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June 19, 2022 • 55 mins
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On today's episode Dylan and Laura are joined by Author, Podcaster, Radio Host and life time paranormal experiencer Lady Ann to discuss her experiences and upcoming trip to Ireland.

Be sure to check out Lady Ann's radio station KPNL --> http://www.kpnl-db.com/
Lady Ann's Book "Aperture In The Veil" --> https://www.amazon.com/Aperture-Veil-Born-Preternatural-World/dp/1954528299

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:01):
You're all right? What is up? Guys? It's Laura here and we
are back for another episode of CreepyUnsolved. Thanks for joining us. On
this episode of Creepy Unsolved, ourguest is our friend, Lady Anne Seline.

(00:25):
She's the owner of KP and Lparanormal radio station and author, host
of the Caravan of Laura podcast,and a lifelong experiencer. On this episode,
we dive into her itinerary of atrip that she's taking to Ireland,
where many famous fonted locations will bevisited. We also touch on some other
travel stories and some of her firstparanormal experiences before we begin, and while

(00:50):
I have your attention, I wantto invite you to visit our website,
Creepy Unsolved dot com. It isyour one stop shop for all our podcast
episodes, YouTube videos and Creepy Unsolvedblog. Would you like to support the
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content and that's less than the priceof a cup of coffee. We also

(01:11):
have a new patreons here that allowsaccess to add free content and bonus content.
Visit our Patreon link in the shownotes below. And one last thing,
before we get started, If youhave a story you would like to
share with us, or a futurestory suggestion, email us at Creepy Unsolved
Media at gmail dot com. Now, with that all out of the way,

(01:34):
let's begin. Yeah, Like,we graduated with probably thirty six people.
I remember being in like fifth sixthgrade and we had like closer to
eighty because we had we had atelecommunication company called Adelphia in my hometown and
they went through a huge lawsuit.The company disbanded, a bunch of people

(01:56):
went to prison, and when Itook in college, actually like read about
that company. It was crazy.I remember being in my house in town
and like flipping on the news andthey have like cameras and journalists and like
police officers and everything outside on thismassive, multimillion dollar building where I lived.
It is like really tiny because youcan tell by my thirty six class

(02:19):
members that I graduated with. Soit was like groundbreaking. And I came
outside of my house and I lookeddown the street and I could see it.
I'm like, holy shit, we'reon TV. And it was the
coolest thing ever. It wasn't coolfor everyone lost a bunch of money and
their pensions, you know, retirementsand that that shit sucked. But that
company, the owner used to ownthe Buffalo Sabers. He had a vision

(02:42):
to turn my hometown into the nextPittsburgh. He was playing on scaling up
so big. There's a mansion inour town that was never finished, and
it's really sad because it was likea beautiful looking house, but all that
money went away, so it justceased to exist. Wow, gosh.
Yeah. See, I'm from areally small town as well. I mean,
it always makes me feel really oldwhen I sit there and go,

(03:06):
yeah, I remember when the firststop light was put in town. O
god, yeah, yeah. Andour graduating class as really small as I
mean, town is only about amile long. If that so's crazy?
We get two three red lights?Maybe oh wow, yeah, well I
guess no, just two? Doyou have an intersection? Then we have

(03:30):
one down the road. It's it'scrazy. It's it's a beautiful, like
mountaintop town in the middle of nowhere. The convenience factors straight out the window.
When I tell Laura I have togo grocery shopping, it's like at
fifty minutes yes, no, exactlysame here. Any direction you go,
yep, if you want to hita Walmart, you drive like fifty minutes

(03:52):
in any direction you hit one.What we have is the dollar store,
and we're fortunate enough to have twoof them on each side of the town.
And they're like the shittiest store ever. Oh I hate them. The
running joke around here. I don'tknow, probably most of the country is
just like random dollar stores popping up, Like every single town they just have
a random one popping up. AndI remember driving down to Waynesboro and we're

(04:15):
out in the middle of nowhere,like middle fucking nowhere, like farm field
nowhere, and there's just a randomdollar stores sitting there. You could upgrade
like a Walmart. It we usedto be a little bit better, but
right, that's true. That's true. Yeah, they've been doing that around
here too, just in towns thatare kind of far away from the grocery
stores. It's like, let's puta dollar store here, get your milk,

(04:35):
eggs and bread here. You're likeyour easy mac and your everyday essential
products and yeah, yeah, filledwith horrible stuff for you. Yeah.
We you know, we come fromsmall towns. And now, Lady Anne,
you're traveling the world and you're headinto Ireland, right, I am,
Oh, my gosh, it's it'sincredible. I mean, I still

(04:58):
have to sit there and kind ofpinch myself off and be like, am
I really doing this? Is thisactually happening. It's the first time that
I've ever left the States, anddefinitely the you know, furthest I've ever
been away from home. It's crazy. Like I was fortunate enough when I
served in the Army to go toKorea, and I made a quick pit
stop in Japan, so I canyou know, I can say I visited

(05:19):
books of them places. It's sonice to get out of the United States
and do experience like different cultures anddifferent parts of the world that you know,
many people never even get to imaginevisiting. Oh yeah, but before
we jump into your upcoming trip,you know, do you want to take
a moment just tell us a littlebit about you. For those who are

(05:40):
not are familiar with Lady Anne,you know what you're about, what kind
of stuff you're into. So yeah, of course, gosh, you know.
So, I guess I could startout with the fact that I just
wrote a book, and which wasabsolutely incredible, because writing has been something
that I have wanted to do sinceI was six years old. I remember

(06:01):
being that little kid in my grandpa'sbasement and I found a typewriter and I
would just type away on that thing. And I always thought, oh,
I want to you know, Iwant to author books. And you know,
I've been an experiencer of the paranormalsince my earliest memory, so of
course, you know, the bookthat I came out with was it's kind

(06:25):
of a journal, a diary ifyou will, that follows every kind of
strange occurrence that I've had in mylife. It started out as a thing
that I was just kind of writingfor my children to leave behind, because
it seemed that as I went throughlife and as I did, you know,

(06:45):
because I became my family's genial justas well, we have a long
line of adoptions on my maternal side, and it seemed that there might have
been something that was being passed onon the maternal side into the women in
our family. So I thought,you know, I think that just in
case, it would be nice towrite everything out from day one up to
the current point, especially, youknow, because we're not promised tomorrow.

(07:09):
We never know what's going to happen, and so I wanted to leave that
behind for them. Well, youknow, one of my very first memories
was I was only about a yearold and my father had taken me to
the babysitters. There was this big, beautiful sliding glass door, and out
this window you could see just thisvast farm fields and it was flooded and

(07:30):
it was early morning, so thesun was rising and there was those brilliant
oranges and pinks and yellows. Andas I looked on this scene, I
thought, wow, I came back, and it was just and that's always
stayed with me, and it's somethingthat, you know, I just knew.
I knew that reincarnation was a thing. And even as I grew,

(07:56):
I had these reoccurring dreams and Iknew that, you know, like in
one of them, I was thesoldier and it was so real, you
know. I remember entering this roomand that there was a bed over on
the right side of the room,and in the middle there was a table,
and then right in front there wasthis window, and I remember looking
out and there it was just absolutedestruction. Well, as I stood there

(08:20):
in this empty room, the doorflies open behind me and I get shot
in the back. And I couldfeel it every single time. I had
the stream. It was so realand I could feel it. So I
dropped to the ground and I thinkto myself, Okay, I'm going to
just try to crawl to the tablebecause the table had this tablecloth on it,
and I thought, I'll pretend thatI'm dead and I'll lay here until

(08:43):
they're gone. They'll think that theygot me. But I actually end up
dying. I didn't make so,you know, I've so there's never been
a time in my life where Ididn't believe that, you know, the
reincarnation wasn't a thing. And thatis why with my book, I ended
up using aperture the veil, andyou know aperture if you think of the
camera, the opening on a camera. My parents were photographers, so,

(09:07):
you know, because I wanted touse a more antiquated word rather than,
you know, something fancier than justopening in the veil, because it said
that when we come here, weare born into this great forgetting, so
we don't remember, you know,generally, we don't remember our past lives,
we don't remember that we've been herebefore. But what would happen if

(09:30):
there was that opening in the veilwhere we passed through it? Then we
would retain some of these memories.And then with born in a preternatural world,
a lot of people ask me,well, what is preternatural? Why
did you choose that preternatural instead ofusing like supernatural or paranormal. It shows
that all the stuff that is happeningin our world that we experience in those

(09:52):
categories is actually very normal to ourworld because if you think about it,
the human eye doesn't everything that isgoing on around it. The ears don't
hear everything that is going on aroundit. So and you know, when
you when you're in this community andyou hear these stories, and especially when
you're when you're coming out and you'resaying, well, I experienced this,

(10:15):
and then you know, because I'llnever forget my very first podcast that I
was on. After I told mystories, I had messages from people all
over the world. I remember somebodymessaged me from New Zealand and they said,
I've experienced this too, I've seenthis too, and it was it
was such a big moment. Andas I have, you know, continued
on, I've realized, you know, this stuff is actually very normal in

(10:39):
our world. Yeah. I couldn'tagree more. And it's it's awesome to
have platforms like podcasts and youtubes toyou know, have people share their experiences
and you build a whole network andyou connect and you talk to like minded
people and experiencers, and it's abeautiful thing. Really. Now I wanted
to jump back into your dream aboutbeing a soldier. Now, were you

(11:01):
able to you know, you talkedabout genealogy and be in your family's keeper.
Were you able to like pinpoint youknow who that was that you were
in a previous lay for anything likethat. I do not believe that this
individual was in my genetic you know, in my bloodline. I think that

(11:22):
I was incarnated into another bloodline.I don't even know what war it was,
because the memory everything is um likewhen I when I sit and try
to remember and look out the window, the buildings are they're like a gray
color and like a gray brick orstone, and I mean everything is just

(11:43):
in utter destruction. There's I mean, the buildings are crumbling and the sky
is gray as well, so Ican't even recognize where this would be.
As for my uniform there again too, it seemed to be I mean,
all the colors were very muted.I would say it was like a gray

(12:07):
but maybe like a gray green typeof a uniform. I don't remember wearing
any kind of hat or helmet onmy head, so I really, I
really haven't figured out much about that, but I had it so many times,
you know. Yeah, it's suchan interesting thing, like I kind
of have similar experiences, not notto that aspect though, but probably back

(12:33):
I remember telling Laura about this.I don't remember if it's earlier in this
year. Late last year, Iwas going through like a series of dreams.
I'd keep dreaming that it was someoneelse, Like every night I'd be
someone else, and like I'd beliving their life while I was asleep,
and I don't I don't know ifthat's I don't I don't think there's any
connection to you know, that actuallybe in someone else's life or whatever I'm

(12:56):
living it because like what terrifies meis the thought of waking up and being
someone else and having no connection toyour previous life. So I think a
lot of that was brought on fromlike a personal fear that maybe I was
you know, thinking about at thetime, and then I was living out
them thoughts in my dream. Butit was so like vivid, and it

(13:16):
felt so freaking real, like Iwas right, there was that person.
I was living like their day today life, like nothing out of the
ordinary happened, Like there's no nodeaths or no like life changing moments that
happened. It was just like bland, just normal day to day activities.
It's so interesting dreams and thoughts andconnections you make. I've been talking to

(13:39):
a friend about spirit guides lately.She knows that friend, she's friends with
her. You could use her name. Okay, Yeah, I was talking
to Cisco about spirit guides and yeah, just just just trying to connect with
them and connect with expand my thoughtsand dreaming. I haven't dreamed in like

(14:01):
a long time. The other nightI spoke to them. I talked to
them and I had like the mostvivid, freaking dream after you know,
I asked for it, oh wow, But like I when I woke up,
it was still there. I'll seeit in my peripheral like when I
think of thoughts and memories itself.It's like in my peripheral vision. It's
weird how it works. But Icouldn't fathom like what exactly was about.

(14:22):
So I've been practicing trying to remember, right, possible gateways that dreams open
and connections to the past, lifeor premibitions and stuff like that. It's
it's awesome, it really is,you know. It's it's so interesting that
you bring that up. Because Idon't know if you guys have seen my
posts on Facebook, but occasionally Iwill post a dream that I had,

(14:43):
and for the first time, Ihad this one dream and I didn't understand
it. I was sitting there thinking, Okay, this this isn't me,
but I'm experiencing it like it's me. And I was really confused. And
I actually never thought about living herseeing something through somebody else's eyes, But

(15:03):
in this dream, it was reallyI mean, this is really weird.
Um. I had a series ofmilitary dreams and this was this was recent,
earlier this year, and in thisparticular one, we were I was
in this uniform and I had neverseen this uniform before and we were supposed
to do a drill. We wereit was we were going to get into

(15:24):
an aircraft and it was just it'shard because it's hard to remember because now
it's been so long since I've hadit. But when I went to go
look at the uniform, I didfind it online and it was actually a
Russian Special Forces uniform in the eeriething was as this was in January,

(15:46):
right before everything happened in February.Yeah, it was. It was weird.
It was weird for sure. Andthat was the first time that I
started talking with other people about youknow, kind of in a dream looking
through somebody else's eyes. But thereagain, you know, this is of
course a whole new rabbit hole togo research down, because why would you

(16:06):
have that connection with that person wherethey awake at the time. Were leap
at the time, you know,So it's fascinating. Were you getting something
in the future some somebody else's stuffand you were picking up on that exactly.
Yeah, I feel like there definitelyhas to be connection with dreams and
stuff. There there's such a bigpart of your life if you really think

(16:27):
about it. That's like, youknow, normal people they sleep eight hours
a night. I get a littleless. But like just studying the thoughts
and uh, you know, thestories behind dreams, it's something to really
tap into because you know, justthe feelings and emotions and what you can
learn from them and possible connections withother people. And I thought, you

(16:48):
know, with lucid dreaming and buildingyour awareness with being in your dreams and
being able to make different things happen. But I was saying today, I'm
like, how cool would it beto figure out how to like write for
my podcast? Asked her to editfor my podcast while I was asleep,
and once I stunna that ship,I wish I could freakingt edit my sleep.
Oh my god, that would beamazing. Yeah. I've had so

(17:14):
many dreams where not not recently andI'm not really sure why, but maybe
ten years ago and even teenage andyounger years that I've had dreams where I've
dreamt something and it was like something. When I woke up, I was
like, that was an important dream, and then months down the road,
weeks down the road, even ayear or so down the road, exactly

(17:34):
what I dreamt happened, and Idon't have any explanation for it. Dude,
I'll tell you a couple more dreamstories and then we'll jump into Ireland.
So I've been I've been talking toa friend as another podcast, and
you know, she was We're talkingabout dreams and about like Hyperfantasia and a
Fantasia and pro Fantasia all the differentit's just basic how you how you think,

(18:00):
and how you project thoughts and differentstuff like that. Like if you
know what hyper fantasia is you Iwas just going to say Nope. That
means say, okay, at leastI'm not the only one one. So
I got on this topic from aTikTok that my wife showed me or we
were talking about, and she waslike, did you know some people can't

(18:23):
envision thoughts. So when they thinkof something, when they close their eyes
and you think of like a memoryor an object or you know, whatever
it may be, it's just it'sdarkness. They don't see anything. They
don't have like a I don't know. I'm sure they have an imagination,
but they can't project thoughts as likean object as vision. So if you're

(18:45):
a fantasia, it's just darkness whateveryou think. There's people who work for
like Pixar and Disney and like UniversalStudios and stuff, then they're a fantasia,
but they're amazing, like graphic designersand storytellers and stuff like that.
Then you have hyper fantasia, whereyou have the most vivid, descriptive,
visionary thought. When you think ofan apple you see like a crisp red

(19:07):
apple. You don't just see likea drawling. You see like every detail,
like whatever it may be. Whenyou think of like a memory,
you can close your eyes and playit like a movie. Then you have
pro fantasia where you can project yourthoughts out you're just looking at something right
now. You have almost like afilm over your vision, like if you
think of opacity, yes, andlike you turn it down really low,

(19:29):
but you can see it, butyou can see through it. They can
like project their memories their thoughts outhere, or they can look at a
wall and they can like see anobject build on it. I've been reading
about and I think a more profantasia. I was saying with my periphuel,
I can see like I can seethe thoughts. I can see the
memories. You know when I whenI talk and I think about something,
you'll see me staring off from thespace because I can I can see it.

(19:51):
So that's awesome me too. Wehave talking about that, we got
talking about you know, spirit gods, we got talking about you know,
dreams in this back into the dreamthing, and then we were talking about
lucid dreams. And she was sayingthat she taught herself to lucid dream when
she was young because she'd have likehorrible nightmares and she had to teach herself
that, you know, these aren'treal. So I remember when I was

(20:14):
a young like seven eight years old, it went on for probably a year.
I could dream of a clock andI could watch the freaking you know,
the arms and the clock spin aroundin circles, and I could stop
it at a certain time, andwhen I woke up, it'd be that
time. It was the coolest fuckingshit ever, like to the minute,
like it was nuts, And Idon't remember how long it lasted, but

(20:37):
it felt like it was a goodyear. Then it just went away.
During that time, it was thecoolest shit ever. Like I'd think of
like nine thirty six am, andI'd open my eyes to'd be nine thirty
six am or ten thirty and soon and so on. It was pretty
sweet. Like I don't even knowhow to describe it, like just I
don't know if it's just a randomthing happening, or like I had an
internal clock, because if you wakeup the same time every day, you

(21:00):
know, right, your body getsin tune to that. But just to
like pick different times and to haven'tstop on that dot. You wake open
up, open up your eyes,you wake up, and then it's that
time. But I don't know ifyou guys have experienced anything like that.
I'm gonna say what you Oh sorry, go ahead, no please, no
please, no. I was justgonna say, almost, like, what
if you were kind of like ina Nasturll projection projection I can't talk again

(21:23):
state and you were like seeing yourclock and not realizing it or something like
that, that'd be sweet. Idon't think I had, or I don't
think I had a clock like inmy bedroom or like an alarm clock or
anything like that at the time.Oh oh okay, I'm thinking I'm picturing
you like in bed, waking up, rolling over and looking at your alarm.
No. No, I was.I was like eight years old out

(21:45):
of bunk bed. But I meanI would wake up knowing what time it
was, but like because I wouldget up in the middle of the night
and i'd go get a glass ofwater or something like that, and I
would pass by the clock and Iwould see that it was exactly the time
that I just internally knew that itwas. And that was always really interesting.

(22:06):
My mom is so good at thatmy entire life. You know,
we'd be outside doing yardwork, orshe'd go out by the pool or something
and she'd be like, what timeis it? About three thirty? And
she's like on the freaking dot,like her whole life. I'm like,
how do you do this shit?It's crazy. She just did it the
other day when I saw her.I'm like, what crazy? That's cool.

(22:27):
Yeah, I guess you'd always beon time if you have that good
perception of time. I don't takemy mother there. All right, So
we're going to Ireland. What arewe seeing in Ireland? What's all on
this trip that you're going on?Yes? So gosh, we are going

(22:48):
to the Seafin Passage tombs that ishright off the bat, which they're like
five thousand years old. There wereno from the research that I've done,
there was no body or anything buriedthere, but it is an ancient ceremonial
site and so that's right off thebat. From there, we will go
to I think it's it's the highestcross that's in Ireland, and I think

(23:12):
it's called the Moon. And thenwe are and this is all on day
one, and then we are goingto and I might watch some of these
words, but oh yeah, Iwas like, oh, I hope maybe
she knows how to say these becauseI'm gonna butcher them. No exactly.
It's it's definitely one of those thingswhere it's just like I'm gonna try,

(23:36):
but you know, then kill KittyCastle, which it was cash I think
it was built. It's gotta beOkay, which day is this? I
got all these links and ever Igot like ten tabs open up. No,
lie, because I was right dayNo exactly, I've got them open
too. Okay, this is stillwe're still on day one. Oh my

(23:56):
god. Can I just say thatI'm going through this and I'm getting so
excited and I'm like, wait aminute, I'm not going this sucks.
I'm going to have to go onthe next trip. Oh for sure.
I mean there's definitely there's definitely goingto be me more after this, for
sure. And I'm just you know, it's one of those things. Here
again, I'm going to backtrack alittle bit. I was just talking about

(24:18):
this with someone over a year ago. I had wanted to go to Ireland,
and I wanted to go so bad, but here I thought gosh,
you know that it just seems likea dream. But let me tell you,
like I named one of the chaptersin my book Manifestation, the power
of the Mind, the energy thatwe hold if you really want something.
I really believe that we have theability to manifest our reality and the things

(24:42):
that we want, we can reallypull them to us. Because here again,
for a long time, I justdidn't think that i'd ever really leave
the United States. I didn't reallythink that I would travel. I didn't
even really think that I'd fly toany other states. And here I've been
to Colorado, Ohio, Arkansas,Texas and everything, and it's just been

(25:03):
I mean, I'm still in awe. I'm still I mean here I am.
I'm it's what's happening this month,just in a couple of weeks,
and I'm still kind of going,is this really happening? So on day
two, going to the Rock ofCash, which is also known as Saint
Patrick's Rock, and then gosh,I mean, we've got here. Castle

(25:27):
is after that, and then theBlarney Stone you know, uh where people
go and they'll they'll kiss the stoneto get the gift of gab. I'm
going to interrupt you for a hotsecond, because I saw a tik tak
or something and I'm pretty sure thiswas it. If you are, you're
laughing, You know what I'm gonnasay. Where the locals pee on it,

(25:48):
and then all these tours are goingup there, they pee on it
like out at night after they've beenat the bars and everything. And then
the next day, you know,when it's suns out, people are visiting
this. They're going up there,right and everyone that's kissing the stone on
the tour, Oh yeah, Iheard about that. No, you know,

(26:12):
honestly, I think that I thinkI've got the gift of gab already.
I mean, I am Scottish andIrish. I don't need to be.
I'm not gonna kiss any stones.We're good there. That's um,
you know. Uh. And thenI mean, I'll tell you I'm gonna
skip through this a little bit andmentioned that I'm one of the highlights.

(26:36):
The place that I'm rolling forward tothe most is Spike Island Prison. That
one really stands out to me becauseit seems like there's something that happens the
second that the universe is like,okay, this is happening. Because I
begin to have visions from certain places, and it was Spike Island that spoke
to me the most out of everysingle place saw on this list. This

(27:00):
was the place. And it startedoff with there was these there were shoes,
and I knew that it was awoman, and she was in a
you know, I could see thebottom of her skirt and I could see
her shoes, and it seemed likeher feet, her toes were you know,
barely on the ground, and youknew that she was she was being

(27:22):
hung for something. After I sawher, then I saw this little boy
that ran by, which I thoughtwas really strange. And then off in
the distance where and this is inlike a courtyard or something. And then
off in the distance there's this hallwayand there was this this figure and this
is all in my mind. Thisis something that I'm seeing in my mind.

(27:44):
There's a man standing in the hallway, but you can barely see him.
It's like he's just a shadow entity. But you know that this isn't
And I was really perplexed by this. And I didn't really want to research
Spike Island because I wanted to allowfor whatever connections and stuff to come through.
And then that's the other thing too, with having I mean, it's

(28:06):
still weird to say having psychic abilitiesor whatever. You know, it's it's
still so fascinating. I don't thinkthere will be a time in my life
where I see something and then it'sconfirmed that I'm not just surprised, like
it happened for the very first time. So I actually called my sister because
my sister's going with me, andI said, Okay, these this is

(28:27):
what I'm seeing in regards to SpikeIsland, can you do me a favor
and can you research was there anywere there women there were their children?
And were there French prisoners there?Because I thought that the woman was French,
and she indeed did find information thatall of those people were there.

(28:47):
There was children's word that there werechains and they had these hammocks that would
be hooked up, you know,one after the other and you'd have to
climb up the chains to get inyour little hammock when you were going to
bed. So that was really reallyfascinating, and it's and it's come to
me a couple of different times,so I'm really fascinated for that event.

(29:11):
Yeah, I looked into you know, Spike Island, the prison a little
bit before this, and they're comparingit to like Alcatraz but like a thousand
times I guess worse, more haunted, right, Yeah, No, And
again it's one of those places Ihaven't I really haven't looked into too much
because I wanted to kind of havethat clear, you know, clean slate

(29:33):
that way things can just kind ofcome to me. And then because recently,
for instance, only when I wentto Texas side of the Aluma and
what was really interesting is on myso when I first booked my trip,
there was this woman that came tome, but she didn't really say anything.
It was just you could just seeher and she was there and she

(29:56):
looked like she was mourning, andthat was all I got. Nothing else
came until my second flight and Iwent to close my eyes I always sleep
on the plane, and she cameto me again and here again you could
tell that she was mourning. Butthen but then she wasn't and she seemed
happy. She seemed like she wasgoing about her normal, you know,

(30:17):
daily life. And I was like, okay, I really need to look
into this and see, you know, were there women, there was there
anybody that stood out more than mostSo I get to the Alamo and I'm
looking around and they're talking about thesoldiers, the men and everything, and
I didn't see any pictures of women, and I didn't really hear anything.

(30:37):
And I asked somebody who was Andthis was at the very end of taking
the tour there. I asked him, I says, is there are there
any women that stood out more thanmost that had a big influence with this?
Not because there was a woman thatsaved the like she saved the Alamo
and and put funding into being ableto keep it and he had to preserve

(31:00):
it right, and but but Iwasn't meeting hers. This is this is
somebody from that time. And hetold me that there was a woman who
stood out and I can't remember hername, but there was a woman who
would play her, you know,reenact her. And he told me where
to find her. So boom,you know, I go over to her
and I was just like, hi, um, do you do you re

(31:23):
enact as as this woman? Andshe goes, actually, yes, I
do. And I was like,I was just curious if you could,
if you could tell me more abouther, um, you know, and
she talked about how she was kindof like she was a princess. She
was, she was rich, andshe had two husbands and they had died.
She had been a widow twice.She had this eleven month old baby

(31:48):
that was there and he when hegrew and he was older. He was
the last known survivor from the Alamo. And during this conversation, it was
so crazy because she looks at meand she just stopped and she goes,
why her, why do you wantto know about her? Well, I'm
still nervous about telling random people.Well I had a dream, you know,

(32:10):
And so I'm just I'm on thespot and I'm staring at her and
I'm like, uh, well,see I had this dream and this is
what she looked like, and thisis what it felt like. And there
was almost this transformation the place whereit was like that moved through this woman.
And she started talking about how whenshe first came there to do this

(32:34):
reenacting this woman, it was likeshe channeled her, and when she reenacts
her, she's actually channeling her.And then how she's spoken to her,
and how this woman was like,tell my story, tell my story,
and I mean, of course,you know. Then I'm struck with emotion
and I'm brought to tears because ofcourse this is you know, it's moving

(32:55):
for her, it's moving for me. It's confirmation that I saw was actually
something that was legitimate, and itwas you know, it was incredible.
So having those moments are they're soimpactful. And that's why, Yeah,
that's why I don't like to doa whole lot of research on a place

(33:15):
before I go. There was anotherinstance when I went to Ohio. They
didn't tell me where we were going. I had no idea what the building
was. And when I had landedand I met them and we were talking
in the kitchen, I had avision again of a location within a building,
and I was like, you know, do you have a pin and
paper? Can I Can I writesomething down or draw something? So I

(33:37):
started drawing this out and it's it'slike a ramp with the railing and and
I'm drawing this out and I'm tellingthem the colors and I'm you know,
pointing to the room that it's goinginto, and their their jaws just kind
of dropped and they're like, wow, you know, wait wait until you
see this, Wait until you seeand I'm like, this is real,

(34:00):
this really exists, and they werelike, yeah, yeah, do you
know just wait And it was incrediblebecause when I had drawn it out,
I even said, you know,I feel like that there's a presence right
here at the end of this hallway. So when we got there, I
mean I was stunned to stand inthat area that I had drawn and so
we actually set up some equipment likethe motion activated cat balls, you know,

(34:23):
and we we set them up downthere where I said that I had
felt something, and we asked questionsand it actually there was a response.
There was actually activity there in thatlocation. So it's just h yeah,
yeah. No. Having these twoevents happened to you as it like jog

(34:45):
your memory to or made you wantto go back and think about other events
that may have been similar, butyou didn't really put two and two together
at the time. Had you've foundanything like that, you know, it's
it made me. I mean,as as I've grown up, I have
definitely looked. But I mean,especially when I was writing my book and

(35:07):
I was telling these different stories,there was these moments where I was like,
oh my gosh, that was actuallyyou know, foresight, that was
actually these abilities that it wasn't youknow, it wasn't coincidence. It wasn't
you know. And then of coursewere viewing back in the past as well,
I can see, oh, thisis why this happened. This you

(35:30):
know all that this was actually setup? You know. So now have
you wrote about a lot of themin your books? Do you want to
share some of them with the storiesthat I wrote in my book on One
of the biggest things was right inthe beginning, my very first occurrence where
something like this had happened. AndI was, gosh, I want to

(35:51):
say. I was ten or soand my father and I so. My
father he was a postcard dealer,and so we would travel all over the
Pacific Northwest with his postcards and heyou know, buying and selling and setting
up at these shows and everything.And so we had the long drive up
to Spokane down here from Portland.So it's like for five hours maybe or

(36:13):
so. It's a long time fora ten year old, especially in summer
when you have no air conditioning inthis little Ford Ranger. That's a long
time for anybody. I feel like, oh, yeah, exactly, Well,
We're going up and I'm and I'mtired. It's in the morning,
it's not too hot yet, andI'm like, okay, I'm just gonna

(36:34):
try to, you know, goto sleep for a little bit longer until
we get there. Well, Iremembered this movie. I could see the
scene in a movie. It wasfrom Flyaway Home. And in the very
opening scene of this movie, there'sa little girl and she was with her
mom and they got into a carwreck. The mom didn't make it,
but she did. I'm and I'msitting there and I don't understand. I'm

(36:54):
like, I don't want to thinkabout this. I don't I don't want
to think about this. I'm inthe car with my dad. This is
you know. So I sit upbecause you know, I'm you know,
just trying to get my mind offof it, and I'm going to think
about other things. But the thingwas, as soon as I opened my
eyes and I sat up, therewas an explosion like it sounded like a

(37:15):
gunshot. And what had happened isthat the tread came off of the tire
completely just and so in the littleforward ranger um it rolled over twice and
my dad had, you know,put himself over me, and yeah,
I just remember it going black,and luckily we actually landed right up.

(37:37):
We landed on all four tires andthe only thing that I ended up getting
was this little scar on the backof my back of my hand. I
only needed two stitches, that wasit. But I was in major shock.
I was in major shock, andthey had them out of the window.
Yeah, and wow, you know, because it not only was it

(37:58):
shocked that that happened, but thenthere was the shock of the fact that
I was thinking about that right beforehand. And then I had guilt. I
sat there and I thought, shouldI have told him that I was sick,
like car sick or something and hadhim pull over? Is you know,
maybe maybe if we would have gottenback on the road, but at

(38:19):
a slower pace than you know.So I it was really difficult to um
to process that. But then,you know, another podcast, I've been
asked about that because it could it. I don't know, if you want
to call it a near near deathexperience. I mean I got lust,
it's yeah, yeah, And sincethen, you know, because a lot

(38:43):
of the time they say sometimes whenyou have an experience like that, it
also opens you up. Yeah,definitely, I have a friend that that's
true for How is your dad too? If he so? If he wouldn't
if I wouldn't have been in thecar, and he wouldn't have leaned down
to lay over me. The sectionright there where his head is that was

(39:07):
all caved in. Holy shit,he wouldn't be here. Yeah, So
it's almost more of a blessing thatyou were there, yes, than anything
the way I take it. Yeah, No, no, I can.
I can definitely understand, like almostlike the survivor's guilt, right with you
know, having that dream beforehand andyou know that happening, but like how

(39:31):
would you you know, have known, you know, but when you're ten
and you're thinking about it, youknow, obviously you're in a different state
of mind. But wow, that'slike some final destination ship there. It
is though, it really is,and it's just been incredible. Yeah,
I mean ever since with U,with all of that, it's you know,

(39:52):
it's so But then you get nervousas you kind of go through life
experiencing these things, because you can'tjust jump to the conclusion of, oh,
because I'm thinking this, it's goingto happen. We all worry,
but everything we worry about isn't goingto be you know, isn't going to
happen. And so learning discernment canbe a little tricky when with all of

(40:16):
that, Yes, definitely, andthen again learning forgiveness, which you know,
of course it brings me, youknow into one of my one of
my beliefs is that we are here, you know, that the soul incarnates
here to learn unconditional love and forgiveness. And so you know, I think

(40:37):
that there's a lot of things thatwe experience in this life that I mean,
there are all lessons to ultimately achievethat. Yeah, definitely, you
know, life's a guide, it'sa lesson. What I'd like to think
is, you know, I'm closeto reincarnation. I think, you know,
that's definitely a possibility. And likeevery reoccurrence of life is a new

(40:57):
lesson you learn. And I don'tknow what the ending is is, but
I think with every we are beingreincarnated. With every lifetime there's a new
new lesson, a new new storyto be told, a new something to
learn, something to believe to takeon next and next. And they sometimes
say like if you had a reallyreally bad person, you come back and
you struggle the next lifetime and soon. It you learn it like a

(41:20):
balance with a universe or something mexactly. I agree. Now, I
was gonna chime in when you're talkingabout your story. I did have a
strange occurrence the other day. Iwas telling Laura about it. When you
know, I wrote my motorcycle towork and the whole morning leading up to
that freaking my neck and my shouldersand my joints just freaking eight sent me

(41:42):
text message. You're like, Ifeel like shit, and I'm like,
are you getting sick? Didn't yousay like I don't think so or something
like I felt fine, Like Idon't know, like I don't feel like
I got a cold or like asickness coming on, just like my joints.
Eight. So, like I gohome every day for hop to my
motorcycle. There is like a grocerydoor next to the hospital. It's like
forty five mile per hour through there. And I've watched people pull out of

(42:07):
this freaking parking lot like idiots andalmost sideswhite people and t bone people like
and it's like the oddest thing everbecause like where you turn out of there's
no blind spots. You can seeall oncoming traffic. It just like people
go stupid pulling out of this parkinglot. So I'm coming through and you
know, I'm going forty five.There's there's a car in front of me,
and then there was an suv pullingout of that parking lot. I'm

(42:29):
coming and like he fucking darts outin front of me, and I locked
my brakes up, going like fortyfive fifty miles an hour, and there's
like a truck right here that itcut off two and he's like yelling at
the car is that pulled out becausethey see me coming at it? And
I found out that day my brakeswere freaking. It was nuts though,
because like I stopped as fine everything, but all that like that, the

(42:51):
aches and the joints and all thatjust went away after that. So I
don't know if it was like likea sign that something was going to happen
or if it just the paint out. I think it just scared all the
shit out of it, but like, wow, it was it was something
else. Like I've had other experienceslike that before, but not where it
was almost like a life or deathsituation like that. Right, listen to

(43:16):
the science man. I got onehere that I can actually kind of tie
into your trip. Here. Iwas doing, you know, my stalking
your itinerary. I love it,and um, there's one you're going to
and I I'm gonna butcher this.It's like it's char Charles Charles Bill Castle.

(43:38):
I keep calling it charlesville Castle.Yeah, yeah, there's no though
Charles will sounds good to meet though, like that's not how you say it.
But it's a in an Irish villageof Oh. I don't even know
why I said this because I can'tsay it this either to Tolla more And

(43:59):
and there's the case gardens and outsidein the castle gardens they have this nine
hundred year old oak tree and theycall it the King Oak. And I
guess this was in the nineteen hundreds. The Bury family was had some kind
of weird connection to this tree,and every time a branch fell off,
a couple days later a family memberwould die. And then in nineteen sixty

(44:22):
three, lightning struck this tree nearlysplit it in half. And then a
few days later, the head ofthe family. I can't say his name
either. It's like it looks likecolonel, but I don't think that's what
it is. Charles Howard Bury,the head of the family. He died
a few days later and they don'tknow what the cause was, and now,

(44:43):
you know, I don't know ifthis is all true. I only
got it off of one website.I didn't dig any deeper. But that's
kind of it kind of ties intowhat we're talking about. I thought that
was pretty neat. Yeah, yeah, No, I mean there's so much
because I've been trying to do research, right, I've been making a paper
on it, and I've only madeit to about day see here, No,

(45:06):
I'm at day three. I meanI've yeah, I've done a little
bit with day four because I wasdoing some research on the Choctaw Native American
site where there's a like a monumentof feathers because the Native Americans have donated
a bunch of money to the Irishpeople during the famine and there was that

(45:27):
they you know, they ended uphaving that kinship and it's continued into today.
So it really is. It's it'samazing. And so I kind of
skipped I did half of day three, you know, all up to half
a day three, and then Idid that one thing on day four and
then I just haven't I haven't jumpedinto anything else because of course, you
know, along with Ireland, I'vealso been researching. There's there's some connections

(45:53):
between Ireland and Egypt, and Egyptis also somewhere that I'm really wanting to
go. There's another tour that MikeRick Sicker is also putting on in February
that it actually goes to Egypt.It's really interesting because there is a place
it's Newgrange and that's an Ireland andthere's these spirals that are carved into the

(46:16):
stone. And when you go andyou look at stuff over in ancient Egypt,
and you see there's also I meanthere's I think, where is it?
There's another there's another location. Ofcourse I can't remember where it is.
But throughout the world, in ancientplaces, there's these spirals that are
carved into these ancient locations, andI believe that they represent energy. And

(46:39):
then of course you jump down therabbit hole of going into like portals and
and you know, yeah, yeah, exactly, that's exactly really neat mm.
So I end up kind of jumpingall over the place where I'm super
into this, and then all ofa sudden there's this one little puzzle piece

(47:02):
but you know, connects me tothis whole other subject. And then I
you know I go go off onthat, Yeah, exactly. That would
be me definitely chasing breadcrumbs itself.Like you'd be ad, it's crazy where
you end up Sometimes just one monkafter another, one Reddit page leads to

(47:22):
this and this and that right,and then you forgot where you even started?
How did I get here? Likethat on YouTube too, You'll watch
one video and then like similar videoand you click on that, then you
forget would even start, like it'scrazy. I feel so bad because there's
times where I'll be doing a podcastand all of a sudden, I just

(47:43):
I throw out this chunk of informationwhere it's pieces of different research, you
know, pools if you will,and the host will will kind of stop
and be like hold on, holdon, that's a lot to unpack here,
Oh my goodness. And I feelso bad because you know, it's
I told something today. I waskind of laughing about it. I was

(48:05):
like, you know those uh yousee on TV where people go into like
Vegas or something, and there's themoney you walk in. It's like this
tornado of money and you have totry to catch the dollars. Yeah,
well that's my brain and that's allthe ideas you know, and all the
different research, so I'm constantly likejust trying to grab what I can and

(48:27):
you know, so that's like alot of our episodes. It's like a
pinball machine. It's yeah, conversationand just wherever we end up, for
whatever we end up. I likeit though, because it's just more like
just laid back and you know,whatever comes out of it comes out of
it. Because I'm like, oh, I should have done more research on

(48:49):
this, and I was like,nah, we're good. We could walk
for a few hours. I'm surewhatever comes out. So yeah, what
makes it an adventure? I rememberwhen we first started, we like wrote
down questions and stuff and really reallydove in, like we do dive into
like some background research about our guestsobviously, and you know, their their

(49:09):
content or their trips or the booksthey wrote or the podcasts are involved in.
Right, well, you still havelike twenty questions on there, and
like it kills the conversation when you'regetting like beat to death question after question.
It's it's so much better just havingthe floor and you just talk to
whatever and write so let your mindgo wherever you want it to go.

(49:30):
Oh yeah, Well, and thereally cool thing about that too, is
it's it's kind of universe lad aswell, because you're really there, there's
that flow, and then usually bythe end of it, it's like,
oh my gosh, the universe throughthis in or threw that in and this
is exactly what was supposed to happen, and it's it's incredibles definitely. Well

(49:52):
that's about it for this one,Lady Anne, But I want to go
already the hour flew by. I'mtelling you really again minutes. This was
one of the fastest episodes in awhile, Like, yeah, literally so
smooth, dude, so smooth.I had so much I loved it.

(50:14):
But I do want to give youtime to talk about I know you're involved
in so much stuff. You're you'rea published author, you're a podcast host,
you have a radio station, youknow, the whole nine yards.
So I do want to give youa moment to talk about, you know,
all your awesome content where we canfind it, how the listeners can
tune in and listen to all yourstuff. Oh yeah, So my podcast

(50:35):
is called The Caravan Library of Lore. Currently, because I have so much
going on, I have moved theCaravan to be seasonal where we premiere,
you know, the first of October, and then we go and tell the
last day in December. Um,you know, so the Caravan Gosh,
you can find it. You cantype in the Caravan of Lore or the

(50:57):
Caravan Library of Lore and Google andthat the first thing that'll come up.
Same with Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Caravan of Lore and we you know,
go over all kinds of stuff.We interview people just like you do,
very similar, you know. Andthen with kpn L that is a
paranormal digital broadcasting station that plays paranormalpodcasts after five pm Monday through Friday,

(51:21):
but special programming on Saturdays and Sundays. Sundays is Old Time Radio, which
I always have a lot of funwith. We also have paranormal Well it's
music with a paranormal theme, soyou can hear songs that talk about ghosts
and demons and witches and you know, all of that. And that's just
kp and L Radio, which youcan find on again, Twitter, Instagram,

(51:42):
and Facebook. There's groups for bothof those on Facebook, so there's
a page and a group. Mybook is called Aperture in the Veil,
Born in a Preternatural World that canbe found on Amazon. I also am
selling author signed copies. If youfind me on Facebook under and Selene just
you know, send me your friendrequest, but let me know why.

(52:04):
And then and then well you know, I can, I can give you
an author send copy that way.Um gosh, yeah there we I think
that's it. There we go.Well, thank you so much, lady
Anne. I had a great timeand I hope you have an awesome time
on your trip. Ah. Thankyou guys so much. Seriously, this
has been amazing. Yeah, definitely, thank you. Okay, don't leave

(52:29):
yet. Hey, guys, thatis it for this one. Thank you
so much for joining us. Ifyou have questions about today's episode, or
if you'd like to reach out tous directly, you can do so by
sending us an email at Creepy UnsolvedMedia at gmail dot com. Until next

(52:50):
time, be sure to check outour awesome content by simply visiting Creepy Unsolved
dot com. If you were activeon YouTube, be sure to check out
our channel over there under the nameCreepy Unsolved. Also, while you wait
for the next episode of Creepy Unsolved, be sure to leave us a rating
and review. This will help ourpodcast grow. Until next time. This

(53:14):
is Dylan signing off
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