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October 4, 2025 14 mins

George Noory and psychic Chip Coffey discuss the afterlife and what happens once we get there, his memory of dying in a Nazi concentration camp in a past life, and how angels and spirit guides can send us signals to help us along our journey.

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Now here's a highlight from Coast to Coast AM on iHeartRadio.

Speaker 2 (00:05):
And welcome back to Coast to Coast George Norrie with
you along with Chip Coffee. Chip. Can anybody be a
psychic or a medium or do you have to have
that special gift?

Speaker 3 (00:16):
There's a debate about that.

Speaker 4 (00:18):
As I said earlier, everyone has some level of psychic
ability as a sliding scale that goes all the way
from very little to a lot. And the ones who
get information on a regular basis are probably the ones,
undoubtedly the ones that we call psychics. Everyone has some

(00:40):
level of ability. I don't believe anyone can be a medium.
I believe that that's an ability or a skill that
some people have and some people don't.

Speaker 2 (00:53):
Do you think it's given to you the mediumship?

Speaker 4 (00:58):
I do.

Speaker 3 (00:59):
That's my belief. I believe. I believe in a highest power.

Speaker 4 (01:03):
Some people use the term higher power, but I use
highest power and I call my highest power God. And
I believe that the gift that I have to be
a medium is a gift from God.

Speaker 3 (01:15):
That's my belief.

Speaker 2 (01:16):
Is the afterlife, chip, heaven or what is it?

Speaker 3 (01:21):
Good question?

Speaker 4 (01:26):
I don't believe in the Judeo Christian versions of heaven
and hell. But I do believe that that the afterlife
is a place of peace where there's no pain. We
can still grow and learn in that realm.

Speaker 3 (01:44):
There's there's.

Speaker 4 (01:48):
There's opinion, there's attitude, there's you still have your personality
when you go to the afterlife. And the interesting thing
that I always tell my clients is that your mother
or your father, your grandmother, whomever they want to contact
could have been Napoleon Bonaparte or Queen Elizabeth I in

(02:13):
a former life. But they're going to come back to
you the way that you know them, the way that
you knew them in the lifetime that you shared with them.
But a soul, a soul doesn't lose itself when it
goes to spirit with a capital S.

Speaker 2 (02:34):
Truly remarkable. Where do you think reincarnation fits into this.

Speaker 3 (02:42):
Let's go to the biblical source for a minute, all right.

Speaker 4 (02:46):
In the Bible, it says you must be born again, right, yes,
and most people tend to believe one interpretation of that
passage is that you must be if you're a Christian,
you must be you wash it in the blood of
the lamb, you must be baptized. What if, as an

(03:06):
alternate interpretation. What was meant was, look, Jesus said this. Look,
I know that you're trying as best you can to
cozy up as closely as you can to my dad
and his perfection, but you're not going to get there.

(03:28):
But you can get as close as you can possibly be.
But that's not going to happen with just one lifetime.
You've got to go through many lifetimes to get there,
to learn the lessons that you need to learn for
your soul to grow and evolve enough to where you
can be as close to that divine perfection as you

(03:48):
want to be. So maybe that was a way to
talk about reincarnation. And I'm a firm believer in reincarnation.

Speaker 3 (03:57):
I have a.

Speaker 4 (03:59):
Memory of particular lives, one in particular lives, one in particular,
and I've even met some people from that last lifetime
that have reincarnated back into the living realm, and I've
met those folks from my earlier lifetime in this current lifetime.

Speaker 2 (04:22):
Since I was a kid, chip I've always believed in reincarnation,
and my theory was that you reincarnate until you reach
that level of perfection where you don't have to come
back anymore.

Speaker 3 (04:35):
I agree with that one hundred percent.

Speaker 2 (04:39):
I don't know how many lives that might take, but
that's what it is.

Speaker 3 (04:43):
I want to hear about one of my lifetimes.

Speaker 2 (04:45):
Absolutely, I believe.

Speaker 4 (04:48):
In my lifetime before the one I'm currently living in,
that I was a young female who died in a
Nazi concentration camp and Nazi occupied Europe. Yeah, I am,
I was gassed.

Speaker 2 (05:12):
What makes you feel that that was you?

Speaker 4 (05:18):
The memories are just too vivid. And you said, since
you were a kid, you've believed in reincarnation. I have
always had this weird fascination with Nazis and concentration camps

(05:40):
and everything to do with Autolf Hitler, and it's like
it's like that wreck on the side of the road.
You don't want to look, but you can't look away.
I had a friend years ago, and she was female,
and we started having simultaneous dreams, exact dreams about being

(06:03):
in a Nazi concentration camp at the same time on
the same nights, and we would share those dream experiences
with each other, and we came to learn that in
that lifetime she was a boy, my younger brother, and
I was the older sister. We both remembered being a

(06:24):
didn't know exactly which town we lived in, but we
lived in an upstairs apartment or flat in this town,
and we were the only two children of our parents.
And we both remembered me practicing piano and him as
my younger brother, sitting on the piano stool with me
while I practiced the piano and other things. My brother

(06:50):
in that lifetime did not die in the gas chamber.
He actually died of disease. And my friend Beth remembered
thinking in that lifetime, if I just make myself as
small as I can possibly be, they'll leave me alone.

Speaker 3 (07:07):
Well that's a real sad sort of statement.

Speaker 4 (07:11):
But as I said, that was one of the people
that I met from that lifetime in my current lifetime,
and there have been several others that we were there.
And it's amazing how many people have told me that
they think they had a lifetime that included a part
of this whole Nazi thing.

Speaker 2 (07:33):
It's amazing that those who are in the concentration camps
were tattooed or branded with a number. Do you have
any kind of markings on your body, or any kind
of birthmark or something that might convince you that that's
where your tattoo could have been.

Speaker 3 (07:53):
I don't. I'll tell you what I've got.

Speaker 4 (07:55):
I've got a scar on my wrist that where I
rammed my hand through a window when I was a kid.
That's the only thing I've gone on my wrist, and
I've got one. I don't like pain. I'm not one
of these people that likes pain at all.

Speaker 2 (08:07):
Well, I don't blame you.

Speaker 4 (08:09):
I've I've only got one tattoo, and I have a tattoo.

Speaker 3 (08:15):
On my left wrist that says I z.

Speaker 4 (08:19):
Z I izzy.

Speaker 3 (08:22):
I want to hear the story.

Speaker 2 (08:23):
Sure, here it is.

Speaker 4 (08:27):
I'm gonna name drop shamelessly. Did you ever watch a
show called NCIS on television?

Speaker 2 (08:33):
Oh? Yeah, loved it?

Speaker 4 (08:36):
Then you know who the character of Abby was. Polly Perett, the.

Speaker 2 (08:39):
Actress, right, the dark haired girl, Yes.

Speaker 3 (08:42):
The one who was kind of a goth lab fir. She.

Speaker 2 (08:44):
Yeah, she's always coming up with these incredible theories of
lab work and stuff like that.

Speaker 4 (08:51):
Okay, name dropping. She's a good friend of mine, and
you know on the show she had all these tattoos.
Some of them were real and some of them were not.
But she does have a number of tattoos and I've
always in my lifetime. Another facet of my weird existence
is I've always had the numbers twelve and twenty one

(09:14):
to follow me all my life. I could give you
tons of examples how twelves and twenty one's.

Speaker 3 (09:20):
Pop up in my lifetime.

Speaker 4 (09:22):
When I met her the first time, I said, how
many tattoos do you have?

Speaker 3 (09:27):
She goes, I don't know how many I've got.

Speaker 4 (09:29):
We can count them if you want to, and I'm like, no,
I'm good with that with not doing that. But I
noticed on her ring finger she had izzy izzy eye
on that, and I thought, could that possibly be twelve
twenty one? It was an ambigram or a pet what word?

Speaker 3 (09:49):
Am I look? A palindrome?

Speaker 4 (09:50):
It was. Any way you turn it, it looks the same.
So I thought, can that possibly be a twelve and
a twenty one? And she said and I asked her
and she said, yeah, it is. And I'm like, I've
got to tell you about the twelves and twenty ones
in my life. They follow me everywhere. And I told
her that. She said, well, for me, twelve twenty one
is a biblical verse. It's Romans twelve twenty one do

(10:13):
not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.
So I was at an event once and they said
to me. The lady said to me, she was doing tattoos,
and she said, do you have any tattoos? And I said,
oh no, And she said, well, let me give you one,
just a small one. And I finally got brave enough
to go sit at her table, and I had Izzy,

(10:35):
just like Polly Perette's Izzy tattooed on my wrist.

Speaker 3 (10:39):
So I share an.

Speaker 4 (10:40):
Izzy tattoo with Polly Perett And somewhere floating around in
the universe, there's a picture of her finger laying on
my left wrist comparing our izzy tattoos.

Speaker 2 (10:53):
That's fantastic. Where do angels fit into all this?

Speaker 1 (10:59):
Ah?

Speaker 4 (11:00):
God created angels to be his workers or his emissaries,
and they're very different than spirit partners or spirit guides.
Angels have never incarnated for full lifetime into a human form.
They're a totally separate form of being. So Grandma's not
going to die and become an angel. Grandma's not going

(11:21):
to die and become your guardian angel.

Speaker 3 (11:23):
It's a wonderful life.

Speaker 4 (11:24):
Got it wrong because whatever that guy's what was his name,
Clarence did not die and become an and get his
angel wings. Clarence was not going to become an angel.
Spirit partners are souls like yours and mine, who have
attained a level of soul growth that they are entrusted

(11:44):
to help those as well as they can as much
as they can who are in the human form through
their lives. So they're formerly living beings. Whereas angels may
incarnate for a certain amount of time I'm into the
human form, they don't spend an entire lifetime in the
human form.

Speaker 2 (12:05):
Are they the same as spirit guides chip.

Speaker 3 (12:09):
Angels? Yes, No, angels serve a different purpose.

Speaker 2 (12:16):
Who might be the most helpful to us? The spirit
guides are the angels a.

Speaker 4 (12:26):
I think both are very instrumental in helping us. I
don't know that one is more important than the others.
I think angels are very protective of us, and the
difference the distinction. Maybe it's a distinction without a difference,
but the distinction is I think that angels are more

(12:46):
protective of us in certain ways. They can guide us too,
but our spirit partners are here to help us maneuver
our way on this path of life.

Speaker 3 (13:00):
Life.

Speaker 2 (13:02):
In the movie you just mentioned with Clarence It's a
Wonderful Life, one of my favorites. The little girl mentioned
his wings, and you say, didn't get his wings, but
it was a great part of a movie. But he
came down to help George Bailey played by Jimmy Stewart,
who was going to try to commit suicide because he
was depressed over a banking situation. Right, do they get

(13:27):
involved in our lives that way?

Speaker 3 (13:30):
Sometimes?

Speaker 4 (13:33):
Sometimes if I'd written the script, George would have already
been an angel, right, he would have been a guardian angel.
And here's a real cool thing. I grew up for
most of my life. I was born with college lived
in this little town in upstate New York called Elmira
that most people haven't ever even heard of. And in
the movie It's a Wonderful Life, fame, somebody's getting ready

(13:54):
to go to Elmira for Christmas. I think, so that's
I always have to laugh when I see that, when
I hear that line spoken in It's a Wonderful Life.

Speaker 1 (14:03):
Listen to more Coast to Coast AM every weeknight at
one a m. Eastern and go to Coast to coastam
dot com for more

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