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July 2, 2024 50 mins
Summer's here, and the long weekend is upon us! Time to soak up the spirit of independence, unity, and sunshine!

Summer vibes are all about the Fire element – sparking change, growth, and resilience. It's the season for personal breakthroughs, epic hangouts, and keeping both body and mind in check.

A time to turn those bright ideas into action. It can also bring a bit of hot-headed impatience and drama.

Join us for tips to keep the summer magic alive, even when the weather isn't playing nice!

The Language of Healing is broadcast live Tuesdays at 2PM ET on W4WN Radio - Women 4 Women Network (www.w4wn.com) part of Talk 4 Radio (www.talk4radio.com) on the Talk 4 Media Network (www.talk4media.com). The Language of Healing TV Show is viewed on Talk 4 TV (www.talk4tv.com).

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(00:00):
The topics and opinions expressed on thefollowing show are solely those of the hosts
and their guests, and not thoseof W four WN Radio It's employees or
affiliates. We make no recommendations orendorsements for radio show programs, services,
or products mentioned on air or onour web. No liability, explicit or
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questions or comment should be directed tothose show hosts. Thank you for choosing

(00:22):
W four WN Radio. Are youready to take a journey. Let's connect
with the healers of the world.It's that time. It's time for the
Language of Healing on W four WNRadio and Talk for TV. Now here's
your host, doctor Nicole Forton.Hello, Hello, and welcome to another

(00:45):
great show on the Language of Healingon the Women for Women Network W FOURWN
dot com. Today we're celebrating summerand the long weekend and sunshine, independence,
unity and everything in between. Iwant to stop you right there.
First of all, you start thatshow beautifully, like so many people forget

(01:08):
to do it that way, andit was like the perfect way. Second,
is is it really independence in Canadabecause it's independence this weekend here.
But I always laugh when other countriescelebrate our independence. Well this is Canada

(01:30):
Day, which was July one,so yesterday. You know, it does
celebrate the time where we became independentfrom there, you got. So it
is independence. It's like represents likeyour country or your yeah, standalone is
the boundaries what makes up that country. You know, it's a time to

(01:51):
celebrate the diversity and the unity andthe you know, independence. It's like
what it's the melting pot, andCanada and US are very mixing melting pots
and we have you know, it'slike a young history but lots of history.
Yeah, it's good that. Imean, it's interesting that they're so
close together. But I don't knowmuch as long as you're not talking about

(02:13):
current politicians because they're all old.Yeah, that's a rough go over there.
I mean, I haven't nothing todo with politics, folks. It's
just old people running things in ayoung world. Yeah. That's like the
dynamic I think where we have togrow and evolve from because the old ways

(02:36):
sometimes don't match up to the newways. And we're changing so fast now,
you know, we live in likeit's not that many generations ago,
where things are so bare and minimumand basic and simple and actually very much
more connected to nature. It's likewe need the both, we need the
old and the new, like myalternative health attire today. Okay, because

(03:00):
it is really I had somebody doa cleansing of me once, and I
had to go to their place andI had to you know, this robe
while they threw a bunch of crapon me to cleanse me, like oils

(03:20):
or powders or smudges, smoke.I don't even remember. It was so
much it was did they throw atyou? No, there was like there
was liquid stuff. There was probablyother stuff, herbs, just different things
like cleansing, spiritually cleansing things.Yes, and monkey poop too. Look,

(03:44):
somebody said that monkey poop too.Yes, and no, that happens
in Costa Rica though. But yeah, but and then you know, he
had told me that you need towear white like I wear black a lot.
So I'm like, you know,I'm attracting the uh no, wonder,

(04:06):
I have so many evil people thathave been in my life. Maybe
I should be wearing white the wholetime. But seriously, though, he
was kind of dressed like this exceptcompletely white. And even my shorts are
white today. So I'm like allwhite today. I'm here like in my

(04:26):
spiritual form while you're soaking in thesunlight. You know, the white is
the bright, it's the light.It's the opposite of black. So you
know, at this time it's good. Maybe you're soaking up. You need
that energy you need. I'll tellyou what made me wear the white though,
Okay, because I was watching amovie earlier, okay, and the

(04:50):
movie was what was it, TheSerial Killer Mom or something. It's about
that mom that's a house wife andeverything. She turns out she's serial killing
people. And so basically one ofthe people she killed is because she was

(05:11):
the person was wearing white after LaborDay. Oh yeah, that one.
And so it's after Memorial Day becausethat's how we judge it here in the
United States. You never wear whiteafter Labor Day. That's a rule.
Not in Florida though, but whenyou live in the states that have winter,
and then you never wear black afterlate Memorial Day, like summer is

(05:35):
the time to wear white. That'sthe tradition in a lot of places in
the United States where they have winter, is like you wear white during the
summer. You don't wear it duringthe winter, So that goes right along
with your concept of the summertime andwearing the white and collecting the light and
all that good stuff. Yeah,because they say in there's a you know,

(05:57):
a Kundulini yoga. I don't knowif you're familiar with that, but
they all wear white and it's justa you know, tradition or a different
branch of yoga. But they saythat it's because white absorbs every color.
So if you think of the rainbow, like you're absorbing everything and then black
is a bit repellent, which isnatural and fine, you know, so

(06:18):
you can you can choose that's urgingor creating a boundary it is. What
do you think about that? Well, what's interesting about that is is I
had a discussion with somebody I don'tknow, a few years ago or something,
but there was one point in time. There's different teachings, and there

(06:39):
was one point in time I wastaught like, black and white are not
colors. Black is all colors andwhite is the absence of color. But
actually, in what you're talking aboutand what this person was saying to me,
it's the exact opposite, which what'sinteresting to me that So it makes
more sense the other way because ifblack you get no matter what colors you

(07:00):
put together, you can get toblack. You can never get to white
if you put any color into it. So it's kind of weird that,
you know, I was taught onething that made logical sense, but then
in the spiritual realm and all thattaught something very different, which logically doesn't

(07:23):
make sense. But that's the point. Not everything should logically make sense,
because sometimes it just doesn't. Sometimesjust think like there's things that make sense
that have no logic to them.Yeah, I mean, that's one of
the great mysteries of life and theuniverse. Like if you think about I

(07:43):
think in a spiritual sense that itis opposite, you know, you think
about Okay, I'm also then thinkingabout science, you know, like the
black hole is not represents nothingness,right, it's like the abyss I have
to do it sunbathing. Yeah,we can talk about that, getting sun

(08:05):
sunshine or the sun don't shine.Yeah, yeah, I know, the
sunshine on the black hole. Onthe black hole. Yes, I know.
This is one of your favorite activities. It's my favorite activity to watch,
not to participate because that could hurt. Okay, well, for those

(08:30):
of you who don't know what we'retalking about, we're talking about getting sunlight
on your dairy air in the blackhole. It's just, you know,
it's the opposite. It's polarity,it's it's all equally as important of an
area to keep maintain health. Wheredoes rebel like sunlight? Wunny? You

(08:54):
should ask, right, man,why do you do this? I know
it's such a brat beautiful blue skywith no rain, which has been really
nice lately except for the heat here. Yes, heat, that's part of

(09:15):
summer. You know, that's agood segue rebel, because that's part of
the summer. Summer heat what wewant to talk about today, because it
also represents like fire and very activetime. So why every romance book is
like placed in the summer. Yeah, and why the man is wearing a

(09:37):
shirt similar to yours? Okay,we got to describe this for radio listener.
How would you describe your your shirttoday? I think it's got like
a spiritual African drum circle motif.Right, Yeah, that's a good way
to describe it. It's white andthen the V neck, the deep the

(09:58):
deep V is is attached my strings. Do you have a pattern not?
Oh yeah, full white? Ilike it. Yes, I see,
it's got the whole thing going on. You must need to attract some positive
energies in your life. I don'tknow, I do not need to.
I just purposely make sure I do. Yeah, there you go. It's
intentional, right, yeah, absolutely, yes, Okay, So where was

(10:24):
I going with this? Somewhere inthe summer. Yeah, it's about keeping
cool. You know, how tokeep cool in the summertime and how to
have fun and ah, and that'sthat's probably where the whole fashion thing comes
from, because if you think aboutit, black clothes, dark clothes,

(10:46):
they are hot, so you wantthem. You want them in the winter
time. You want them in thewinter time. But white is not hot,
so that's why you want in thesummertime. Now, if you live
where Rebel lives, it doesn't reallymatter. Well, yeah, I'm sure

(11:09):
we have high humidity. We haveone hundred plus percent humidity here. Well,
you can't have one hundred plus Okay. The maximum percentage you could have
in anything is one hundred that's themaximum percentage. I'm in Florida, So
like it's the same thing here.Like literally I was sitting out on my

(11:30):
balcony balcony last night, and Iwas there for like two minutes. I'm
like, it's freaking too hot forthis crap. Wow, it is way
too hot for this. Because rightnow current temperatures right here is it's ninety
five. What it feels like ofone hundred and twelve. We just started
whoa here that I got to convertthat into celsius for the Canadians. And

(11:56):
here's what's interesting is that. Okay, so it can have two meanings to
summertime because summertime, Okay, solike in New Jersey, summertime is when
everything opens up and there's all kindsof action and stuff like that. But
then also summertime is also a timewhere like you don't even want to go

(12:20):
outside because it's so fricking hot andit slows you down. So it slows
you down and speeds you up dependingon what you're doing. Well, this
is like, yeah, the dualitiesof everything. There's like, okay,
so just let's get back to thisrebel you said, feels like one hundred
and fourteen twelve oh, one hundredand twelve, Okay, that is forty

(12:43):
four point four four four celsius,which is crazy, crazy hot. I've
felt that heat once in my life. It was in the middle of China
in the summertime, and my friends, I, honestly I couldn't do it.
I have to stay in the hotelroom in the air conditioning the whole
day. My friends went out fora bike ride, came back with blisters

(13:05):
on their butts, and I gotreally bad diarrhea that day. Actually,
but that's is that related to whatI want to know? Not related at
all. We each had our ownissues going on down there. But but
that's a from Chinese medicine perspective,if we can make it like useful information

(13:26):
for people, is that that kindof heat does affect the body and you
have to be really cautious in it. And there's a really good formula.
I never traveled to a hot countrywithout it. Hot and humid equals like
damp heat, and yeah, youcan get you can get sick from that.
I eat diarrhea, you know,and which is probably which is I
haven't checked recently, but the numberone cause of death in the world is

(13:50):
diarrhea. Because it come on,come on, hold on, I'm looking
that up. Hold on, Iokay, all right, I'm looking at
that one up they move aside thatseed word diarrhea's coming your way. Hold
on, yeah, exactly, yeah, because it dehydrates you. So this

(14:13):
is key number one for the summeris to keep hydrated. In China,
for example, they have a lotof heat. In Chinese medicine or Eastern
medicine, we really take in connsiderationthe climactic factors in our health. So
our internal environment matches or meets theexternal environment. So we need to respond

(14:33):
appropriately. So we can do thatthrough food or practices or clothing. What
do you got there, pipeline?You look like you guys, I have?
Yeah, it says people ask isdiarrhea a leading cause of death worldwide?
The answer is please. Diarrheal diseaseis a eating cause of child mortality

(15:01):
and morbidity in the world, andmostly results from contaminated food and water sources.
Worldwide, seven hundred and eighty millionindividuals lack access to improved drinking water
and two point five billion lack improvedsanitation. All right, children, Yeah,

(15:26):
so children, Okay, Well,that's still important. Equally is important
because that's our upcoming generation. Imean, but then there's other problems of
sanitation. I think that's maybe aI think, doctor, I think we
should give that water to the olderpoliticians instead of the kids. Right well,
I mean yeah, maybe just youcan't mess around with nature though.

(15:50):
That's just the way it is.You got to accept it. I mean,
nature will take court care of iteventually. Right well, yeah,
rebel, how's your water in Louisiana? Yeah? What is? Because we
have a water issue here for sure. Any thanks, I don't Louisiana.
I don't suggest drinking the tap waterbecause they put things to tap water and

(16:14):
it's just not you know, conditionit to drinking funny thing they put it
in that water, right, Iwould suggest cleaning your water with some sort
of filtration system here. The boilingsystem always works. If you don't have
a filtration system, boil it,boil all of the contaminants out that you

(16:36):
can. And what about if youused a locking screen? Would that work?
What a locking screen? You know, like locking screen doors? No
locking screen? Get that? Yeah? Where we go with this? Well,
because one time she told me shenever heard of a thing as a

(16:57):
locking screen door. They don't havethose in Louisia, and they just let
people They just let people walk rightin your house. Yeah, yeyeah,
Well all the time we did dothat. We just let people. You
know, my grandparents' door was alwaysopen. Nowadays you can't only the certain
people though, because in your grandma'sday it was like, yeah, females

(17:18):
aren't allowed, only males or somethinglike that. That is not the case
that we're Italian and everybody's welcome.Yeah, that's that's like old You grew
up in like obviously a more populated, like harder area where you have to
lock the doors. Well I'm thesame way, but nowadays you lock the
doors. It's just yeah, itdoesn't matter where you are nowadays. That's

(17:42):
the sad state of affairs, becauseyeah, maybe that's true. So yeah,
I mean during the summer you shouldbe able to leave your doors open
and everybody come over for your barbecues. Yeah, that's what it's about,
epic hangouts and enjoying the long daylight. Well here, at least, you

(18:03):
guys are a little more south there, so I don't know what the sound
like. Our sunset right now islike eight fifteen. We're like eight fifteen
right now. But I was justover in Belgium and it was like ten
to eleven o'clock. Yeah, yeah, you spent you spent solstice over there.
Yeah, we missed you last lastcouple of weeks. You were out
having having adventures, getting into deepshenanigans and music festivals. Right, that's

(18:30):
right. Was it a couple ofweeks? I think it was only one
week? I don't know, Ithink. Okay, well, you know
better than it seems like a coupleof week there, one travel one what
to be there? Yeah? Sodid I miss two shows Rebel? Yeah

(18:53):
we did. It's been a coupleof weeks on a plane and it would
have been impossible because it's an hour'sdifference. Yeah, yeah, in one
week because you were there. Yes, see, it just felt like one.
Yeah. Well, it all happensso fast. I mean it just

(19:15):
gets so excited for each episode thatit goes very quickly. Yeah I know,
right, Yeah, me too.It's nice to have you back,
Nice to have you with us lookingso bright and shiny, brilliant. Okay,
what are some other what are someother benefits of the sun? Well,
vitamin D. Yeah, vitamin D. There's nothing better than the sun.

(19:40):
The cure what ails you? Andwhen I say cure, what ails
you? Like, don't take thatliterally because it doesn't necessarily do anything,
but it does a lot of things. It's kind of hard. That's an
earth thing too. You do studiesof winter places, you know, the
difference in men. You know,positivity or negativity differs greatly during the summer

(20:04):
and as the winter. I meanyou look at places that have six months
of darkness, like that becomes veryThat plays on your mind. People that
live in that, they'll tell youit plays on your mind negativity. And
so of course we got seasonal effectivedisorders SAD. You know you need to
stay. Yeah, and like myarea, I mean we have we have

(20:26):
the sun in the winter time.Well yeah, we're similar to Belgium.
Like the sun is setting ten pm, it's light till eleven pm, and
then in the wintertime it's dark byfour thirty pm. So you've got lots
of darkness to deal with and getthrough, and you have to find your
own sunshine. That's the point ofbalancing and going through cycles and moving through

(20:49):
cycles with more wisdom, and Imean that comes with experience and knowledge,
and that's what I hope that wecan provide to listeners here, you know,
through the language of healing is likehow to live more in harmony with
nature and enjoy life a little bitand yourself. Yeah, well, and
the sun sun represents like m tome. That's I don't know, it's

(21:15):
like you, even your solar plexus. It's your independence, it's you,
it's your purpose, it's your senseof identity, it's what you're, what
drives you to do what you do. It's the action. And then the
moon energy, say, on theother hand, would be more of that
winter, more reflective, more introspective, and you need the balance between the
two. You can't always be go, go go, which maybe our society

(21:37):
loves to do and have the pressuretowards. But those moments of rest are
equally as important. And that's whatthe summertime calls for, is when we're
maximum activity that you need to seedthrough some of those water qualities like rest,
relaxation laughter. Oh No, summer'sfor party time. Forget the rest

(21:57):
of the actuation that's RESTful. Yeah, but you can relax in the sunlight,
like if we're talking one hundred andtwelve degrees forty five degrees, Yeah,
that's not very RESTful in that sunlight. No, but you need you

(22:17):
know, Yeah, you need.That's a good example of the extremes where
it's like critical to rest, andthat's where siesta is born, right through
those hot countries, is Louisy,I like that to rebel where you've got
siesta is up part of the culture. More like, we do have a

(22:38):
lot eating here. But no,uh, things have changed so much over
time, especially after all you know, the foolishness and locking people up and
all of that good stuff, andall those who say this climate change.
Well, I've lived here the majorityof my life. I've lived on the

(22:59):
place. But it's the heat isso different from the eighties to now,
and you can't even stomach going outside. I went outside this weekend, got
heat stroke twice. Not again,what that for. I didn't do it,
no purpose. It's not like Iwas out there looking for it.
If you get it once, likesomething would tell you, Okay, maybe

(23:22):
I shouldn't do that again this weekend. Well no, you see, I
went to mister got stung by ajellyfish like three or four times or something.
I went out to a party andit was out the doors, a
barbecue party. Never barbecue in theheat. It just adds more heat.
So anyway, I went to aparty. Made the barbecue. You just
put it out on the rock,I know, right, But we were

(23:45):
out for an hour and after thathour my skin turned all red. I
was pouring buckets of sweat, andI'm like, I can't do this.
I gotta go, I gotta Igotta leave. But some of the parties
stayed there, so I had togo back. I went home. I
tried to sip on water. Neverever, ever drink water too fast if

(24:07):
you have heat stroke, because it'snot going to do you any good.
Just saying. So I cooled offfor an hour. You're never supposed to
drink it fast anyway. Well,you know, sometimes you're thirsty, but
anyways, I'm never supposed to drinkit cold either. It was ice pater
ice water. I was outside,good, good, but I could the

(24:30):
water was making me sick. Andthat's a that's a short sign that I
am dehydrated. When water makes mesick, that's never a good thing.
So I cooled off for about anhour and then I said, okay,
well let's do this again. Wentback out for another hour. It's like,
well, see that's what I'm saying. You got you got back to
good and then okay, let mego do that again, because it was

(24:52):
a different part. It was anhour later in the day. The first
time I went out, it wasthe beginning of the hottest part of the
day. It was one hundred andfifteen degrees. So I was like,
okay, no, this is youknow, I'm I figured I could handle
it. It's just outside. Yeah, there's a big difference between being outside
these days. Because I was outside, but I was outside on grass.

(25:17):
I'm allergic to grass. So itwas like, okay, let's see yeah,
that's a likely story. And it'sa likely story. You see the
hives that popped up on my arms. It's like, I'm not even rolling
around in the grass or anything.I was just walking in it with shoes
on. So it's like, ohno, Well, can I give you
some advice for a bone place,some health advice if you're allergic to grass,

(25:41):
don't walk in it. If youget heat stroke with it being hot
out, stop, don't go rightback out after you cool down after a
few minutes. Just some helpful healthadvice. I'm sure our our expert in
Chinese medicine will probably add to that. Well. It's kind of funny because

(26:02):
I've I've heard of someone being allergicto grass, but I've never met anybody
allergic to grass, so I wonderbecause there's so many Well, she never
met a Canadian either, so you'reeven really no, I have met Canadian.
Yeah, that's funny. We're likepretty much the same, okay,
except for very different. You knowwhat's funny is I noticed, like my

(26:26):
my keyboard actually is set to CanadianEnglish, you know, Canadian versus US
English. I think that's kind offunny that there's does have like like things
like A and yeah a capital eaeach yeah bady a that's like in your
keyboard, yeah, b the ahey buddy yeah. Oh, and then

(26:48):
you gotta gotta get like the wholeEast Coast keyboard. That would be a
whole different thing. I'm west Eastcoast of Canada because it's French Canada.
Well, there's fred there's Chiac,which is a mix of French and English
that's spoken in. I think NovaScotia is a very or New Brunswick Someone's

(27:11):
hope. I don't know actually onehundred percent. I've actually never really been
there. But and then there's Newfoundland, you know, which is very close
to the Scottish. I had oneof those dogs, all right, what
a Newfoundland Oh really, you hada Newfoundland dog? Oh my goodness in
the heat of No, it's inNew Jersey, Okay, I'm in Florida.

(27:33):
Yeah. I think that's like equallyas cruel as having a polar bear
in San Diego. I think thatit doesn't make sense those poor animals,
right, But yeah, a Newfoundlanddog in New Jersey. It's interesting you
say that, because what was interestingto me is I was at grassp pop
music festival, which is in acertain part of Belgium, and there are

(27:56):
multiple languages spoken there, and youknow, separately, not like they speak
all the languages. It's like thisneighborhood speaks this language. So I met
a woman that spoke every language.There's English is the last one, German,

(28:17):
French. I was gonna say Belgium, but there is no Belgium.
So German, French, Dutch,and Flemish, which is like a kind
of Dutch, but it's a BelgianDutch. It's kind of like the best
way I could describe it as thedifference between French in Canada and French in

(28:40):
France, you know. So yeah, it's it's in fact one of the
bands. Okay, they have thissong. It's called speak and then you
know the language we're speaking or die. It's from back in the eighties.
You couldn't really sing that song now. Whenever they sing it over here in

(29:02):
the States, they sing and theycall it speak Spanish or die. So
at the festival they did speak Flemishor die nice. I didn't even know
there was a language called Flemish.All this time on this earth, I
learned a new language. Oh that'sawesome. I mean you can always learn.

(29:22):
See you don't know about a newlanguage, or you learned the new
language. There's a difference. Ilearned how to hit on women in each
one of their language. Let's hear. Let's hear the best pickup line?
What do you got for us?You don't want that on this show?
No, no, because because afriend of mine from the UK told me

(29:45):
to say something to somebody in Germanand uh, and I can't really repeat
it on this show. You canremind me. Actually we did talk about
it. I think I'm type manray. But yeah, all right,
so we can tune in there findout more. Maybe maybe Oh no,
he said what happens at grass Popsays at grass Pop. Well, that's

(30:10):
what I was told, you know, I was told that. They're like,
it's kind of like vy, you'vegot to you've got a big mouth
though, so oops. Yeah,well it had to do with something big
and it wasn't my mouth, Okay, like I didn't know what I was
saying. I'm just game. Justtell me what to say. I'll say

(30:30):
it. I don't give a crap. And they said, if you say
this, then you will then theywon't want to, you know, perform
it. People just want to hityou. This carnal carnal knowledge with you.
Let's play this exchange a mutual Yeah, if you say this nobilizing on

(30:56):
a if you say this specific thingin German, okay, I mean rebel
communicated if she wants because I thinkI did say it on last week's show.
No you didn't say it. Youjust say and then we don't know,
all right, No, you gotin an interview. No it had

(31:18):
It was a German saying something German, and it basically was I have a
big right, yeah, a bighockey stick. Yeah, well that is
part of the see it. Thisis like summer summer flings. You know
that didn't never hurt anybody until youcome home with something. They're called festival

(31:41):
fla They're called festival flings. Okay, Oh, festival flings. Okay,
okay, Yeah, it's all good. It's all part of the fun,
you know. Yeah, when it'smuddy in the campsite and you know,
I didn't really stay in the campsite, but it was money at the campsites.
Yeah, lots of rain. Yeah, the first two days we're very

(32:05):
muddy. So yeah, how ismuddiness good for our energy and health?
Yeah? Okay, so here go, let's go back. You have mud
energy to grass? Okay, becauseI wonder how are you with the mud.
There's so many properties of the earth, well, not specifically the grass,
but part of our ability to cooldown and re energize and recharge the

(32:28):
ions in our body and feel goodphysically, mentally, spiritually. Is is
grounding? You know, getting inthe in the in the dirt, mud
baths and using mutter is great wayto remineralize yourself. So yeah, rebel,
how do you do with the mud? Have you tried that? Have
you ever had a mud back?Have you ever wrestled in mud? Or

(32:49):
wrestled in mud. We got inanything that mud not jellow. Not anything
about chocolate pudding No, not topudding either, or spaghetti cooked spaghetti neither
none, Na, I don't wrestle. Oh see what kind of fiestas are
happening here? I know, right? Is this spogett spaghetti, mushy or

(33:13):
out dante? Yes, it wouldbe ill dentate to wrestle in. But
anyway, I'm not sure about themud. I've always heard of the mud
bath, and I've seen a few. I haven't done any of them.
I think it also is a coolingsensation, and it helps cool the body
down, doesn't it. Yeah,right, I have a lot of mud

(33:36):
in Louisiana. You should be doingit, you know. Well, yeah,
let me just go jump out inthe swamp. I don't do that.
Well, you gotta be careful becausethat's where you guys hide the bodies
exactly. Yeah, oh yeah,that's like the boggy swampland Okay, I
must, I must excru it trulydoes what happens in Louisiana. It truly

(33:57):
stays in Louisiana, in the swamp, stuck buried in the swamp. Okay,
swamp. People's laughing. She's done. She knows. Okay, this
might be a silly question. It'svery tangent. But is that where Lenard
Skinner's from. No, they're fromJacksonville, Florida. Oh really, Oh,

(34:20):
Jacksonville, Florida. Same as Pantera. Mm and I think fred Durst
lum Biscuit. Correct. Yeah.I met a guy at in Daytona who
got a tattoo from fred Durst justbefore he hit it big with lumb Biscuit
in Jacksonville, Florida. Wow,that's a really cool story. Showed me

(34:42):
the tattoo. Oh, I gotit covered up. Like it's a big
mistake. So I don't know ifit's a true story or not, but
I believe it. It probably wasa big mistake and he probably got covered
up before they got famous, andlike that was a big mistake. Yeah,
it didn't turn out that well.Tattoo. You know, we should
do an episode on that because Idon't have any tattoos. And one of

(35:05):
the biggest reasons I don't have anytattoos. Originally the biggest reason is because
I'm Jewish, but now the biggestreason is because tattoo inc attacks every organ
in your body. There's well,I have many thoughts around that we can
do a whole episode, but thereis that's what I'm saying. Maybe the
modern ink, Yeah, but intraditional sense, there's there's other ways to

(35:31):
do it that are I know somepeople that have gone that route, and
there's purpose to it. There's oldlots of tradition with it. Even acupuncture,
people would tattoo a point to keepit stimulated. So if you were
I mean, there's a point thatthey say after everyone over the age of
thirty five should stimulate every day.But if you had that point stimulated,

(35:54):
do they do that at festivals too? Well, I don't know. I
guess if you're into that, Iknow, if it's good, I'm all
for stimulating it every day. Okay, there you go, There you go.
Hey, incarceration, do they dotattoos there? Yeah, there's a

(36:15):
whole tattoo part. It's a tattooand music festival, So there's a whole
section in the prison that's tattooing.Appropriate that would be in a prison that
you would have the tattooing. Butyeah, some of the most famous tattoo
hourists in the world are that.But they do not know that's the jail
house ink. Let's be specific.It is the safe well I'm not going

(36:37):
to use the word safe. Wellnot everybody does tattoo inc. It is
not the jail house dangerous. Waitwait wait you say traditional. But traditional
was where they were using sticks andwhat shoes talking about where it wasn't a
poison it is today, Yeah,jailhouse ink like mashed up like cigarette ash.
No, you know how they dojail house tattoos? Do you know

(36:59):
how to? Don't? Okay,so I've seen it, like you know,
creating with and they use a toothbrushas part of the creator They use
a pen and they use the inkfrom a ballpoint pen like the pen ink.
That's what they use. Mhmm.Interesting. They also do something as

(37:21):
an Asian thing that actually you cango to a doctor and get done in
prisons called a pearl, the jailhousepearl. Do you know what pearl is?
You were in China? Yeah,no I don't. I don't personally,
no I do. I've had haveheard of this. I mean you

(37:42):
could go a doctor and get itdone, you know, and there's a
go Chinese doctor and get done,but they do it in jail where there's
no doctor. Yeah, I meanthis yeah, pain, no gain.
Yeah, No, I don't likethat. I mean to each their own.

(38:04):
But maybe that's in you know,when you're incarcerated, you're looking for
your own sunshine, your own joy, And you know that could mean different
things to different people at different timesof their life, that's true. Or
the person doing it is looking forjoy, yeah, by doing Yeah,
sure, there's like there's different aspectsof that. It could be an old

(38:28):
like torture device. I don't knowif people even know what we're talking about
right now, Why don't you tellus what that even is? What pearl
is? Yeah, it's an implant. You know what it is. You
just said implant? Yeah, youknow what it is. I know what
it is, but maybe not everybodyknows what it is. You want me
to go into anyway? No,well you can just look it up.

(38:50):
No, that's fine. Well theyfind that. Let's look that up and
see what it says. Okay,I'm gonna look it up and see what.
Yeah, I think that there's there'smore connected to that. Okay,
While you do that, I'm goingto talk about maybe the spirit of something
else, not the spirit of Christmas, right, no. However, it

(39:13):
was my birthday a couple of weeksago. I was out for dinner,
which is June, and they wereplaying Christmas music in the restaurant that's discussing.
I felt like, okay, isthis some cruel joke or a way
to balance the heat of the summerwith here? Remember remember the spirit of

(39:35):
Christmas. Okay, here it is. I got it. Okay. This
type of body modification, it's alsocalled p nile beating. It's also known
as pearling or genital beating, isa practice where an implantable material material be

(39:59):
it sphere, goal or rib shaped, is inserted into the subcontainous tissue of
the penis. Okay, there yougo. See it would make sense for
the pearls to be in the clambut I don't know, maybe that's just
me. Well no, okay,because or maybe that's it's kind of like

(40:22):
all right. They sell in storestoday, to be serious, they sell
condoms that are that have that samething, like the bumps on them.
Apparently those penile implants are for thepleasure of the women and it reaches spots

(40:43):
that wouldn't normally reach and create serioussensation. Now, I don't know,
why men in prison are doing it. But well there you go, welcome
to the pearly gates. Some bump. Okay, well that's fine. See

(41:06):
this is the playful spirit of summertime, all right. I think we should
be playing like the Will Smiths songwe should you with it this summertime.
Summertime. I don't know that one. I think summertime with like who is

(41:27):
that Louis Armstrong and el Fitzgerald orsomething, and the Living is Easy and
all the remakes like okay, right, yeah, music. Okay. So
someone asked me the other day whatshe asked me, where do you find

(41:52):
your sunshine? And I thought thatwas a good question. You know,
in like the darkest gloomy days,it's important to find her own sunshine.
What I thought about that made methink of that was like music obviously being
part of that, because music canevoke emotion and it can lift your vibration.

(42:13):
It can also like you know,it depends on what you want to
tune into. You want to tuneinto something like that opens up potential or
it keeps you kind of in gloomygloominess. I don't know. I get
a sunshine from death metal. Itmakes yeah, yeah. I mean I
agree that, you know, music'sgood. It's the heavier and harder and

(42:37):
you can just let your It's likean outlet to let that fire. Like
d stem. I also get alot of great pleasure when I expose Rebel
to punk music live. Okay,yes, oh yeah. We talked about
was it your first mosh pit experienceoutside surroundings of it? I wasn't.

(42:59):
In it means a yeah, Wellyou know that's where like you got to
get the friction to get the heat. And I don't know. I guess
that's how we weather the storm ofeveryone else's stuff in the mush pit.
I guess it's like how do youhold your own? Oh? I remember

(43:21):
my first mush pit actually, actuallyit was at the Calgary Stampede, which
is coming up here. It's veryappropriate. Well I know it's yeah,
it doesn't it doesn't sound like itmakes sense, and it probably doesn't.
But these days it's a melting potof everything. We're going to talk about
the Stampede next week. So Idon't want to get give it away.

(43:43):
Don't don't give it away. Iwant to give it away. But Rebel
said, yeeha, and that willbe thrown around this city for the next
fourteen days. That funny as itmay seem, that was like one of
my favorite TV shows when I wasa kid, so I could make fun
of Southerners. What's what show isthat? Okay? It was an actual

(44:07):
show. M hm m about Itjust showed their the mental inca capability of
the South and why they are nowthe South. Okay, yeah, I
feel like that's not correct, butI mean you're entitled to your opinion.

(44:28):
Well, what what do you thinkabout that show? Rebel? Will you
get at that show? Seeing thatshow? I didn't even know that was
such a thing. There's a showalso called Green Acres and right next studio,
the next town over is Green Acres, and every time I drive through
there, I think of the themesong, because the theme song was green

(44:49):
Acres is the place to be?Howmakes of that? I gave you the
words? That was more than that. You start rumming, there's a whole
thing. Why you sing us thewords that come one? Oh my gosh,

(45:09):
it's funny that happening. You know, the last five minutes of the
show is not gonna be me serenadinganybody. It's gonna be here, Come
on, Rebel. You can doit, Joe, your Southern spirit,
rebel, I am by not doingthat. Oh my goodness, we can.

(45:30):
We can look it up. Itreminds me of there's like I mean,
I'm sure that a lot of musicianshave done a riff of that song,
because I can think of I don'tknow if it's who did it.
I'm taking my mic off for aminute because I'm gonna bring a surprise.
Oh okay. When he says that, that's kind of makes me worry a
little bit. Yeah, but we'vealready been there. He's gonna show us

(45:52):
his uh, his favorite sunning positionin a moment. He wore just the
ripe pants for that, all right. He doesn't have a microphone on.
He's yeah doing something. So whatelse? What else are we celebrating?
How do you celebrate Independence Day?Is that something you gout? You have

(46:13):
a holiday coming up? Rebel?We did it. We had big fireworks.
We had a crazy thunder and lightningstorm and people were still throwing off
their fireworks. And I love it. The spirit of Oh yeah, we're
going to celebrate. It's summertime andwe're going to celebrate some hell or high
water. A lot a lot ofpeople have forgotten what we actually celebrate Independence

(46:36):
Day for. You know, they'redoing their barbecues and their fireworks and whatnot.
And for those of you have pets, please keep them safe inside during
that time. It's your PSA announcementfor the day. Yeah, thank you
for that. Okay, here wego, folks, watch this. Hold
on, it's commonna una, Let'ssee what do we got. Okay,

(47:07):
okay, welcome, Sorry man boyMark. Okay, so this like a

(47:47):
talk show, a comedy. I'mblack, I'm rolling. He holls black.
Oh boy, that's going right now. Sons, wells Rebel Out.
I picked Rebel Out instead of thatone, so that, yes, that

(48:09):
was a famous show in the seventies. And yeah, like in the seventies
in America, unlike now where youhave reality shows. You have a bunch
and you had a bunch of thosevariety shows and a lot of those people
that you saw on there, theywere like famous people. But it definitely
was making fun of the South attimes. I mean they were making fun

(48:31):
of themselves there in the Yeah.Well, I mean it's important to be
able to poke fun at yourself.Actually, the word fun derives from like
joke, you know, to foolaround, and you know the innocence of
being the fool is just uh,you know, keeping things lighthearted, not
so serious. We need the seriousness, but we'll save that for them.

(48:53):
So serious. Yeah, how'd youget that scar? Hey? Why so?
But now the serious sad part isthat we have to wrap up the
show because we've already been down there. So yeah, I know, cry

(49:15):
as a river and then when youfind that river, jump in there and
enjoy the coolness of the water andmake sure you're in the river swimming.
You're in the river, swimming ina nice cool river and exposing your are

(49:35):
air to the sun. Yes,perfect health for summertime. That's my advice
what you should do in the summertime. Yeah, I do kind of encourage
it. I mean, as funnyas it is. You know, it's
spread your cheeks and let it,let it soar, let it rip,
let it nicole before it gets reallybad. Okay, Yeah, I agree.

(50:00):
Okay, thank you for tuning in. See you next week Tuesdays at
two pm Eastern Time. Language ofHealing W FOURWN dot com. Thank you
Dean, thank you, Rebel,and we'll see you next week. You
don't want to miss it for sure, We're going to be ee hiing,
hey hiing and see it then yeewow. What a show today, And

(50:24):
the journey does not stop here.Come travel the world with Nicole every Tuesday
at two pm Eastern Time, astogether we become more fluent in the language
of healing on W four WN radioand talk for TV. See you next week.
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