Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:01):
Welcome. This is your invitation to freedom.
The podcast that challenges the traditional left right
paradigm and explores a narrative centered on unity and
reclaiming our rights. Each episode will explore
topics from how we got where we are to what a peaceful journey looks like
to get back to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
(00:24):
Well, greetings. I'm so happy to be here with you today
on this very special episode of invitation
to freedom. On today's episode, I'm honored to
share a peek inside 1 of Invitation to Freedom's weekly road
mapping meeting. In this meeting, we've been graced to
have one of the cofounders from AMG, Americans Meeting Group,
(00:46):
Robert William, discussing the meaning of sacred honor.
Robert's also partnered with us in developing and delivering our
annual subscription Freedom Through Equity.
So I hope you enjoy. Here we go. Boy,
that Robert William, he's in the head for more than a hat rack.
(01:07):
I like that saying. Another teacher.
So road mapping, today is May 7th, year of our order
20 24. We have our special guest with
us, Robert William. We're gonna be diving into sacred
honor, where you consider
that on your road, defining it,
(01:29):
anything around that concept, Taylor
honor, I'd love to bring to the floor. And I'm gonna ask
Robert, he's probably so kind to define it within a conversation.
I'm gonna bring some things up around it. But first, do we
have any roadblocks, dresses that you think someone
wants to bring to the group because we are after all
(01:53):
the wise counsel of many.
Okay. I see a smile from Cindy while she's having a little snacky
poo. Okay. So, Honor,
how many of you, like me, have
had honor or
a the concept of honor thrown
(02:17):
at you and you've been told you're out of
honor, you're in dishonor, it's been hurled at you as
a weapon
Anybody? Wow. You're so lucky. I
I used that on a, tenant that I had to, evict.
He wanted to go to court. So I told the the judge because I had
(02:40):
all these excuses, however many he had. Yeah. I
said, war is not trustworthy, and he's not an honor.
And how did the cape go? At 1, he got
he called the guy. He goes, I can't make her do anything. I'm like,
okay.
(03:00):
Well, that that that's where you hurled it and it was
appropriate. Okay. So,
Robert, I'm gonna go out on a limb because I'm
always willing to be wrong because you correct
me when I am with grace. And that is
beautiful for me because I can't learn without
(03:23):
the willingness to be wrong in this because I'm learning.
So to me, Sacred Honor
has to do with exclusive equity that
we learned is a gift from the Creator. If we're living
in equities we and we're
(03:43):
applying honor, we want
to treat as stewards
in our relationships on all levels
honorably. Now to
define a word using a word is kind of that's
cheating when I was in school. So that's not really
(04:06):
defining it because I used the word in it. So another elevation
in a description for me would be
morality. Acting with morality.
Treating my fellow men and women
with grace and kindness and compassion
(04:28):
and truth, delivered with kindness and
compassion. Those all become these sacred
substances. This all ties back to conversations
that we've had for me. When I talk about
living in honor and sacred honor and something
I learned from Martin who is teaching a
(04:51):
fantastic course over in American Meeting
Group having to do with trust, he's talking
about you leave a situation better
than you found it. So for me in a relationship,
how can I how can I leave a situation better than
I found it? And one way is
(05:14):
walking down the street with a smile on my face and making eye contact with
another man or woman. That is such a
little thing and that sacred substance of joy
and just getting that smile. That's
honoring that other man or woman.
So when we talk about living in honor and
(05:36):
sacred honor, to me it's I need to
start figuring out what it looks like. I have
used a term when I'm critical of somebody saying that
person knows nothing of honor. And what I mean
when I say that is usually they're dishonest.
And I've used that with Robert. I've talked about some people that we've all been
(05:59):
to know. And I've talked about it with Ron Gibson,
and he's brought it up, highlighting people
have having a lack of honor. So
am I off base? Am I am I in the vicinity?
I did a good job. There's a
couple things I would point out just to further clarify.
(06:23):
So the first word that kind of bug me that you used a few
times was relationships.
In equity, we have relations.
And when we add ship to a word,
it's a shipping reference or a maritime reference,
and there's a lot of them. And since
(06:46):
jurisdiction is the words of a jurist
or a law form, we wanna be careful
about the words we're using. Maybe not so
much amongst us because we understand the intent and
purpose of communication. But when you're in a forum
where you're being when you're contracting,
(07:09):
it becomes relevant. And
your intent and purpose can fail because of the
of the language that you're using. And
so to enjoy relations or
to establish trust relations is the
exclusively equitable way to refer to that.
(07:33):
Equitable way to refer to that. Now for me,
when I hear enjoying relation, it has a sexual
connotation. So that's I don't know if I got
that. In the gutter, you got it from the public.
Okay. There you go. So, again, they took something they took
something that was supposed to be higher and they put
(07:56):
it in the lowest possible form, right? They're always trying
to tune us downward and see if we'll accept it.
Wow. So the next thing, you listed a
whole bunch of beautiful values, but
vigilance is a value and equitable substance. It's a
sacred substance, and it's a
(08:18):
more masculine substance, if I may
say that. And that vigilance
is, I believe, granted to us to protect the sacred
trust. So it's a resource
that we require to protect all of the
equitable relations that we have functioning.
(08:40):
Wow, okay. So to, to steward
sacred honor it requires this vigilance. Yes.
And the expression of that vigilant is
through our expression, our language.
That's one way. We can also write it. Expressed through writing.
Got it. Yeah. So language is a way that's
(09:04):
probably, the spoken word is
is powerful face to face. The written
word is powerful because it lasts through time.
It can't be misinterpreted later from a foggy memory.
And then body language without without
(09:25):
words is also a way to be vigilant.
We communicate a lot through our body.
Like, if somebody was, being inappropriate
with a date, I might stand up
and move myself in between what was inappropriate
(09:46):
and the date without saying anything.
But it is an offer to escalate.
Or an offer to to terminate. Yeah. Or terminate.
Yes. Yeah. Well said.
Well said. And then I saw somebody put
(10:07):
ethical into the chat. The little flag popped up when they
saw the word ethical. And ethical
is a set of behaviors that are
coming to an ethos. And so
depending on what the value hierarchy of the ethos is is what
will depend, which is what will determine what is
(10:29):
ethical among those in that ethos.
So with an ethos being a society
or a social Lisa, something like that,
and we know there's some dark societies and some dark
social circles that,
so ethics is is an interesting word.
(10:53):
We have to make sure that we don't tune it into one end
of the because then you can be
fooled by deceivers like
corporate ethics. Sounds good, but I've seen them go
to the left and injure people over
the last, you know, bit of time. So what
(11:16):
is ethical behavior while the the center point moved
in corporate ethics. It, you know, it it requires
drilling down. We think we comprehend
a word, but communicating and
making sure you get feedback so that you are
(11:36):
in fact understanding or comprehending what is
being spoken is an art in and of itself. You know,
like, I shake my head down, but am I really getting it? You know,
where are my thought bubbles so that you can say, oh, Lisa's
using that term. She's using that word. You know,
because the words I used incorrectly
(12:00):
for this, like, relationship, that is
obvious. But how much more am I really comprehended? And you are such
a master at communication. How are you able to
encode all that? That's a good question. I think we all have
been granted sacred gifts in terms of
capacities. And a lot of us might not
(12:22):
even realize that we have, say, a large
capacity for something because we haven't
accepted it and developed the ability with it yet.
But for me, you know, I went through over 20 years of moving
behavioral coaching, so I had to do a lot of listening,
a lot of contemplating,
(12:46):
and understanding, which I theorize and then test
test through the processes, and refine
before I communicate, right, what I think could
be helpful. But so I think I've had a lot of
practice developing that ability. I rely on other people to tell
me that kind of stuff. Is it lonely in your world? Do you
(13:08):
feel other people are communicating? I don't wanna say on
your level, but in the vibration. I've I'm looking
for a word. I don't know what it is. It's it's a reality.
Are you having a shared reality with enough other men and
women? Pretty deep personal question.
I think enough to answer it. I think I do a pretty good job
(13:31):
of meeting people where they're at.
I enjoy them there and interact with them there.
And as a result of that, I think they open.
And as a result of them opening, they're able to receive
things that are beyond where they're at. And so we
have a mutual exchange of value. But working
(13:54):
in this town with the land patents, I think is
gonna be a much better opportunity to see people
over and over and over again, you know, in real
life where by biological
energy and spiritual energy is is exchanged
through the through the capacities that we've been given to do
(14:18):
that. We're social creatures, and fortunately, we have this
Internet because people
can find each other, find their communities, but it's
not the same as in real life. And I
travel a lot around the country putting on the seminars, and so I get to
meet all these new people all the time when we do them. And I can
(14:39):
feel the difference teaching across the internet and teaching
with people. Yeah. And then growing with a group,
Right? Yeah. This is unique because it's an
Internet group that continues to meet and meet face to
face. A lot of us in AMG, it's
rare that somebody turns on their video
(15:02):
because there's such a value for privacy.
The private, private trust, private relations, private,
private. And I think a lot of them are worried about not
sure knowing this much information that they
were never intended to know, you know, what kind of problem
that might be for. Yeah. The backlash. Yeah.
(15:24):
Yeah. No. I appreciate that. And I think that it's taken a
lot of I don't know. My husband said he would call it stupidity,
but I think it's taken a lot of courage for what Chris and I
are doing with putting this out there
that we are not letting fear stop us. Yeah.
We want to attract people who
(15:47):
are sincerely motivated
to come together and ask the tough questions and
evolve. And what you just shared was so valuable,
and I appreciate it because it was personal. What what does
it look like to do this? If you continue to evolve,
are you gonna be alone? And I I gotta answer
(16:10):
my own question because before I started this a couple years ago and
started a platform in the community, I felt such a deep sense
of loss and loneliness. It was horrific.
And the more I'm evolving and I've always
been someone who's transparent and will speak her mind. So it wasn't
for lack of my ability to connect, but it was for lack
(16:33):
of either attracting the right people
or creating the state because it wasn't heaven
except for my husband and my daughter and my my best friend and a
couple of married. But now with all you who
come to these these meetings and the relationship
that we've established, even though, you know, we see face to face on
(16:56):
occasion, and it does matter, And I hope that we are able to
continue to do that. I'm gonna our goal was to do it
in 24, but we had not been able to to do it. We were
gonna try to set meetings up all over the country, maybe
25. I don't feel I feel
more connected with positive relations
(17:21):
and more alive at 61
than I think I have felt in over a decade.
And I'm so grateful to everyone's
willingness to continue to come together in community
and share. And Robert, you're joining us. It's just been incredibly
valuable. Well, I honor your spirit
(17:45):
and your goodwill, and then a
valued friendship has certainly emerged along the way.
And I was thinking that we were just talking the other day and
I, you know, I realized that a friendship between us
has truly blossomed, and there's so much love and appreciation.
And, you know, how it is when you're close to someone, you wanna share what's
(18:08):
going on in your life because it makes it real. Like, you're you're people who
are like, what difference does it make if you don't share with, you
know, the people you're closest with? And I do feel that. And I feel
that with a lot of our members and I hope that you guys are connecting
with each other so that you you
gain that because I think honoring what we're
(18:29):
doing, again, back to honor its relation.
Right? I mean, that's really that
focal point of the definition of this that I just
got from you. And what kind
of relations are those?
Well, we've rolled out sexual.
(18:53):
Why is it weird? There are sexual relations that are honorable too. I don't know,
but that's federal. I'm just thinking of funny. But what
kind of relations are they? Right? They're
Exchange ideas, philosophies.
Yeah. That's a value exchange.
Relations of value exchange. So
(19:16):
if if the written law is nothing without equity
and equity is everything even without the the written law,
you'd say that trust, equity arises
from trust. Right? The sacred trust is the beginning,
and equity is an expression of how trust works.
(19:38):
So trust is everything even without the written law.
And so they are trust relations. And the
more that you honor
that sacred trust and your stewarding of it,
your vigilant protection, and that we
(19:58):
deepen our trust relations,
and we help each other to stay
on that path that is honorable and equitable.
Because we're willing and trust, Like you said, you
like it if I correct you, and it works
because you trust me. And so
(20:20):
through the depth of trust relations, we are able to
exchange more profoundly. And serve that vulnerability
of trust. And when we honor that trust and that vulnerability,
that local communities
ride beyond these public commercial
(20:41):
that are communities that are under such a weight and such a
burden of trauma. It's hard to trust much of
anything but what the bank tells you or
the judge. Right? The administrators.
And they are why I am through their sheet. Well, and it's
so critical, the component that you're pointing to,
(21:05):
that we can come together, that we build the trust, and we can
convey our observations, our
experiences, and that we,
over time, trust that it's true.
And we trust the person that they're giving us truth because
we have some history that has been built.
(21:27):
Right? Yep. And those mechanisms within us
that we've been granted get more and more sensitive to
what is the truth when people are speaking it
or offering it. Yeah. You feel it in in the afternoon
and and what you've said. What is what is so true
that it's true for others? Yes. None of
(21:50):
them. Yes. Wow. I can I
can relisten to that beautiful
man and his ability to articulate
these concepts over and over again and learn
something and hear something different each time?
And I hope that this was valuable for those
(22:12):
of you listening, realizing that equity
arises through trust and trust relations.
And coming into a community where you can build that
trust over time is something that
Crystal and I have dedicated our lives to accomplishing.
(22:32):
And, I sincerely invite you, if this was
attractive, to to try
bringing yourself into communion with
others who can meet
you on this level and help you to
thrive and grow and
(22:54):
reduce your vulnerability and reduce your fear
that being private means you have to cut
yourself off. I think that's a very
sad reality that's become part of
people's lives that they feel they have to go into the
private when, in fact we are already in the private
(23:17):
and the public really is just using our social security number
And communities such as Invitation to Freedom is a
private member association, a
PMA, that is holding their
arms open for you to join us. So I hope to
see you there, and I appreciate you listening today. And we'll see you
(23:38):
on the next one. Bye bye. Thank you so much for
tuning in to this episode. If our podcast resonates with
you, know that you're not alone. There's a private community
awaiting your discovery at invitation to freedom dot
com, where we come together in the spirit of unity and
ask some tough questions, share insights,
(24:01):
educate, and assist people who are interested in reigniting
the American spirit and living free. We hope that you'll accept
this invitation to check us out today. Visit invitation
to freedom dot com. That's invitation with the number 2,
freedom dot com.