes and she goes, oh my god, you're
playing all wrong. That I knew you needed me, and
(20:42):
I'm in my head, I'm going this, lady's a little
kind of a minute. How do you play these five
notes wrong on a piano? I mean, if it was vocal,
then maybe she could talk about my tone and my breathing.
But I'm sitting here just hitting these notes. Da da uh.
I don't want to get into the whole thing. It
would take a whole podcast. But what she was trying
(21:04):
to get across was, I was you know, you you
mentioned it about the body is already hooked up to
your voice. Well, the piano is a villa. And she
was trying to get across me that I was just
playing this piano. The piano wasn't me. I wasn't one
with the piano. I wasn't singing my melody. And making
(21:25):
the piano sing the melody so in order for her
to get me to do that, and I never forgot
it because it was one of the most successful things
that ever happened to me. Is I always scat when
I play and sing, so my breath is always hooked
up to my notes, which is like, you know, so
I'm like, but I could play those same notes without
(21:50):
doing that, just mechanically, and guess what they come up?
Speaker 1 (21:53):
Will you sound the same?
Speaker 3 (21:56):
I don't care if I even got all the dynamics
right and the notes and the vom there's no way
Saul was missing. So comment on that.
Speaker 1 (22:04):
Yeah, yeah, absolutely absolutely. You know you know how Chapin
used to tell his pupils go and listen to singers.
Just just go to the opera. Just I don't care
your pianists, just go and listen to the singers because
of that, Because of this breathing. One thing that I've
(22:25):
always taught my pupils is this, you breathe in so
you have enough air to sing this phrase. But it's
not only that, so it's how much can your lungs contain?
Do you manage it properly? You can get out this
phrase at this volume, this length, this height. Okay, No,
(22:46):
you are breathing in, you are borrowing for a minute
some energy and you are transforming it and you're bringing
it out multiplied and transformed. So yes, it's the air. Yes,
(23:08):
that's how we do it, all the technical stuff, but
mechanical part, that's exactly. But what how much energy are
you bringing in? Are you subtracting for a minute, transforming
within you and bringing out again with your tone with
(23:31):
your energy in it. And this is what interests me obviously,
it's it's got to sound good. So let's let's get
the you know, the technicality is right, but what makes
the the you know, the the unforgettable voice and performance
and singing and is what you do with that air
(23:53):
and with that energy and how how you make this,
how you transform into sound. What's what's this sound carrying out?
Apart from maybe the you know, the lyrics or whatever,
but what energy is going are you broadcasting out there?
Speaker 3 (24:14):
That's what things And I think that's the expression of you,
the spiritual being coming through. That's your melody. Because now
we've got Ai. You could you could train Ai to
sing something very accurately and perfectly, but the soul is
(24:35):
not there. That's why it is artificial intelligence. The soul
is not there, and so putting the soul. So when
I teach students sometimes I get into the Madam shawlof
lesson and they'll play something and I'll play the exact
same thing with the feeling and the soul, and so
the student goes, why is yours different? You know what
(24:57):
I mean? And then I have to show them to
difference between you're not letting who you are out exactly.
Speaker 1 (25:05):
And you know paradoxically what you're saying. Now, I imagine
that AI gets to a level where it's like really
absolutely incredible. What AI does is it collects everything we
feed it and then just processes it much faster than
we can. So that's that's what it does. Now, imagine
(25:26):
that AI gets to a point and it's been fed
so much by so many artists, so much accuracy, so
much style, so much you know, the nuances of the idioms,
everything like amazing, But whose soul is going to go
through that? The thing is when you sing, say two
(25:47):
singers to piano players, two dancers to anyone who are
exactly like equally skilled on equally good form, singing exactly
the same thing, or playing exactly the same piece with
the same you know, following the same notes, whatever, they
(26:08):
will not be the same, that's right. They will simply
not be the same because yeah, because well that's the
missing element. That's a missing element. That's that's really what
then makes it really really special is that's you, and
there's only one You were eight billion yet and there's
only one you. There's no one like you. And if
(26:30):
you were twenty billion, it would be the same. There's
still only one you.
Speaker 3 (26:33):
I'm glad you said that phrase because I was just
going to say this. I had this incredible teacher rest
his soul. He was one of the greatest bebop jazz instructors,
and in Boston I went to study with him, and
when I was done with him, I was ready to
go out to California to quote get involved in the
(26:54):
industry because I was living in Boston. And he said
two things to me, as vice, he goes, John, just
remember one thing, there's a big difference between creating music
and the music biz. Be very careful that the music
biz doesn't alloy who you are, right, meaning my soul right.
And then the second thing, which has to do with
(27:15):
what you just said, he says, and never compare yourself.
It doesn't matter if this other musician you recognize has
better chops than you and has better rhythmic prowess than you,
and you may even think that he can play better
than you, but you are the only one who can
(27:38):
express you. And it was so I didn't even fully
grasp it until I got out to Los Angeles and
got involved in the competition in the market, and then
I realized that, and that was very uplifting, probably one
of the best lessons I had to keep me on
my purpose and on my path. Because again, the name
(28:00):
of this podcast is as within without, and so we
have to find clarification of our melody are in And
that's why the secondary title of my book is out
of Design your perfect life from within.
Speaker 1 (28:17):
So that's the only way to design it if you
if you design it from without.
Speaker 3 (28:22):
Yeah, well it's backwards. That's a concept in the book
called B do have, and most people operate on have
do B. I had a lot of money, if I
had this, i'd be able to do this and I
could be somebody. But n actual fact, you have to
be that somebody and then go that way. So that's
part of what my mentor is about, which is a
good segue to get into your concept of Oh no,
(28:49):
so I wanted to ask you obviously, whether it's male
or female. We're all human beings, we're all spirits and
in these sacred vessels. But it appears that you've chosen
maybe to specialize or focus with women.
Speaker 1 (29:04):
Is that the case? And if so, well, yes, So
for some reason, women tend to resonate with me a lot.
So in the numbers, it's more women, I think, you know,
as a middle aged woman myself, I can really feel
(29:27):
into their feelings. So I feel where they're at, and
they feel that that I feel that they kind of
they feel seen, they feel felt, they feel heard. Will
probably have common background in the sense of cultural of
(29:54):
upbringing of you know, the kind of stuff were brought
up with in the West. So and I'm starting to
see also in the east of it, but I'm talking
about the West, say I see, so, yeah, so they
seem to resonate. But I am discovering now and I'm
delighted to see that so many men are starting, even
(30:19):
younger men, are starting to open their minds and their
hearts to a lot of things that even a decade
ago would have been unthinkable, would have been like, you know,
with a you know, hippi sho or I don't know what,
and they're now like really, yeah.
Speaker 3 (30:39):
Well I think it's an all there's an overall collective
consciousness on the planet. On one side, there's a lot
of dwindling spiral degradation and and you know, obviously the
planet needs help, but there's also, uh, it seems like
there's a movement, an unexpressed, unorganized sort of collective movement
(31:06):
where a certain amount of beings are starting to realize
that they're here for more than a beer and getting
laid and getting the job and paid. You know, they're
starting to realize that maybe there is something to this
higher self in who I am.
Speaker 1 (31:22):
Yes, And it's a huge happened. It's not starting to happen,
it's happening. It's in full swim. It's a huge movement.
You're totally right, it's a huge movement.
Speaker 3 (31:32):
Yeah, I'm There's two they're kind of famous in in
uh in India. I don't have their name, Handy Suri anyway,
there are a couple and they've started a big planetary
movement called the Oneness movement and they've got millions of
people that they following. Their whole thing is like the
(31:55):
name of the how we're all one with the Father
and we're all one. So they've started to movement. So
they contacted me and wanted to be on my podcast.
So in the next week or two I'm going to
probably have them on the show to discuss their particular
movement exactly what the pass within as without. So what
methodology have you developed? What's your sort of unique I mean,
(32:18):
there's a lot of as you know, life coaches out there,
you know that do various things and modalities and all
kinds of different things. So what's your approach when you
work with anybody, but especially women Because you talk about
your main focus is life purpose mentoring. So do you
help people discover their purpose if they don't have it
(32:41):
or refine it? And if so, how do you do that?
What's your methodology?
Speaker 1 (32:45):
Yes, So my methodology is, you know, we have plenty
of modalities that we can use, plenty of things, but
for me, it starts with awareness, with clarity, and what
you were saying about be do have is exactly that.
(33:09):
For example, people think that their live purpose is to
be a musician, saying, or is to be a cop,
or is to be a doctor? Or what a mother? Whatever?
And this is again the backwards way you're going about it.
Your life purpose is not to do a special thing
(33:33):
like it is to be able to hear your essence
through the noise of the mind. And once you hear that,
once you hear the melody of your soul. As you say,
we're talking about the same thing here, you will find out,
(33:56):
actually that there's a lot of different things that you
could do to express that melody. It's not only that
you were born to be a musician and you were
born to have kids. No, this is one possible way,
might be a preferred one. But if you're if you're
starting with the with the bee instead of the do
(34:18):
you will see that who you are likes and appreciate
and understands a lot of different things.
Speaker 3 (34:29):
Yes, and you will find about different hats you could choose.
Once you have your melody, you can choose many different
hats to put on. As a matter of fact, sometimes
we do have to change horses in the middle of
the stream if we got injured or something else happened.
The melody part of our soul doesn't change. You just
go well, I can't really do that anymore. I used
(34:50):
to be I used to be a track star, but
I have a problem now I can't run anymore, but
I'm still me. That part didn't get damaged. So then
you find something else, and it may be and maybe
teaching track stars, or it may be something completely different.
Speaker 1 (35:05):
Exactly exactly. So the purpose people say, I don't know
what my purpose is, your purpose is exactly the same
as everyone else's purpose. Your purpose is to live fulfilled, authentic.
The word is used and abused, but the life that
(35:29):
feels real to you, that's what your purpose is. An
end of description of life purpose, it's to live a fulfilled,
beautiful life. Now how do you go about that? I
don't know. Let's see what Let's see how you want
to go about it. But your life purpose is exactly
(35:50):
the same as everyone else's life purpose, and we are
here to make the most of it.
Speaker 3 (35:57):
So when you work with people, though, for people that
are made be listening that may want to work with you,
what's your session like? Or I see you have different
programs that write them all down. What are the types
of programs that you work with people? On and how
in their first session do you do a little sort
(36:18):
of discovery diagnostic call to find out what they're doing
in their life and what their confusions and struggles are,
and then how do you guide them into this.
Speaker 1 (36:26):
Yeah, so you know, everyone has has completely different I mean,
we're all human, we're all more or less the same.
But within that, within that kind of range, which is
a big range. Within that kind of range, the facets are.
I mean, there's as many individuals as there's people on
(36:48):
the planet. There's really eight billion, very very unique, unique
people here with unique gifts, unique with is unique hopes,
a unique past, a unique belief of what the future
(37:08):
can be. It's it's absolutely fascinating. So I personally start
with trying to find out, which is not always easy.
You don't always get that out straight away, what someone's
ideal life, if they were if they were to say, Okay,
(37:30):
I really made the most of this life. When they
when they leave it like this, this was the best
life I could have had, what is that? And the
problem is that many times what we think would make
us happy is things that will absolutely not make us happy,
because there are things that we are conditioned to believe
(37:50):
will make us happy because because that's that's what we
see out there, and that's how you know, as.
Speaker 3 (37:56):
Part of the society modifications in education.
Speaker 1 (37:59):
Yeah, yeah, and it's sometimes it takes a long time
to go deep and to see what's someone's real desires
and what's those you know, posted desires that were were
kind of slapped on them and that they think are
their own but are.
Speaker 3 (38:20):
Not feeling away their layers and stuff. Yeah, you have
something in here that I've looked on your website called
a reawakened to radiance is a one hundred and eleven
day journey back to a life that feels like your's
not someone else's version of who you should be program.
Speaker 1 (38:41):
Oh yes, yeah, yeah, yeah, this is this is a
beautiful thing because you know, people arrive at a point
where they are so exhausted with people pleasing, worth following,
with obeying, with just sticking it out, with just you know,
(39:06):
just doing what you need to do, because no, I
haven't got time to think, I haven't got time to whatever.
I got to do what I got to do. And
these are lives that feel very heavy, very very unsatisfying,
and they easily lead to burnout, to illness, to depression
(39:29):
to all sorts of things, and this is something that
no human beings should go through. This is something for me,
my main thing. If you want to sum meet up
in one word, it is freedom. So a life that
does not feel free, a situation, any situation that does
(39:55):
not feel like freedom feels like hell.
Speaker 3 (40:00):
So.
Speaker 1 (40:03):
And if you've been made to believe that giving up
your freedom for this cause, for this thing, for this family,
for this group, for this association, for this nation, for
this anything is noble and you should sacrifice your life
for that. No, you should. You should look after your freedom.
(40:31):
And once you have your freedom, if you freely choose
to do something for that particular thing we're talking about, great,
but come from freedom and from choosing it after having
refused it, then yes, I'm with you. But if you
are if you are knocked into believing more or less
(40:53):
accepting that your freedom doesn't matter and that everyone else's
wish and orders and stuff comes before your freedom, no
it's it's free, then you're not free. And it's a
it's a big it takes a big, big toll on you.
Speaker 3 (41:14):
And well, it's interesting you chose, and I don't think
it's an accident. One hundred and eleven because one hundred
and eleven and one one one one are angel numbers.
We all know that kind of numerology and what it means,
and so I take it you chose that for a
reason because of that, or you tell me.
Speaker 1 (41:32):
Yes, it happens to be. It happens to be my
favorite time span to work with people anyway, which is
four months.
Speaker 3 (41:41):
Okay, So it happened to just correlate.
Speaker 1 (41:44):
It happens to just be, you know, just just be
really really beautiful, more or less precise, but so obviously
I added that extra layer to it. But I really
believe in four month periods to attain interesting change, to
(42:07):
attain real change.
Speaker 3 (42:09):
Do you work with everybody once a week on a
zoom call or tell the listener how you work with people?
Speaker 1 (42:14):
Usually yes, usually yes. So there are also times when
when people can come together for group calls or things
like that. But for me, the most effective, the most
effective way and the preferred way if people is working
(42:34):
one on one.
Speaker 3 (42:36):
Yeah, me too.
Speaker 1 (42:37):
I don't like to absolutely.
Speaker 3 (42:39):
I do sometimes motivational speaking, but you can't really It's
like you can't teach jazz piano or in a group.
You know, you can get the group to do a
few exercises, but everybody's at a different level and there's
different challenges and weaknesses and the drinks, so you got
to do it one on one, you know. Yes, do
(43:00):
you base your methodology when you work? Is it more
of an organic conversation and you give them some homework
or do you have books out that you have them
read or a syllabus or a program.
Speaker 1 (43:12):
Of some So I have I have a few resources,
some are printed, some videos, some things to listen to
and all of that. It's an organic conversation. And also
I love doing I love taking people a bit deep
(43:32):
in some activations, in some journeys to the subconscious, that
kind of stuff I do.
Speaker 3 (43:43):
Hypnotism in a sense.
Speaker 1 (43:45):
Yeah, it's it's a form of that absolutely also sometimes
not always, but it's it's a morality that I find
very very useful.
Speaker 3 (43:56):
Glaura's canon, Oh yes, I did one of those sessions
with one of her top people once, so it was
pretty amazing.
Speaker 1 (44:06):
Yes, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, that lady was a real
gift to humanity. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (44:12):
She specialized in the past life and associations.
Speaker 1 (44:16):
And stuff, and yes, yeah, and you know, I do
also a lot of physical work as in nutritional education,
and also things like deep relaxation, Like I'll have people
(44:37):
depending on how they want to do it, because some
people are not comfortable lying down. Some people prefer to
like sit comfortably and go back a little bit or whatever.
But I'll take people through really really deep relaxation sessions
and like inner body scans and all of that. And
(44:59):
I will also just very pragmatically teach about health, about
the lies of food and farmer about what's quickly and
what's slowly killing you and what you can do two
(45:21):
to preserve or restore in case lost your health.
Speaker 3 (45:26):
So you get into letting them know what the toxic
kinds of chemicals are, and I.
Speaker 1 (45:32):
Talk about all of that, yes, and I'll talk about
what foods and things that we call foods but are
not foods, what they will do to you, what things
out of nature can do for you. And also you know,
the energy of the foods that we eat, apart from that,
(45:53):
from the chemical composition, apart from all of that, but
the energy of a food has it's It's usually overlooked,
but it has a much bigger impact on us than
we normally think. And so learning to understand what energy
food has and how it will affect you when you
(46:21):
were when you you were saying a little bit earlier,
how the physical affects the spiritual and the spiritual effects
of physical I would go even further. For me, they
are exactly the same. I wouldn't even say, you know,
it's a language pattern. We say physical and spiritual whatever.
(46:41):
But for me, it's all energy. It's just different frequencies
of energy.
Speaker 3 (46:51):
So you go from correct because even a rock has energy.
Speaker 1 (46:55):
Oh sure does matter? Matter is a very er and
you're you know, your your highest the spiritual awareness is
still energy. Your thoughts are energy, your emotions are energy, your.
Speaker 3 (47:14):
Thoughts of energy. In my book, I have a chapter
called everything is Energy, and I get into the physics
of what physicists have discovered as far as the different
particles and waves and how no piece of matter is
really solid if you look at it in electron microscope,
and there's all kinds of space and particles and zero
(47:35):
point energy. In my new book, and one of the
things I do when I mentor people is I get
them to understand that everything is energy, so they understand
how their thoughts and beliefs are energy. And since we're
all one and connected. It's the it's the old butterfly
flex effect. You know, my flaps here, but it affects
(47:57):
everything down there. It's like to become aware of of
spirit source, who I call the invisible Architect, and become
aware of their connection to that, and then learn how
to interact when they want to try to manifest. Because
the big my biggest realization was there's a lot of
(48:17):
people in the law of attraction world. Everything is I
am healthy, and I am this, and I I It
becomes a narcissistic kind of thing. And what you're what
you're missing out is that you aren't the power. You're
the distributor of the power. And once I get people
to realize that the real power is source and you're
(48:41):
a fractal spark of that and learn how to operate
with that. It's like electricity. I'm not electricity. I have
to distribute electricity around my house to have light. So
if I understand the switches and the wiring, I can
light my house up and run my computer and I
can manifest a lot of things. But I'm really narcissistic
(49:02):
if I know I'm the one that's lighting. No, I'm
distributing the power. So that's one of my main mentor things. So, yeah,
what do you think about that?
Speaker 1 (49:11):
Yeah? Of course. And you know, if you talk about
if you talk about a law of attraction, I maybe
because I'm a musician, I don't know, but I much
prefer talking about the law of resonance. I like that.
Speaker 3 (49:25):
I call it law of vibration or a law of reflection,
because your inner world reflects You're out a world in resonance. Exactly.
Speaker 1 (49:33):
It's a resonance. It's nothing but the resonance when something
vibrates at a certain frequency and then another thing in
the room starts vibrating with it because it has a
matching kind of resonance. It's just built in a way
that it will start vibrating to when you play that
(49:54):
particular note on the piano, or when the dishwasher starts
making a noise or whatever it is, there will be
one object in the room that resonates with that. That
shows you how the energy that's broadcast by say the
vacuum cleaner or your thoughts will move things that are
(50:14):
vibrational match to it. So what are you what kind
of vibration are you broadcasting out there in a universe.
Speaker 3 (50:24):
Yeah, it's like reflection. I think the ultimate name is
love of cause and effect. I had that one day.
It's really your causation, do have as your circumstances. That's
the effect, cause action effect. But vibration, resonance, reflection, it's
(50:44):
that way. I didn't like the law of attraction phrase
because it's trying to say you're attracting this.
Speaker 1 (50:50):
Well, you're already of saying it. You are, in a
way trying to, but.
Speaker 3 (50:55):
It doesn't exp.
Speaker 1 (50:57):
No, it's more like like the energy that you broadcast
out there will show you things that resonate with it.
So whatever is a match will become you'll become aware
(51:18):
of it. And before you vibrate at that frequency, whatever
it is can be high or low, wanted or unwanted,
it doesn't matter. But before you vibrate or that frequency,
the things that are a match to it can't even
come into your awareness. Again, with the note on the piano,
(51:40):
if you go plank and then the lamp starts vibrating,
it only vibrates when you hit that particular note on
the piano. It won't vibrate if you play another one,
or if the other guy is playing is playing the
drums or whatever, that lamp will not vibrate. So only
when that vibration comes that you are setting in motion,
(52:04):
then things that are a match to it will appear.
So if you like the sound of the of the
lamp and you go, oh, I like that, I'll play
that noesse more point point point pink, and the lamp
will go dying, dun dun dying. So the more you
do that, the more this other thing happens. And if
you do that and it makes an awful sound that
makes you makes you cringe, Oh, you stop, you won't
(52:26):
play that note like that anymore because you don't want that.
So that's what happens with our thoughts and emotions. If
we feel horrible, guess what will get more of things
that make us feel horrible. And if you feel fabulous,
guess what we get more of things that make us
feel wonderful.
Speaker 3 (52:44):
And you deal with women, you know, I know a
lot of women have trouble with relationships and attracting the
wrong mate and stuff like that. But if you have
a thought or a belief that saying all men are
bad or are there well that resonate that that reflects
you're probably gotta either have no relationship or keep attracting
(53:05):
or reflecting bad relationships. And until you change that be
to a different be, then you'll not do the right
things to eventually change your circumstances.
Speaker 1 (53:17):
Yeah. Yeah, and you know, with relationships it's it's a
bit like with many other things, but with relationships it's
very it's very tough because people. This is this is
men also, this is this is just human beings. Human
beings want a mate out of oh my god, I
need someone so I'm not on my own. Oh my god,
(53:39):
I need help, I need company, I need someone to
love me. And then what they're broadcasting out there is
I'm desperate. I'm I'm I need, I need something, And
what they're broadcasting there is desperate and need. And guess
what comes along someone who will keep showing them desperate
(54:05):
and need. So it looks like a relationship. Yeah that's
my new boyfriend. But you're still feeling desperate and in need.
It's a relationship that does not work because it's not
like I want to manifest the man. No, you it's
not what you want. It's what you are broadcasting. You're
broadcasting desperation.
Speaker 3 (54:25):
And need, and you will just get you have to
broadcast your ideal scene and learn how to have that
be be your ideal scene, even if you feel desperate
in need. You have to be careful and learn how
to discipline yourself to not broadcast that because it will
(54:45):
just reflected.
Speaker 1 (54:47):
But that's that's a matter of awareness. You have to
get to a point where you understand that you don't
need anyone. You don't need anyone.
Speaker 3 (54:58):
You're complete, you.
Speaker 1 (54:59):
Complete, and you need to get to a point where
you love yourself. And then guess what the world will
show you more people who love you. If you are desperate,
I need love, no one loves me. I need love,
No one loves you. You'll get more of that. Even
if it shows up with a bottle of champagne, it
(55:20):
will still be a thing that doesn't love you, because
that's what you're broadcasting out there. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (55:27):
I agree, Well, we're getting near the end of my
time limit. But is there anything we haven't covered about
your program or and I also wanted you to state
so it's recorded, how people can get a hold of you,
your website, your contact information, and if there's anything that
you would like to say to the people that are
(55:49):
just finding out about you.
Speaker 1 (55:51):
Now. Yeah. Well I want to say is I don't
know who you are, whoever you are. If you're a
human being, I can't talk for aliens. If you're a
human being, you are You are basically a creator, and
you can't help create. You're creating all the time. You're
(56:15):
a creating machine. You cannot stop it. The question is
what are you creating right now? Are you creating something
beautiful that you want, something wanted, or are you creating
something unwanted? So be aware that you are way more
(56:36):
powerful than you think, for good or for bad. So
it's a matter of being really becoming really aware of
what it is you're creating. Because you're creating at top
speed all the time. That's what you do. So you
better make that intentional. Since you're putting all that energy
(56:58):
out there in the universe and you are, well, let
it be an energy that shapes your reality the way
you want it. Don't put all that incredible amount of
creative effort into creating something that you don't want, a
life that you don't want exactly. So my message is
(57:19):
you are way more powerful than you think. It's just
you're driving a really powerful car. Look where you want
to go? And don't look out the side windows because
if you look out the sun side windows, you'll crush
the car. You have to look where you want to go,
and you have to feel that that's where you're going,
(57:41):
and then your vibration will be will have things that
are a match to that resonate and that's going to
be your life.
Speaker 3 (57:51):
So people contact you, you can work with them on
all these areas to help them focus their mechanics and
discipline and their mindset so they can, you know, understand
the concept of their they are. You know, it's like
the Kingdom of God is within and even Jesus said,
(58:11):
I and the Father are one. So there's all kinds
of references about how we do have this power and
that we can and should use it.
Speaker 1 (58:19):
Oh, absolutely absolutely. And oneness you were talking about this
couple who talk about oneness. Oneness is maybe if you're
new to the concept, it's very difficult to grasp. You know,
it's us and them and me and them and we
are different and they are strange and they are bad
(58:42):
and whatever it takes, it takes. It takes some awareness
to grasp what oneness really means. But I hate to
break this to you You're part of it. You are
part of who you are. You are part of this.
Speaker 3 (59:02):
Yeah, you're not going to be able to escape that.
In his you ever, did you ever hear about or
read the book by James Redfield called The Celostine Prophecy.
Speaker 1 (59:11):
I know of it. I haven't read it, but yes,
I know.
Speaker 3 (59:12):
Pretty amazing book, the fiction book. But it's about a
guy who's been illusioned and bored and Pennsylvania and he
heard about some insights and incredible spiritual things that are
happening in Peru. So he goes over there and he
gets taught these eight or nine insights. But his big
takeaway was what you just talked about, that humanity has
(59:34):
insidiously been slowly separated from its source. And as we're
more and more separate, meaning not one, then we get
weaker and weaker, and all kinds of problems happen. And
so the most important thing is to rehook up again
so we have that juice. It's probably why Star Wars
(59:56):
was such a big success because it always talked about
Houston for it. Look, the Force was this energy field
that you could use for good, and some people used
it for bad, like Darth Vader. But the whole concept
of hooking up to the power and distributing that power
and realizing that we're one. I think we all are
(01:00:18):
spiritual beings, know down deep that that's true, but we've
all lost our way.
Speaker 1 (01:00:22):
Yes, yes, absolutely, absolutely, So.
Speaker 3 (01:00:25):
How can people get a hold of you? I'll put
your website on the.
Speaker 1 (01:00:28):
Notes, but oh, thank you. Well, it's not difficult. So
if you can remember my name, Simona is like Simon.
It's the feminine in Italian for Simon, so it's Simon,
will be in English. But I'm with an a because
I'm half Italian. And yeah, you were joking about the mango,
so remember it's not a papaya, it's not a banana,
(01:00:50):
it's a mango. If you go Simon and mango you
I'll come up easily and you'll find me there. That's
I'm easy to find because of that.
Speaker 3 (01:01:00):
Fantastic listen. Thank you so much for being a guest
on the podcast. Really appreciate it. And I'll send you
a link when it's up in things like that so
you can do your own promotion of it and listen.
Godspeed on everything. Let's stay I like to stay hooked
up with my guests because you never know, we may
(01:01:21):
collaborate on something or something could happen.
Speaker 1 (01:01:23):
Love to stay in touch, John, Thank you so much.
It was it was really really beautiful and really aligned.
I find it really really aligned talking to you.
Speaker 3 (01:01:34):
I could talk to you for a couple hours, yes,
if you if you want to stay on the line,
we can talk for a second. But let me let
me wrap it up here and do what I normally
do at the end and then and then I'll shut
the recording down and we could talk. So hold on
all right, everybody. So that was our guest, Simona Mango,
(01:01:55):
and she's actually in Italy. I can't wait to probably
go visit her because I'm going to go to Italy
shortly to the Maulfi coast and she's only a couple
hours away, which will be fantastic. So remember, I really
enjoy your feedback. So you can email me at John
at johnnovelloauthor dot com or text me at eight one
eight seven four zero three seven two eight, or if
(01:02:17):
you want to have a free mentor session and get
the details of my program, the Invisible Architect Protocol, you
can book a free life Strategy session by going to
my website. My mentor website, Go dot johnnovelloauthor dot com,
slash register. You can set up a free zoom session.
(01:02:38):
It's an actual mentor session. You actually will be given
assignments and decide if you want to work with me.
So until next week, flourish, it's your destiny, Johnavello, The
Jazz Philosopher, Over and out.
Speaker 2 (01:02:54):
This concludes this week's podcast with the jazz philosopher John Novello.
To learn more about John, visit his website at johnnovelloauthor
dot com. Or to schedule a one on one consultation
with John, visit go dot johnnovelloauthor dot com, forward slash register.
(01:03:14):
See you next week