Episode Transcript
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(00:00):
Good morning. Good afternoon.
Good evening. Whenever you are.
Welcome to two men with a mic. How's it going?
Tire. Awesome.
Awesome day. Yeah.
Yeah. What's beautiful about it?
Clear skies, no rain. The storms have passed.
(00:26):
Beautiful up here. How cold is it?
It's not too cold. I mean, it's chilly.
I'm wearing a jacket. I'm sitting outside but.
Yeah. You know, it's not like sub
zero. That's cool.
Happy day to you, Sir. Yes.
How's the weather down there? Are you underwater?
(00:48):
It's it's cold and it's been a very unusual winter.
But yeah, just remember that climate change has nothing to do
with human beings. It's just to do with natural,
regular shifts in the Earth, according to every legitimate
(01:10):
scientist there is. So I hesitate to talk about
weather and climate change 'cause it's one of the
ridiculous lies that's being bandied about in another attempt
to access, control us, divide and conquer us, whatever they
can do to make us fearful and stupid.
(01:31):
But yes, it's been a weird winter where I live.
I don't know. I'm an old guy now and, you
know, I used to love like seasons and snow and living in
California where I am, you don'treally get that.
It's mostly just warm and hot all the time.
But as an old guy now, I, I, I like that.
(01:53):
I mean, old people used to they're, they're now they're
running away from California. But one of the reasons that we
have so many old folks in California is especially where I
am in Southern California is theheat.
You know, like they're old. They don't want to go outside
and wake up in Colorado and and shovel snow and feel how.
(02:15):
Cold it is and stuff they want to be.
In a place where there aren't seasons where you're in the
desert and it's it's warm all the time.
So as much as I was kind of donewith summer, because we do get
like scorching hot, crazy hot summers here, I I've kind of in
a weird way been enjoying. This.
(02:36):
Warmer winter, I mean it it likeup to Christmas it was like 80°
outside and. So anybody have you driven down
to like the Palm Springs area oranything to see any of the
disasters, disaster areas? No.
(02:57):
And actually I I haven't. Even really been following it.
I didn't know that there was a disaster in Palm Springs.
Yeah, right, right. Woods almost gone dude.
Really. Yeah, got like they had to shut
it out, evacuate everybody. Houses are like covered in mud
(03:21):
and road washed out and all thisstuff.
Wow, I didn't know that. We just went up to I, you know,
it's the craziest damn thing. Like, so here I am an hour in a
way is the, you know, some snow areas like Wrightwood and Big
Bear and all that stuff. So like I, I just want to know.
(03:44):
So my kid, I would be taking my kids so he can play in the snow.
Like, is there snow on the ground?
Like you would think that that would be the most like that
would just go to the Internet, Google it.
Is there snow in in Big Bear andbingo like AI or whatever says
Oh yeah, there's snow or Oh no, there isn't snow?
But instead what? You get are like all these, like
(04:05):
AccuWeather, like all these weather things.
And then you look at it and it'slike, Yep, atmospheric pressure
this, you know, atmospheric pressure that and, you know,
atmospheric river or like whatever.
And it's like, OK, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
But is there snow on the ground?And I cannot find a place.
(04:25):
Where it's like bingo, yes, there's.
Snow on the ground. I, I, I think some of the ski
resorts like, don't want to say how bad it is, especially this
year or I don't know what, but if you're asking it.
Yeah. Well, I was going to say, we
went up to Wrightwood just a fewdays ago before this latest
rainstorm, and it was totally bizarre because there was no
(04:50):
snow at all and, and it was pretty.
Oh, go ahead. I was going to say I was
tripping out on every, when I was seeing all the flooding on
the news and stuff because it was like, that's supposed to be
snow. I mean, normally they, they get
this, but because it's not snow,it's flooding them because
normally what happens is they get all this rain and water, but
(05:14):
it's snow. So the snowpack builds up and
then it slowly melts. And so there's always like that
little Creek that kind of runs through the town, right that.
Always. Water in it, but it's only like,
you know, a foot of water or something because the snow is
slowly melting and stuff. But that's not what happened.
(05:37):
All this water came and none of it was snow and it like
destroyed people's homes and everything.
It looked kind of OK, but a little torn up when we went
there. Honestly, I can't remember when
we went but it was within the last week and.
(05:59):
You know what? I think it.
It, you know what it was, it wasthis last Monday, which is
before the latest rains came. And yeah, it, it looked a little
torn up. By the way, I saw a population
fund. Do you know there's only 5000
people in Wrightwood? Yeah, yeah, that's great.
Yeah. There's the where where I am is
(06:19):
like almost 400,000 people, I think.
And then the neighboring city isabout almost 300,000 people.
But yeah, we drove up to Wrightwood.
And so I find it's like 5000 people are here.
It reminds me, you know, like people think about running away
to a small town in the mountainsand stuff.
You know, I love to visit those places and stuff.
(06:41):
Unfortunately, with the great upheaval that was deliberately
done to America and it's still being deliberately done to
America. I found that mountain towns are
not friendly anymore. And if they ever were, and
there's a lot of people there who, who went to that town to
get away from the city and they are very unhappy when you come
(07:04):
and visit their, their little small town.
One time I, I was in Oak Glen, which is another like mountain
area, kind of, you know, about 40 minutes to an hour away from
me. And, and when I was in there and
they have like a little village and they, there's apple orchards
up there. So it's famous for going and
(07:24):
getting apple pie. And they're like these cute
little shops. So women are happy and, you
know, it's a, it's like a, a place to take a date if you're
dating or something like cute little snow village in the
mountains with apple pie. And I remember years ago, I was
in one of those shops in Oakland.
I was talking to like the lady who worked there or whatever.
(07:48):
And I, and I was really like, yeah, I, you know, I this, this
is great. This is like a small town in the
mountains and everything's beautiful and there's only a few
people here and, and wow, you know, I, I, I would love to live
up here, you know, that would begreat.
And and she was like, Yep, it's a small town, so everybody knows
each other and we all. Hate each other.
(08:14):
She might have been saying that to discourage me from.
Like wanting to move there, which is another thing that
happens in small towns with locals, is like, they don't want
you moving there. They don't want you spoiling it,
you know. Yeah.
Or or or she it was real too 'cause that is the toss up.
Like in a big place in a in a city with a big population.
(08:34):
Like where I am there is some ananin anonymity unless you're
being gang stalked. But but otherwise there's.
Anonymity in a big city with a lot of people.
But you moved to Wrightwood and yeah, people are get you're,
they're going to know you, you know, 'cause there aren't that
many people there. So, but anyway, I, I digress
(08:58):
into like small town politics, politics, but no, Wrightwood had
no snow and it looked kind of torn up.
And the only thing they had was like, whatever the ski resort is
up there, they had made like, itjust looked like a square of
snow. And I mean a big square of snow.
But there was there was no snow on the slopes, you know, like
(09:21):
the, the actual ski run. It was just like a big like, I
don't know, 50 by 50 square of, of snow.
And we, we drove were there, butthey were closed.
They were like, yeah, there's nosnow really.
And there's just that and we're closed.
So we didn't really get to play in the snow.
I we went up to Oakland yesterday hoping that there
(09:44):
would be snow. And that place was totally torn
up like you described rightwood,where you had like tipped over
trees and like big trenches had been dug to like redirect water.
And it was kind of a disaster. Up there and there was also no
snow and, and when, when I was trying to like find a place with
(10:08):
snow like a couple of days ago when the rain started again, I,
it the, the closest I, I got in trying to find something that
would just tell me if there's snow on the ground or if it's
snowing right now instead of like atmospheric river pressure
numbers. One weather thing said that it
(10:30):
it it was a mix of rain and snowlike up in Crestline and Big
Bear and stuff. So, but yeah, no, it looks like
everything got torn up and. I I was at home.
Like editing a video and, and I,I got a message like in my
e-mail from Spectrum, which is like the, the local cable
(10:54):
service or whatever. And they they said that we're in
a state of emergency in California.
Yeah. So I didn't did miss the
governor or whatever, come out and say we're in a state of
emergency. I don't know.
I didn't, I didn't hear that. I didn't really follow that.
But yeah, there there was, it was some pretty heavy.
(11:15):
Do you didn't notice any real heavy rainfall at your house?
Like like you didn't notice the pounding water or any of that
kind of stuff? We got heavy rain, but it no,
yeah, it wasn't like crazy Twitter level or something, you
know, but apparently, oh, go ahead.
I was going to say I didn't get,I didn't get too much either.
(11:37):
I mean, my wife and a cup, you know, daughter said, Oh yeah, it
rained really hard last night. But I guess I, I slept through
all of it. I never really experienced
anything. Oh, so we, we got it light.
But yeah, some other areas got trashed and but with no snow,
(11:59):
there's that's the sad thing. There's, you know, every year in
the winter around Christmas or whatever, at least for, you
know, a couple of times we'll take down up my sun to the
mountain areas just to goof around in the snow.
But now there's nothing but mud and trenches and knock over
trees and like all weirdness outthere.
(12:22):
Yeah, yeah, I saw they, I saw I,I didn't watch too much of it,
but I saw a thing where they were doing something like
helicopter lifting out of feeling and Hwy. 138 was closed
and all this stuff like that. But yeah, not a not a lick of
snow. Although up here they did say
(12:43):
Tahoe got snow and they were allexcited about that, so.
My cat is meowing so I just let him back in.
Oh, so yeah, you know, but just a lot of lot of water.
(13:05):
Yeah. Water everywhere, your grass
will be greener. Yeah, it definitely helped with
that. I but I woke up today, you know,
and I'm like trying to think of places to take gown and, and so
here we are late December and it's freaking cold outside.
It's like 40° outside right now.And I was looking at different
(13:29):
places to take him today and like until the high today will
be 63, if it even makes it to that.
So finally, late late December, we do have winter conditions.
Yeah. But it it's hell on a, it's hell
on a dad though, like especiallyin the morning, like, OK, where,
what can we do? Where can we go?
(13:50):
Because everywhere it's freezing, you know?
Yeah, well, supposedly. You know, you could go look at
all the disaster zones. We did well yesterday.
Honestly, Oak Glen was a disaster zone and I didn't know
that. I didn't expect anything.
But yeah, it was like you describe Rightwood.
It was totally torn up. And they even it.
(14:11):
Looked like, I don't know if it's the same time or if that's
like leftover from another disaster, but there were signs,
you know, there roads were washed out, big trenches.
There were signs you were heading into a disaster zone.
Yeah. But there there were also signs,
though, like, you know, like saying, you know, avoid this,
(14:32):
avoid that. But they were the signs were
detailing trouble with the aftermath of a fire.
So we saw a lot of burned trees.And then also the new rains.
So you do you know what I'm talking about In Oak Glen,
though, It's like that little village.
Yeah. And you can get apple pie.
So that was there. Were actually a lot.
Of people there, but it was it was hard to to get into the
(14:56):
parking lot because they'd had to do like so much digging,
digging trenches and like, I don't know what probably
redirecting water or I don't know what they were doing.
But it was almost hard to even and it was all mud and piles of
mud and rocks and it was the little difficult to even like
just pull in the parking lot in that little village there.
(15:17):
It was like that, torn up so. Well, this is our last show of
2025 S Welcome to the end of 2025.
It's going out with a with a epic flood and disaster.
We were talking about last night.
I just wanted to know if we weregoing to be doing the show
(15:39):
today, 'cause you, I from Facebook, it looked like you
had, you were very busy during the holidays at Christmas and
stuff. And I know you've had house
guests. And so I was wondering like, oh,
are we skipping the show this week 'cause you, you just got a
bunch of family around and so there's no time.
How did that all go? You know, like we're this is
(16:02):
like the here we are in the Matrix and the technocracy.
So usually I get my updates fromyou from like Facebook stuff.
But yeah, every time I looked atFacebook, it seems over the last
couple of days, it's like you guys were all dressed for the
holidays and you're like decorating cookies and and like.
(16:25):
I don't know, did you guys? Go to a movie for Yeah Yeah.
We for my Christmas present fromAmber, they, you know, because
it's the holidays. So the big movie theaters, you
know, they, they go back in time.
So they were showing early in the well, not early like, you
(16:46):
know, 10/30/11 they were showingthe original It's a Wonderful
Life, which is my, that's my favorite movie of all time.
Is it really? Yeah.
And so I've never seen, I mean, I've seen it on TV in VHS, but
I've never actually like, seen it at a movie theater, you know
(17:07):
what I mean? Like big screen and stuff.
So we all dressed in our matching pajamas and we went to
the movies in your pajamas. Yeah, in our in our Snooky
pajamas. And, you know, it was funny
because there was another familythere and, and they were in
(17:30):
pajamas, but they were like younger kids, like high
schoolers and stuff. And, and you could see that
like, you know, the, the, the, the parents were like, come on,
let's do this. And the kids are like, come on,
Tad, this is stupid. What if people are going to see
me, you know, kind of thing. And, you know, then then here we
(17:52):
pull up and, you know, we park the car and we just hop out,
right? We're just all like hopping out
and we're in our, our blue Peanuts pajamas, you know, and,
and the family's, you know, right there, like, you know, 20
feet from us. And the dad looks over and he
says he's like, yeah. And then they all look over and
(18:15):
they're like, oh, yeah, because they saw us in our pajamas.
And then they were all happy andthey got out of the car and it
was, it was, it was cool, you know?
Hey, were those pajamas you werewearing the kind with like the
flap that opens up over? Where there's like, no, they
(18:36):
didn't have the poop shoot, the poop shoot.
No, but what was what was interesting about it was how
many comments and applauses and Merry Christmas we got from
people because we wore those matching pajamas we had.
(19:00):
We when we were leaving, there was, you know, you know, it was
the, you know, the front of the movie theater is a pretty big
area. It's like a mall.
And there was a group and they yelled at us.
They were like. Yeah, Merry Christmas.
Across the mall to a. P JS Forever.
(19:22):
Yeah, and stuff, but but no, it was, it was interesting to.
See. How, how dressing like that
really changed people's attitudeand like brought out the
Christmas spirit and the Christmas attitude.
It was it. It actually surprised me and
stuff because yeah, that was that was probably the first time
(19:46):
I wore pajamas out in public like that since I was like 4
years old. That time when I was refused, I
was throwing a Tantra tantrum with my mom 1 morning because I
didn't want to get ready for school, so she just gathered me
(20:08):
up. This would have been like in 19.
72 She gathered me up and put myclothes in a bag and drove me to
school and handed the bag to my teacher and said when he's ready
to get dressed for school, here's his clothes.
Oh, that's. Funny, yeah.
(20:31):
After that I was ready for school without any problem.
But, you know, this was the first time since then, since my
trauma at four years old, that that I like, you know, purposely
got in a car in my pajamas and drove, you know, somewhere.
But but yeah, the, the, the acceptance and the attitude and
(20:56):
the spirit was really good. It was, it was really cool.
It was a neat thing. And watching It's a Wonderful
Life on the big screen was really cool.
And it was the original black and white and, and all of that.
So I really enjoyed it. Actually.
I had my Coke, my popcorn and myRed Vines.
(21:19):
So yeah, yeah, it was, it was really nice.
So we did that. And then of course, I got a
bunch of food and snacks and stuff from the kids, which I
enjoy. So yeah, it was nice.
We went and saw Mom last night. Did you I I got to call her.
(21:40):
I thought maybe I'd try for New Year's Eve to call her.
I did call her like, well, I think it's been like a.
Week or so. Now we did have a long
conversation. Anyway, how is she doing?
She was doing good. We bought her She liked these
coffee Donuts from a bakery hereby our house.
So we, we, we brought her some coffee, Donuts and we, we hung
(22:05):
out and visited for about 3 hours.
And yeah, yeah, it was nice. It was, it was really nice.
So. And you've had house.
Guests Yeah, yeah, we're still, we're still rolling on and well,
we got Amber back, right. So Amber will be here till the
17th of January or something like that.
(22:28):
So she's, she's a permanent returnee from New York and, and
she's telling everyone to stop crying about the cold weather
because it's really not that cold.
Oh jeez, last night I was looking, you know, through the
weather. Well, I I've got like a
smartphone with the weather app and I have certain areas that I
(22:48):
regularly take down to and and for some reason the New York
City is in there so last. Night.
When I was looking at weather, it was, you know, I think 40° or
something here, but New York was21 degrees.
Yeah, and snow and. Yeah.
(23:09):
Telling Amber, I said, I'll bet you're glad you're not there
right now. You're you're missing all this.
And she was like, yeah, yeah. So.
So. Yeah.
So she's home. Ashley's here for right now for
a few days. Jen's sister is coming up for
New Year's, and then actually he'll be back.
(23:30):
And of course, Amber's here. So yeah, you know, I thought
his. Brother was there too.
Yeah, he was. Danny was here last weekend.
So yeah, you know, it's a it's aholiday roulette, so still going
on till the Sunday after New Year's.
(23:54):
I think after that we'll be donewith the, you know, with the
holiday airs and, and stuff likethat.
So yeah, it's, it's nice to see everyone and, and that sort of
thing. So, you know, it's, it's fun.
I think we're going to go see Chad on the 10th.
(24:14):
We're going to go see Chad. So you know, that'll that'll,
that'll be nice. So.
We got a big family, dude. Yeah, you're the total family
man. You're a grandpa.
Yeah, yeah, Grandpa, Four times over.
That's amazing. That's amazing.
Yeah. All your pictures look very
(24:36):
festive. What happened with the contest?
They did. I, I I entered your.
Contest. Oh, I lost.
I think I came in second or third.
Which one did they pick or what?Yeah.
I think they, I I don't know. I think it was Ashley.
I think Ashley beat me by three,three votes.
(24:57):
Oh, OK, So what? What was the most popular
picture? I was Ashley, I forget what hers
was though. Was this?
The one with the little farm animal.
No, that was Amber. Oh, OK, that's.
Actually had the blue purple door actually had a purple door.
Oh, OK, Actually it was the house.
(25:18):
Mine was the train. Oh, the train, OK.
Yeah. Yeah, I voted.
For the one with the little farmanimal, now Stanford, well, so.
Who won the contest and. Actually, actually won Who
actually? Did So what did she get for
that? To say she won and beat me.
(25:40):
OK, so just a little. Friendly competition.
Yeah. Yeah.
Just to call me a loser, that's good.
That's good. I actually, I'm really excited
about your pajama story because,you know, I lived in for about
12 years. I lived in a place in San Diego
called Ocean Beach, which was, it was the last of the artists
(26:05):
and the hippies. And like, it was a very wild,
like party town, but, and it, itwasn't like the rest of the
United States of America at all.Like you were there to visit.
OB was like visiting maybe what it was like to maybe visit like
Haight Ashbury with the hippies in the 60s or like, I don't
(26:26):
know. But you know, OB like everybody
was walking around in pajamas like pretty regularly.
And people, there are a lot of artists there and a lot of
musicians there, a lot of rock bands there.
And so it was a like free for all.
And, yeah, walking around in your pajamas and, and doing
(26:47):
silly things like that, that wasjust like the standard in Ocean
Beach, you know, where I where Iwas for so long.
But the country got destroyed. And like, according to 60
Minutes, you remember the news shows 60 minutes.
Yeah. 60 Minutes has now reported that officially America
(27:10):
has lost all civility. So that's the fake news show
with a bunch of crazy people whoshould all be in jail running
it. But even fake news came out and
said that civility has been lostin America, and it has.
So when you lose civility. And then you go to the.
(27:31):
Store in your pajamas. It's not quite the same scene
because like when I got back into this area, I was still like
Ocean Beach Goofy where you do stuff like that, like walk
around in your pajamas at the grocery store.
And, and I was met with nothing but hostility.
And I, I was really shocked. Like all these goofy little fun
(27:54):
free things that I, I used to doin the hippie town, like nobody
in the rest of the country couldstomach it.
Like they were all pissed and they're here to kill you and
we're here to take this country down and we don't believe in
civility anymore. And you don't get to wear your
pajamas at Stater, right? Like I was so stunned.
(28:17):
I was like, what's wrong with everybody?
Like these, these silly little things, They're the only things
that kind of make it bearable. I will say recently cautiously,
because it's still it's, it's still a nightmare scene, but
I've seen like a little bit of evidence here and there of
people regaining not just their senses of humor, but also like
(28:37):
kindness, compassion and decency, just like a miniscule
percentage of people. But it used to be that.
Not there was no percentage of people where where they were
cool anymore. Well, it starts with one
raindrop, so just remember. Yeah, I hope the deluge began
like yesterday was actually a pretty good day for living in a
(29:00):
war zone in the ruins of A1 great country.
Like people were OK, like we we did OK, you know, going out and
trying to, we ended up going to a Botanic Gardens and stuff.
But so, yeah, I hope it's it's just the first raindrops and all
of a sudden, like a giant delugeof decency and goodness and
(29:20):
polite and respect and compassion and even humor is
somehow returned to like, whoever is living in America
now. Yeah, I do.
Little signs, but you know I I count my.
Blessings all day long, so it's like.
Anytime someone is able to be a decent person around me.
So I'm like, oh, thanks God, that was nice.
(29:43):
That's wonderful. Oh wow, that person was like
civilized and nice. That's fantastic.
You know that's how. Lost it is.
But yeah, but I I miss. That you remember OB, like the
whole crazy lifestyle of OB which you would think people
would love, like outside of OB suddenly became like intolerable
to people. Yeah, that's what, when I went
(30:06):
and visited or moved Chuck to Berkeley and in the late 80s and
stuff, and then I'd go up and visit him, you know, like in the
summer and stuff. That's what Berkeley you know OB
what When you know what, That's what Berkeley was like, too.
Yeah. And stuff.
But but yeah, it was, it was really encouraging, you know, to
(30:26):
see the response of of everybodyand us wearing our pyjamas on
Christmas and and stuff like that.
You know, overall, you know, when I was talking to Julia and
we were Facetiming, you know, itwas cool to to see in the
background, you know, her son Jackson and and her boyfriend
Charlie. We're having a nerf, nerf dart
(30:50):
war and and stuff, you know whatI mean?
I mean, people, yeah, it was great to just see people like
it's supposed to be, you know what I mean?
It's, it's and, you know, and they were in their pajamas, you
know, and it was like, you know,whatever, you know, late, late
in the day and, and stuff like that, you know, and, and
(31:13):
everybody was just like, hey, let's just, let's just call time
out and, and go hit the reset button and take a break, you
know, So, you know, I know 2025,at least for me, you know, if I
never have another 2025, it willnot break my heart.
(31:33):
It was. People feel that way.
Yeah, it was, you know, just just for us personally.
I mean, you know, especially my wife and stuff.
I mean, I mean, this was a really scary and hard year for
us. And, you know, I mean, I'm, I'm,
I'm more than grateful that justthat my little wife was here for
(31:59):
Christmas, you know, I mean, forget everything else.
I, I, I my present was just thatI was able to celebrate
Christmas with my wife and she wasn't, you know, drooling in a
bucket in a wheelchair or something.
You know, there was, there was areal possibility that, you know,
she wasn't going to be here for Christmas.
(32:21):
So which would totally change myperspective and my attitude,
right? Yeah.
So I'm, you know, we're heading into the new year and I am, I am
more than grateful that that 2025 is it, you know, coming to
(32:41):
an, an abrupt end. And I can only have hope and,
and, and joy for 2026. I got to believe it's going to
be better. I believe, you know, my, I, I
think that, you know, my wife's health is going to be a lot
better. I'm excited.
Just I'll, I'll, I'll just take that, you know what I mean?
(33:04):
I'll, yeah, I'll just take, you know, not having three brain
surgeries and, and and that sortof thing, you know, I'll, I'll
take that. You know, if I can just go to
2026 and, and we not have any brain surgeries, that'll be,
that'll be freaking awesome. Yeah, I'm with you.
(33:25):
I hear you. I welcome the new year as a, as
a new start and a new beginning.And damn it, that's my attitude.
I'm gonna, I'm gonna forget 2025like it never happened.
Yeah, I I hope, I hope it's a better year, My sister.
Well, almost everybody, myself included, 2025.
(33:48):
And for the United States of America, 2025 was devastating.
Like this. This is not the I'm just telling
you, like if you're over there in a different country and
you're like, oh, let's go visit America.
You don't. Like this.
This is not the same. Country Anymore at all?
It's a war zone there. And according to 60 Minutes,
(34:10):
once the most one of the most respected news programs of all
time, according to 60 Minutes. And I'm living it.
So I tell, I'm telling you it's true.
All civility has been lost in America.
So yeah. And we there was just more of
that. And things just got worse in
2025. This is not the country I grew
(34:32):
up in. People do not behave in a way
here that is at all socially or personally are acceptable at
all. You know, it's a war zone with
angry people and gangs and trouble everywhere.
What's interesting though, is it's it's, it's an, it's the
(34:55):
best way to describe it probablywould be like the ocean, so on.
Top. The ocean looks calm and
beautiful, but underneath are are violent and deadly under
toes. Yeah.
And, and what are those cross currents?
Or what are those currents that pull you out when you're in the
(35:15):
RIP? RIP RIP.
Tides, yeah, there's there's RIPtides, there's, there's sharks,
there's all this stuff going on underneath.
But from the from the top, you know, it, it, it, it looks, it
looks like it's, it's, you know,beautiful and calm and peaceful
(35:36):
and relaxing. And, you know, I just hope that
in 20, my wish for 2026 is that some of that stuff that's being
hidden beneath the surface, you know, can, can get resolved and
(35:57):
eliminated and whatever else we got to do.
But, yeah, we, we, we, we need to up our game, that's for sure.
We've gotten really laxed and, you know, very selfish.
I think is, is, is, is what's happened.
(36:18):
Not everybody, you know? So if you're the one person out
of 10 who's out there feeding the homeless and, you know,
whatever else. Thank you.
Yeah, there are a couple, I willsay, and, and it might be the
beginning of a big agreement because yeah, yeah, 'cause I
didn't, you know, for years now.I haven't even seen a couple of
(36:41):
decent people for years now. That's how bad it's been.
But just recently, maybe it's the holidays too.
Like yesterday. I was running around doing stuff
and then taking us up to Oakland.
But I, I have to say, you know, at the ending of the day, like
it all worked out fine and people were kind of being funny
and reasonable. Funny in a good way, you know,
(37:02):
and reasonable. So I I hope that's the beginning
of better things. I don't think there's any
reason. To expect that though, because
the the plan is to destroy America, reduce it to a third
world country, take all our rights away and ultimately lead
us into a genocide. A kind of genocide where 90% of
the people on the earth are deadby 20-30.
(37:24):
So. Wow, way to start 2026.
Well, no. We're still in 2025 though, so I
get to bitch in mind after 2026.I'll be all oh.
No, everything's great. Yeah, it's real good here.
So I get to bitch. Well, it's actually, I didn't
(37:44):
know. I I keep trying to not bitch,
but then it just, I blurt stuff out.
But no. So this is a 2025 show where
it's still shit, but in 2026 it's going to be our golden era.
All. Right, 111 little nice fear
thing though. Like before, we try to be
optimistic though. But I mean, honestly, how do you
(38:07):
feel about it? Like, considering what's going
on in the country and what's going on politically and all
that stuff, do you think like it's going to get better in
2026? I don't know.
I think that maybe internally, you know, I, I hope, I'm hoping
(38:28):
that the American attitudes get better.
That's what I'm, I'm hoping for.As far as globally, I don't
know. It looks pretty doom and gloom
out there globally. Yeah.
You know it. You know nothing's happened.
You know, Ukraine and Russia arestill blowing the shit out of
(38:50):
each other and, you know, other Israel and whoever else is still
blowing the shit out of each other, you know, so really
nothing changed. You know they.
Hand it, they rename it, but in the end, the end results out
globally are pretty much the same.
I guess we're blowing people up in Africa somewhere, some shit
(39:13):
like that. Nigeria, I don't know, somewhere
like that. There's a.
Yeah. So, you know, not a very, not a
very good ending to to 2025, nothing to be proud about.
So I can only hope that, you know, globally 2026, you know,
(39:34):
things, things improve, you know, that's that's all I can
say because I don't know any more than that.
I know for me personally, I havemy wish list and, you know, mine
is just that my wife's health continue to improve.
You know, that's all I'm, that'sall I'm looking for is for, you
(39:56):
know, I love her with all my heart and I just, I just need
her to be healthy and strong because I'm a dumb ass man and
I'm going to be, you know, relying on her.
Yeah. So, you know, and that's the way
it's been. Did you see my?
(40:17):
AI Superman thing I posted. Yeah, when is that a new one?
No, it was it was right around Christmas.
It was posted it of Jan and I. As oh, oh, wait, maybe I did.
Oh, yeah, I did Superman. I yeah, I, yeah.
It was like you and you, you as Superman, or you're both like
superheroes or something. Yeah, yeah.
(40:39):
I was Superman. She was Wonder Woman.
I have to admit, like, you know,like I sent, like I, there's the
thing, I forgot what they're called like 123 greetings or
something like that. And it's a.
Yeah, yeah. So I always.
Go there, you know, and, and youcan send like free electronic
(41:00):
cards to people for different occasions and including
Christmas. But you guys are sending me like
all this AI stuff or, or you like, you also sent me like a, a
cute thing. It was like a photograph of me
and my son. And then it turns into like a
cartoon version of it. Yeah, I thought you would.
Like that, I thought that was, Ithought that was cute.
(41:21):
Yeah. Well, it was kind of funny.
It was sort of a psychic moment because, you know, my son is
pretty picky, like about what hewatches on TV.
There's only like a like his favorite cartoons are there's a
giant. Well, they're giant now, but
they have a YouTube channel. It's a company called super
(41:43):
simple and they they make educational cartoons, you know,
and so like he loves those. But like if I try to show him
super mount or whatever, he's like like he he doesn't.
He he doesn't. Want to see it.
And so a lot of art, like, I mean, it was a part of our
training. And I do think we were the last,
(42:03):
we were the last generation thatthe government left alone or, or
that socially engineered in a positive way.
And then after us, they started social engineering in a really
negative way and created an entire generation of, of people
who are not. Well, anyway, I, I'm gonna, I'm
(42:25):
gonna skip that. But they, but no, we were, we've
always been socially engineered.It was always the government,
always the movies and the TV andthe radio was lies.
And but they would tell us different things and turn this
into different kinds of people. And our generation was the last
time they treated Americans withrespect and boosted us up and
(42:48):
made us feel like we were cool. And you know, 80s America and
90s America was like the peak of, of this, of this social
experiment here in America wherewe, we had a standard of living,
we had civility. We and people were able to dream
and, and, but after that, no, they, they dumbed down the
(43:11):
public. They started introducing all
kinds of elements of hate, like,oh, be sure to hate white
people. And like, you literally go to
college now and where they will tell you in college that white
people are bad. So it's, yeah, they they
destroyed the millennials. They destroyed them with lies.
(43:32):
And I don't think the millennials are really waking up
to the truth that they were created.
They were socially engineered tobe stupid, unpleasant people who
can help tear the country down, along with some other elements
that were added so that at the end of it all, our powerful
elite will be running third world country America, where no
(43:53):
one has any rights anymore. Is is.
Is actually the. Goal.
And so to that Bay. But what?
What was this about your son's cartoon?
I think we got off track. Oh, Oh well.
But but what I you? Know I was talking about like.
Elements that made our generation the last good
generation in this country. And some of the elements are
(44:16):
it's like Looney Tunes, Bugs Bunny, that and and Tom and
Jerry, those cartoons, you know,believe but or not, I think
those are big factors in character building.
And. Definitely big factors in in
building like a sense of humor and yeah, but like so my son
(44:39):
will watch super simple where and it is super simple.
You know, they're kind of primitive cartoons and but it's
all educational and stuff. But like I I throw in Tom and
Jerry or I throw in Pink Pantheror something or or Looney Tunes,
and he has no interest in it at all.
And I'm like, don't you understand?
(45:00):
That's the building block of America.
Boy, you got to learn this kind of humor and have that kind of
attitude. That's what made America great.
And but yeah, honestly. But these they did though, like
Clint Eastwood and John Wayne and Bugs Bunny and Tom and Jerry
and like Scooby-doo, these things like built us into in our
(45:22):
generation, a smart, seemingly informed, funny pop generation.
You know, like we had confidence, we had wit.
And at that, during that period,America was like at the top of
the world. And now it's just at the bottom
and by design. But anyway, just the other day I
(45:44):
was with my son though, and he'sgetting a little bored with like
the Super simple cartoons. So I I just thought I just threw
on Tom and Jerry and for a few minutes he actually kind of
followed it and, and was laughing at it and was like,
interested in. Yeah.
And so I was. Really.
(46:05):
And then right after that, the did you send me this AI thing
where it's like a cartoon picture of me and my son playing
with Tom and Jerry? Did did you show?
It to him I'm wondering if he. Noticed them, I did and.
He's getting interested. I mean, it's, it's good news,
bad news, but he's sort of getting interested in like the
(46:26):
iPhone and messing around with it.
So the good news is there's a lot of stuff that's really cool
that you can deal with an iPhone.
The bad thing is it's killing you.
It's, it's, it's, it's literallygiving you diseases and because
they're trying to reduce the population and it destroys your
(46:47):
conscience, studies show. And that's how you get people
who are acting like they are in America right now.
You have no more conscience. So you don't care what anybody
around you think. And so you become an asshole.
And because you don't feel guilty when you're a jerk to
somebody now, you know, So but yeah, no, I, he, he'll, he's,
(47:10):
he'll like look through the photos on the iPhone or whatever
and, and stuff like that. And then in, in a way, like to
be able to live in the modern world.
I don't know what will become ofhim or what he might be doing
with himself in the future. But right now, unless it all
blows up tomorrow and it's really possible that it will
like he's going to need to know about computers and smartphones
(47:33):
and how to use them. So I kind of feel like, you
know, on on that score, it's good, but there's a lot of
drawbacks here, so. But yeah, he.
Was he was digging? On you know, I meant so was that
psychic or what? Cuz like my son was like, oh Tom
and Jerry are good. And then like the next day I
(47:55):
think I got that cartoon from you with me and gal.
I'm playing with Tom and Jerry. Yeah, I don't know.
I guess so. I just, I just saw it and I took
a picture I had of you guys and and that's what it it gave me.
I just thought it, I don't know.It looked like you guys to me.
Yeah, it was kind of Oh, great. I just knocked.
(48:16):
Something over. Yeah, it was cool.
And and what I. Was kind of talking about was
like. You guys are all.
Everyone's ahead of me. Now.
Like I, I'm, I'm still going over.
To like 123 greetings and you guys are sending me like.
These. AI masterpieces.
(48:37):
And I'm like, what? What happened?
Like like like 123 greetings seems silly now when you can
just like, I guess sit with Gemini and say hey, make me a
greeting card, you know? So I didn't know I.
Felt very old. And out of touch, like I'm
sending this electronic greetingcard and yeah, you guys are
(48:58):
sending me these AI where you'reSuperman and Chance Wonder Woman
and and you know, I got to get with the times, I guess on the
AI. Front hold on a second.
Hey, the front door is that? Way uh huh, Amazon's trying to.
Deliver packages but. Can't figure out how to get in.
(49:18):
Just remember as a as a pirate, you're also a porch pirate.
Have you seen those videos of? What they're doing on their
people, putting boxes that explode with pink dye and blue
dye on their porches for people to steal and then when they walk
(49:39):
away with it, it blows up with pink dye in their face.
I no I hadn't heard about that though.
But I know porch piracy is like,huge.
I always tease Mitch about beinga pirate, and then I try to find
like some funny picture of a pirate to send to him.
And I got a lot of jokes about porch pirates where there's like
(49:59):
a pirate. You know, just like Pirates of
the Caribbean or. Whatever.
Like lifting a package off the porch.
That's good, I guess. Like, yeah.
Let. It explode.
That's good, Markham. We know.
We know who you are now. Porch pirates blow up in their
face. On that score.
I was just watching. There's a journalist, I think
(50:21):
his name is Patrick Halley, and sometimes he posts, I don't know
where he is exactly. Sometimes he's on Infowars and
Alex Jones and all that stuff, so but he, he gathers.
Footage. From around the country of
Walmart fights. So like this Christmas gift,
today I was. Watching it was like a 4 minute
(50:43):
music video of just people fighting in Walmart across the
country. It's very Jerry Springer.
We used to have a show called, well, we there was like a talk.
Show. Format that kind of blew up in
America and it started with a guy.
Kind of named Phil Donahue. And then, and then Oprah had a.
(51:05):
Talk show like that for years. When I start talking about talk
shows though from Walmart fights, I forgot what fights.
Well, you were trying to get on Jerry.
Springer Oh, right, yeah. And then this guy.
Appeared. I don't know if people remember
him. But he was he was kind of like a
a He's trying to act like he wasPhil Donahue or Oprah.
(51:26):
And it was a normal talk show. But really, what it?
Was was like white trash people beating the beating the shit out
of each other. Yeah, yeah, like it would be the
Well, you know, I was having sexwith my sister and then she
really pissed me off so I had tohit her over the head with a pad
and then like the. Sister would be there like,
yeah. He did hit me.
I'm gonna kill you. And then they.
(51:47):
Would like get in fights. During the show, like on stage
and it was like just the worst representation of like the worst
elements of America at the time.But that show became popular.
Like people would watch it just to watch like all these like,
white trash speed freaks going on there and talking about like,
their lurid sexuality and then throwing down, you know?
(52:11):
But so yeah, this guy puts up Walmart fights.
It's kind of like Jerry Springerwhere you just see these people
like, willing to like, murder each other over like a fighting
over like a package of toilet paper or something.
It's really alarming. You know what I mean?
Yeah, before you know. About Walmart, you know, it's
(52:32):
like. Dude, you, you realize you're
fighting over something from Walmart.
It's not like, yeah, there's notanother Walmart 5 blocks down
the road. Yeah, yeah, it's.
Crazy, but yeah, so any innocenttourists out there who are like,
oh, I want to go to Disneyland and see Mickey Mouse and stuff
and oh, America, it's like watchthe Walmart fight, by the way,
(52:54):
when when you, when you, when you go to.
Disneyland. It will be a Walmart.
Fight because what I've. Discovered is even places that
that are supposed to be happy and joyful and people have their
children there. So you should.
Be on your best behavior, this lack of civility in the country.
This downfall of America is eventhere.
So, like, you take your little kid to the amusement park and
(53:17):
you're going to get attacked just like you will in all those
Walmart fights. Like you, you, we took our kid
to Santa's Village. You can't even make it through
Santa's Village without someone doing something rude and
attacking you. So yeah, if you're like, oh, I'm
going to go to America. Oh, Mickey Mouse.
Yeah, yeah. Good luck at Disneyland because
you're just going to be in a giant Walmart fight.
(53:41):
We want to come to your country instead.
Instead of tourists coming here,where are you guys?
Are people cool there? Because we'd like to be.
Around some cool people now, yeah, yeah.
That's definitely. You got to pick your spots if
you're going to come to America.I would.
I would pick small towns, not big towns, you know, Yeah.
(54:05):
I mean, at least they'll pretendto be kind and, and, and
cheerful and and stuff like thatbecause, yeah, you come to
downtown big town and, and something like that.
Yeah, you're going to, it's not going to be a happy scene.
Yeah, unfortunately. So I I think generally you're
(54:26):
maybe in a better. Area being up in Northern
California, but it is. Famous like.
It's internationally famous. What became of San Francisco?
And so like, you wouldn't like they were just getting through
this glorious sparkling city with a lot of cosmopolitan
people and like sophistication and art and culture.
(54:49):
And it was like one of our greatest cities in America.
And and it was like so popular in the legs that in the Star
Trek movies with Shatner, William Shatner, like the San
Francisco was supposed to be thecapital of the the Federation.
Yeah. And like you were talking about
(55:09):
with Berkeley and stuff, it was all those liberal ideals and
things like that, that back whenpeople really were liberals, the
people calling themselves liberals today are not liberals,
but real liberals like myself are cool.
And, and they made that city great.
And even I wanted to live there and I visited a few times and
was always blown away by it, youknow?
(55:31):
And. Now it's an utter shithole
filled with drug addicts and criminals and it's unsafe and
it's disgusting and I mean it. It only took about 5 to 10 years
to totally destroy what was oncea glorious city that was world
renowned, you know, But when I, you know, when I hear your
(55:53):
story. So I, I know you also have a
better attitude about all this stuff than I do.
But overall, I sort of get the idea too, that Northern
California is a little bit better than Southern California.
Yeah. Yeah.
I think so. I mean, I haven't, I haven't
personally been down to SouthernCalifornia in a couple years.
(56:15):
Yeah, you're not missing anything.
Except me, but no, you're not missing anything.
It would. Only to come here, having grown
up here as you and I did, and, and knowing that world where
we're, where we had civility anddecency and respect and
politeness, to come and see whatit's become is devastating.
(56:39):
So yeah, I would say. Stay in Northern California.
It's devastating that what? This where this area is where?
Mitch and I grew up now comparedto what it was when we were
growing up, it it's not it's a complete nightmare.
It's like what happened? Like I, I remember, you know,
it's shocking. So yeah, don't come to Socal.
(57:02):
OK, so so. Let's pivot to something
positive. So let's what do you what do you
wish for? Since this is our last show
before the new year, What do youwish for 2026?
You get like 2 wishes let's say.What are your top 2 wishes for
(57:23):
2026? OK.
I'm gonna go big on this even. Though it's a little.
OK, so I. I'm very into spirituality.
There's very much an idea when you get into spirituality that
if something is good and it's working for you, you really
shouldn't discuss it. But I'm going to do this for the
(57:46):
sake of the public and then for,for the world.
You know, when people ask me like, what do you hope for?
I I'm just going to. Say.
That I I had an experience in meditation in which I met God
and God is love just like you heard.
(58:08):
So through meditation I experienced pure love.
With like nothing else in it. But love, like love, energy,
love, power, like they always say that behind all of this God
is love and that the universe isactually made from love.
(58:28):
We've just like twisted it. But the core is love, so one
time in meditation. I.
Had an experience where I I feltthat and that's what God really
is, is love, love, energy, joy, energy.
And so that experience changed me for the rest of my life.
(58:50):
And, and I didn't expect to havethat experience and, and, but I
had it and, and since then I've researched it and it turns out
that that experience that I had in meditation is really common
for people who are actually meditating and meditating
(59:10):
properly, although that's a whole other can of worms, but
about like what, what is proper meditation?
That's a whole can of worms. But yeah, I, I researched it and
lots of monks and yogis like, that's usually like the first
step is you have that experiencewhere you close your eyes and
(59:33):
all of a sudden everything is nothing but love.
And there's there's no evil in it, there's no form in it.
There's nothing but just you. It's almost impossible to
describe or imagine but a state where nothing but love exists
(59:55):
and. So.
I've. Experienced that and I've never
been the same sense and my greatest wish for 2026.
Is that everyone on the earth isable to experience God in that
way that I did. Where all of a sudden you
realize everything is love. Like literally there's nothing
(01:00:19):
but love. And you feel that the experience
that I had, if you, if you look it up, they, they, they call it
the white expanse. So if you listen to other like
yogis and monks, this is a common first stage of like
success with meditation where like what I thought was like,
(01:00:40):
I'm sitting meditating and then the next thing I know there's
nothing. And it's all just like a white
void and, and all of it is left.And I felt myself dissolving, my
like my personality, my ego, my body, my identity was dissolving
into love. And but that feeling of pure
(01:01:05):
unadulterated love is like nothing I've experienced before
or sent. And I feel like if the people of
the world had that, if everyone had that experience, then it
would change the world forever because everyone would know
there really is a God and everyone would know that we
(01:01:27):
really do need to live in virtuous ways.
And, and the reward is God. And, and because I'm telling you
like, whatever you can think of,like, oh, I want a new car or,
you know, I'm going to go vacation here, or, you know,
someday I'll have enough money to get this or whatever it is.
(01:01:48):
There is nothing in your world that will equal.
Pure, unadulterated love. I've heard other people who take
DMT have had similar experiences.
I heard Joe Rogan who had soundslike he had a similar experience
and he described the universe atthe core as being.
(01:02:10):
Built with units. Of compassion, and I'm telling
you, the universe at the core isit's more than compassion, it's
pure love. I know I just keep saying that,
but if you ever take a bath in pure love and then come back to
the world as we know it, you're going to want to spend the rest
of your life trying to get get back into pure love.
(01:02:32):
So my hope for 2020. 6. Is that everybody self realizes
and has an experience with God that shows them it really all is
love and it really all is God and that makes everybody better.
People. People talk about like in fact,
I think it's not the first time a movie like this has been made,
(01:02:53):
but I think with the exact subject matter.
But I think there's even a movieout now, and there was a
Japanese film that was the same plot that I saw many years ago,
and I always really liked it. And basically like, you're dead.
You go into the afterlife, there's the representative in
the afterlife, and the afterliferepresentative says, okay, so
(01:03:16):
you're dead now. So what you have to do is pick a
moment in your life that's like the greatest moment of your
life. And then you're just going to
keep reliving that moment. And so that that's what heaven
is. You pick the best thing that
happened to you. And then you're going to be
transported into that scene and you won't know it, but you'll
(01:03:37):
just keep looping and having that same great moment like over
and over and over again. And there's a new movie.
Coming out with the same. Plot.
Like I said, there was a Japanese film that was really
great that I saw with that subject matter years ago.
But so for most people, they'd probably be like, Oh, you know
what, it's the first time I had sex or, or, or, you know, when
(01:04:01):
I, the day I got married or like, oh, the day my child was
born or, oh, that time I won that race or I, I, I, that time
I, I won the football game. You know, like those are like
standard things that people would think of.
Like, well, if I have to experience one reality for
eternity, you know, I'm going topick that time when I won the
football game or whatever. And, but for me, and if
(01:04:25):
everybody else in the world could experience this at least
once, the one moment in my life that I would like to keep
reliving over and over and over again is that moment when
through meditation I met God andGod was love and I was
(01:04:47):
dissolving into God and I could have stayed inside of love
forever. But I, I, I actually kind of
pulled back because it was overwhelming.
Like it was like, Oh my God, there's nothing but love in the
universe and I'm dissolving intoit.
And I kind of pulled back because I was a little scared
actually. And to this day, I wish I
(01:05:07):
hadn't. If you look up that experience
though, at the White Expanse that is so common in meditation,
they say that that's also a common reaction where you're
like holy shit it is an illusion.
And there's nothing but love. Here and my body and my mind are
illusions and my illusory self is dissolving into pure love.
(01:05:33):
That's what I want for 2026 for everybody in the world, and
that's what I want in 2026 for me and my family and friends.
If everybody could just self realize and know that God is
love, then then the whole world would improve, you know, don't
you think? Yeah, all you need is love.
(01:05:54):
All you need is love, dude. And.
Love is the the white expanse where it's the end of form and
it's just the beginning of pure energy.
Pure love energy. So how about you?
What do you want in 2026? Jeez, I don't know.
It's hard. To talk to that, you want to go,
(01:06:17):
you want to win. A fight in Walmart.
You know I. I can't, I can't really argue
that. I've basically been saying that
all through the show, right? For yeah, for me in, in in 2026.
I just, I just want to be with my wife and, and, and, and
(01:06:41):
that's all I care about, you know, I just want to be, I want
my kids to be safe and I want to, I want to be with my wife
and I'm just so grateful. But but to me, that's love,
right? That's the closest on earth I
can get. The pure love is, is, is being
with my wife. And, you know, she's, she's just
(01:07:04):
an amazing woman and the things she does and the way she treats
people, if, if the rest of the world acted the way she did, we
would be living in a totally different world at this time,
You know, and, and she is just, I'm just more than grateful and,
and I'm all I want is, is more of her and more of time with
(01:07:31):
her. And you know, that's, I don't
even know what else to say, but but to me, that's love, right?
That's it comes down to the samething, right?
We all just need to feel loved. We all need love and the more we
can share that. And you know, John Lennon wrote
(01:07:53):
that song. You know, I don't even know how
many years ago was was that in that was in the 80s, right?
All you need is love. No, I.
Think that was I. Think that was still.
Late. 60s I think that's magicalmystery to her.
(01:08:14):
Oh wow, it does go back. Yeah, OK, I'm off a couple
decades, but see the The Beatlessaid that's all.
I was just. Saying all you need is love.
Guess what? It turns out the universe is
made from love, and you have theability to access that love
through. Meditation and yoga and.
(01:08:36):
So yeah, all you need is love, and once you experience that
great love, you'll gonna. Be different for the rest of
your life. You're gonna be a good person
then, so. All right.
All right. We hope you all have a safe and
happy New Year's. Be good people, Be kind people
(01:08:59):
and 2020. 5 not in. Jail and, you know, start
actually in 2026. We need a whole.
Bunch of people to go to jail. But that's another that's
another story for another shot. All right, so make good choices
and start with, you know, searchfor love however you can find
(01:09:21):
it. Meditation, whatever, because,
you know, like The Beatles said many, many decades ago, all you
need is love. Yep.
All right, and here I'm going tomake your lives.
Even a little simpler. Here's how to experience love.
You need to stay in the. Present moment.
You need to have no concepts of the past.
(01:09:44):
You need to have no thoughts of the future.
You're in the now. You're in the present moment.
If you breathe in through your nose and out through your mouth,
that places you in the present moment.
So no past, no future. You're in the present moment.
You're filled with compassion and kindness and you do not
(01:10:05):
react to anything that happens around you in your head in the
way. Of thoughts or physically in the
world around you. So you're in the present moment.
There's no past, there's no future.
Your mind is clear, you're centered.
Whatever happens, you don't react.
To it you only show it compassion if if thoughts appear
(01:10:28):
in your head, you don't like like interact with the thoughts
or like fall into the thoughts, you just keep detached and you
observe those thoughts with compassion.
And so it's the Christian saying, be still and know that I
am. If you sit still quietly,
without the past, without the future, just in the present
(01:10:51):
moment, observing with compassion, you will feel God.
That's what the Christian statement is about.
Be still. In the present moment, no
future, no past, just the here and now.
And you will. Feel God.
So like I studied a lot of spirituality, but the basic
stance, the basic position that everybody needs to be in is I am
(01:11:17):
detached. I am in the present moment.
Anything that occurs, I am observing it with compassion.
I have no thoughts of the past. I have no thoughts of the
future. I'm here and now with our
authentic self, with our truest self, which is love.
So there's. A bunch of, you know, create.
(01:11:37):
Yoga, hatha yoga, you know, learn to breathe this way, Hold
your body like that. A lot of that stuff's actually
really. Great, but the.
Basic position that anybody can be in at any time to receive.
Believe God is to be in the present moment, in the now, and
to observe with detachment and compassion your thoughts and the
(01:11:59):
so-called world around you and everything that you don't react
to in a negative way. And instead you just observe
with compassion that dissolves your sins, that dissolves your
bad karma, and that puts you even closer to ascending.
To a higher place, but I just I I just want to say.
(01:12:20):
Say that again, because it's as simple as that.
Stay in the present moment, observe with compassion, remain
detached. That's that's it.
That's the core of all of that stuff.
So I hope that helps people. I hope everyone meets.
God after they finish. Listening to this.
Show because as soon as you do, it's going to become a very,
(01:12:41):
very nice planet. Very.
Very or a. Very, very nice world on the
planet, you know, two men with amic is recorded.
At close on a Hanger Studios youcan reach the guys at the Number
Two Men with the mic@gmail.com. Rock.
(01:13:06):
And roll memories drive when we were wild and high high.
School days were tough. But all we had enough sting
tunes. Rock was roughly dance.
We laughed. We loved tell the.
Stories. Lid on bright underneath your
(01:13:27):
city lives. Rock ruled our every night
memories. Echo echoes up the fight.
The shame was our domain. Teenage hurricane, No glory
(01:13:48):
without the pain. But we did it all again.
And posters on the wall, Dreams so light they stood tall.
Same stands some sunshine they call we were kings before the
fall coming stories lit upright.Underneath your city lies rock
(01:14:11):
ruled our every night memories echo echoes our good fight.
The stage was our domain, a
(01:14:37):
teammates hurricane. No glory without the pain.
But we did all again. And posters.
On the. Wall.