Episode Transcript
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Speaker 2 (00:10):
It is May 25th, I'm
Patti, with Patti Talks Too Much
, and I'm here with my dearfriends and Noki is down in
Florida today anybody who ismissing, palm trees there, we
(00:32):
have, we have some.
Speaker 4 (00:33):
I'm going to hug that
trunk for me, please?
That's what I'm doing.
Speaker 3 (00:39):
I'm wrapped up in it
are you missing, florida Taylor?
Speaker 4 (00:44):
I'm so homesick I
want to swim in the ocean.
Speaker 3 (00:49):
So, patty, I wake up
at 2 o'clock in the morning and
I take my partner to work andthen I come home and sometimes I
can go back to sleep in themorning.
sometimes I can't, you know, butyesterday was one of those days
where I can't really, and so Iwas up from like 2 30 in the
(01:13):
morning until one o'clock in themorning last night, and so an
alarm goes off, and at threeo'clock in the morning, and then
I couldn't go back to sleepbecause I tried this stuff.
It's a free workout formula orwhatever, but it's 120
(01:35):
milligrams of it's called crack.
Speaker 4 (01:40):
There is a, an amino
acid or something in there and
it makes your entire body tingle.
I thought I was going to die ifmy whole body had pins and
needles.
I was like what?
Speaker 3 (01:51):
It works.
If you are a zombie and youneed to go somewhere, it works.
It's not illegal.
Speaker 2 (01:59):
It's not illegal in
America.
Speaker 3 (02:00):
It's probably banned
in Europe and most places around
the world.
Speaker 2 (02:03):
Yeah, well, I'm
punctual, I'm on time, but yeah
but you know, honestly, youreally have to lay off that
crack.
Yeah, I know yeah, you really.
Speaker 3 (02:14):
Oh, my god lay off,
lay off the crack girl my head
still hurts a little bit, like Ifeel a little hungover or
something yeah, I mean, don'tyou, but don't you know that
information mixed with cracks?
Speaker 2 (02:32):
yeah, I don't you
know that crack is whack
deprived human.
Speaker 4 (02:39):
So I can relate to
your need for crack, but but I
can't take that pre-workoutstuff, man.
Speaker 2 (02:47):
When you get home,
though, you really should
probably drink a lot of waterand detox that shit out of your
body.
You know, I'm I'm actuallydoing the opposite.
I'm I'm fasting.
I'm in a second day of offasting, and I'm going to see if
I can do a five day fast, justbecause it's part of.
Yeah, it's part of what I, youknow, addressing the, the
(03:10):
condition, you know, thearthritis stuff, and so I'm I'm
doing a fast, I feel pretty good.
I feel pretty good, so I thinkI think I can do the five days.
Yeah, I just decided I wasgoing to try, you know, and then
I'm going to, I'm going tospend June doing cleanses and
(03:33):
some of them sound kind ofintimidating, like, well, I'm
going to do a parasite cleanse.
It's actually a very reputableparasite cleanse and it does
have the things that you wouldexpect wormwood, it's got like
three different, three differentthings that are.
You take, like certain, acertain number of drops each day
, and it's got like threedifferent, three different
things that are, and you take,like certain, a certain number
of drops each day and it's overan 18 day, uh, 18 day period.
So, um, it's probably one ofthe most reputable um, parasite
(03:55):
cleanses.
So I'm going to do that Um, andthen I'm going to do what they
call a liver flush.
Now, the liver flush is moreintimidating than the, than the
parasite cleanse, because it'sit's over the course of, I think
, five days, but it flushes outyour liver.
(04:18):
So if you're doing, if you'redoing a cleanse, you know your
liver is the organ that's kindof everything cleaning out.
You know those toxins, you know, like all those toxins you just
put in your body.
I know, well, your liver iskind of working overtime to get
rid of those toxins and when itgets, when it gets overwhelmed,
you know, then it really reallygets sluggish.
(04:40):
So if you're doing a cleanse,it's good to do something to
kind of keep your liver flushedso that it can release the
toxins optimally, you know.
So, at any rate, those see,taylor, aren't you proud of me?
These are all the things thatI'm learning.
Speaker 4 (04:57):
I want to know the
ingredients in your cleanses,
though.
Speaker 2 (05:00):
Well, in the, in the
parasite cleanse, the ones that
you know, black walnut, wormwood, and there's another one and I
think it might be clove.
So, because I'm not in, youknow, school is over now I was
going to dedicate is like June,I was going to kind of go
through these different cleansesand when I'm home and I and I
(05:22):
have that, you know, thatcapacity to do that, I'm free
and still no idea what I'm doingin August.
So I'm working to kind of catchmyself.
When I find myself in a stateof worry, you know, you know I
kind of have to keep remindingmyself.
(05:43):
Oh, you know, you're a woman offaith.
I think that what we're doing Isee as a, as a springboard into
, into other things.
You know, so, like this, youknow, like every week we're,
we're doing it, you know itgives me ideas for other things.
Like I think, oh, wow, wouldn'tit be great to start like
(06:05):
inviting someone a guest so wecan interview them, so we can
like have a conversation?
It's like let's, you knowsomebody who's like?
really into this or really intothat.
It's like let's have so-and-soon so we can pick their brain
and so we can have thisconversation about all the
things that they're really anexpert in.
You know, things that we'reinterested in.
(06:27):
You know that we you know thethree of us are interested in.
I think that that would be alot of fun.
How to heal my my, which lookwhat looks like rheumatoid
(06:52):
arthritis?
Naturally, then you bet that Iwill be out there some way or
another shouting from themountain news.
Yeah, read in the news that thisis how well, I've got some good
news.
Speaker 3 (07:00):
So my nutrition
program I we all know I was like
215 when I started it right.
I am now in the 180s I'm 187.
Good for you, and really allthat was was limiting my calorie
intake I can still eat whateveranything you know.
In fact, they said don't eatthe same thing all the time yeah
(07:23):
, I've had a similar experiencewith um.
Speaker 2 (07:28):
You know, because
when I went to, when I went with
my follow up with my, my doctor, it was really clear from my
blood work and everything that Ieat really well, like I don't
you know what I mean, like I'm areal clean eater, but you know
I still need to lose weight, andso it was really clear that the
only thing I really needed todo at this point I don't need to
clean up my diet.
(07:48):
I don't eat junk food, you knowI don't.
You know, like I'm off sugar youknow all of those things right,
but it's just that for my age,I need to consume fewer calories
a day.
I love to eat and so I'm eatingreally good food.
I'm just eating too much of it.
So I know what I needed to do.
So I just I knew it was justlike and I told her.
(08:10):
I said portion control.
That's all.
That's the.
That's the one thing left forme, because I've done everything
else.
I am definitely dropping theweight just through portion
control.
And I also think that when I dothe cleanses, like I think,
sometimes, when we have asluggish liver, we, we, uh, we
tend to to gain more weight, andso I think, um, if I can get my
(08:32):
liver working optimally, Ithink I'll be able to maintain,
um, maintain a better weightjust because, um, I have a
better functioning, uh, liver.
You know I gotta say like morewhat I'm hearing more and more,
and, taylor, I don't know whatyou.
You know I got to say like morewhat I'm hearing, more and more
, and, taylor, I don't know whatyou think about this, but, like
what I'm hearing more and moreis like, even those of us who
(08:53):
want to eat our vegetables, youknow, get our vegetables in and
everything.
The amount of nutrients thatwe're actually getting from our
food these days is not what itused to be.
Speaker 4 (09:06):
All of our fruits and
vegetables have been GMO'd in
such a way that we don't evenknow what the original
vegetables look like anymore.
Speaker 2 (09:12):
Have you seen some of
the videos online that actually
show people peeling bananas andtrying to break them and trying
to cut into watermelon andwhatever, and it's like wait a
minute, this isn't even realfood.
And it's like it's not evenlooking like real food anymore.
And you just wonder if that'swhat it looks like, then what's
(09:34):
in it?
Speaker 3 (09:35):
They're trying to
make farming illegal, they're
trying to make your backyardgarden illegal, and it's because
they want to poison you.
And they want to do that.
Speaker 2 (09:45):
You know, and yeah,
if you're buying groceries at
the store, you're you're buyingpoison there's a whole um thing
happening up in pennsylvaniawith um, these um amish farmers
that have been targeted by thePennsylvania Department of
(10:05):
Agriculture where they've gonein and they've confiscated the
meat.
And there's this whole thingagainst raw milk, you know, like
you cannot sell it.
There's a guy, amos Amos Farms,and he's you know he's, he's an
Amish farmer up in Pennsylvaniaand he's in a big fight with
(10:27):
the government right now becausethey even want to shut down
what he feeds his own family.
So I've been following thiscase and it's you know.
And when you look at the Amishand you guys know this, I mean
like there's.
So the Amish live a particularlifestyle.
They grow all of their own food.
They don't really interfacewith the medical system, so they
(10:50):
don't vaccinate their childrenand there are all of these kind
of diseases and things thatdon't exist among the Amish.
Speaker 4 (10:59):
They have diseases in
other ways.
At St Jude there is a plethoraof amish families and it is not
due to cancer.
Always it is due to bloodconditions.
Speaker 3 (11:16):
They have a lot of
blood conditions there are
disease, you know, and just asmuch as we're exposed to
chemtrails, they're exposed tochemtrails just as much as their
crops catch these things thatgo over when they're not covered
.
That's a thing.
That that that the world isdoing to everyone, that yeah,
it's inescapable get away fromcompletely, you know yeah, we
(11:41):
can live our best life and wecan try.
The sicknesses is worldwideit's a.
Speaker 2 (11:46):
It's a point well
taken.
I think that it is inescapable.
I wanted to know.
I wanted to know.
Taylor, like what?
What are the blood diseasesthat the amish were coming in
with that saint jude's?
Speaker 4 (11:59):
I don't actually know
particular details.
It was really just assumptionsfrom other mothers and what they
had heard.
Speaker 2 (12:13):
We were contemplating
they were genetic diseases or
genetic malfunctions in theblood due to incestual ties, so
so like inbreeding, like yeah, Imean, I have a lot of, I have a
lot of respect for, for theirway of life.
I it would not be my choice, myway of life, but the whole thing
about the Amish having all ofthese children.
I just saw an article just thisweek about how in Europe and I
(12:34):
do think that this is somethingthat's coming to America but in
the UK they are beginning toclose down schools in London
because of a population decrease, like they're starting to see
the effects of the populationdecreasing, and so it's like
(12:54):
well, we don't, the populationin these schools it's decreasing
.
We have to start closing theseschools.
And I do think that that issomething that we'll probably
start seeing in America theclosing down of some schools or
merging of some school, of manyschools, because we're I think
(13:14):
we're going to see a populationdecrease, our life expectancy is
shortened, there are a lot ofpeople just choosing not to have
children or only have one childand we're below the replacement
level basically in our country.
And you can't do that.
You know you do that for acertain amount of time and
you're going to see the effects,and so they're already seeing
(13:37):
that in London, where they'restarting to close down schools.
So I think that we'll probablysee that.
Speaker 3 (13:43):
If six or seven years
ago I felt like there was not a
chance that Nidus would have agood life in any way, shape or
form, I would not have had it.
I would not want to bring achild into nothing but despair,
with no hope for anything in thefuture.
But I feel like when women havea choice, women do not want to
(14:07):
bring children into a worldwhere they're only going to be
hurt, where they're only goingto be, you know, tortured or
subjected to the same kind oflife, if they don't feel like
they have a chance you know,your argument is true in that in
a country like America, in theUK, where women have choices,
where they can bring childreninto the world or not, they look
(14:29):
around and they say do I wantto bring a child into this world
?
Speaker 2 (14:33):
And often the choice
is no, which means that our
population is going to decline.
So we are going to have to dealwith the reality of a declining
population and what that means.
Speaker 3 (14:46):
I think we have a
population problem and I think
that the solution is not to justprocreate, you know, without
thinking, without thought,without good intent.
You know, just like everythingin life, you have to have good
intent, you have to have thought, you have to care about what it
is, you have to see how it'sgoing to affect the things
around it, how it's going to beaffected in itself and what
(15:08):
it'll grow to be, becauseeverything you create is
beautiful, right, but everythingyou create could also turn to
chaos, you know.
So.
Create within reason.
Create within you knowconsumption.
Create within you knowconsumption.
Create within whatever you have.
Speaker 2 (15:25):
Because had we not,
you know, gone through the
boomer process where everybodyfelt like they needed to have 13
children, you know, and thebaby boom happened at the tail
end of World War Two, when wehad lost all of those men, when
there was so much death, deathand so much destruction, the
inclination for humans toprocreate and bring more life
(15:48):
into a nearly destroyed worldwas very strong.
People wanted to create, peoplewanted to bring life into the
world because so much life hadbeen destroyed through that war.
We will always have baby boomsafter wars because it is our
natural inclination to createlife after so much death and
(16:13):
destruction.
Speaker 3 (16:14):
We destroy the planet
, we consume more than we need,
we take things that we don'tneed.
And if we were just procreatingnaturally, without some kind of
power, intent or population?
Speaker 2 (16:28):
the average human is
not like that.
The average human just wants tolive our lives.
It's the.
It's the, the powerful folks,it's the rich folks who want to
develop, develop, develop andthey want to build their
skyscrapers.
They want us all living incities.
They want to do all of thesethings for profit, where most
people.
What do we want to do?
We want to go to work.
Speaker 4 (16:49):
We want to provide
for our family.
My dad, you know he's anaturalist, he's an
environmentalist in his own way.
You know he spent his entirelife in the waters of Florida
and what he's seen in hislifetime.
He mourns for his grandsonsbecause he knows that I mean it
(17:11):
brings tears to my eyes.
He knows that they'll never seewhat he saw.
Speaker 2 (17:16):
Okay, so these these
things, these depletion of life,
right, the depletion of life, Ithink that there are parasitic
forces that are in human form,but most of us are not.
We are not.
I think the power elite areparasitic.
They feed on us, they feed onthe world and when you think
(17:37):
about it, when you think aboutwhat's happened, like, say, in
Florida, where we have these bigblooms, you know, like the red
tide and all of that, what'sthat caused from this cause,
from the, the, what?
The sugar?
Big sugar, right, big sugar andcattle.
It's not the fishermen out therefishing or to catch a fish to
feed their family.
They're not the ones who arecontributing to it If we have a
(18:00):
fish depletion in our oceans.
If people saw what the fishingindustry does and how they have
these ships with these huge netsthat rake the bottom of the
ocean.
Speaker 4 (18:12):
The poison and the
toxins that have gone into the
water.
It's not just the fish dying,it's their entire ecosystems.
When you would go out in a boatand get five miles out, or what
have you?
You're supposed to hit giant,just fields of underwater
(18:32):
seagrass, that seagrass thatthese entire ecosystems lived in
.
It doesn't exist anymore.
Speaker 2 (18:41):
So what caused that?
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (18:44):
all of this shit and
the temperatures of the water,
the the runoff from all of thisfucking pollution we're all
participating and contributing.
Speaker 3 (18:55):
You know, just going
to the grocery store and buying
fish, you know, is contributingand participating, you know.
Speaker 4 (19:01):
And and it's not that
we had the intent of ever being
parasites- but do you know howmany times my dad goes out
somewhere and watches somebodyabuse the right to how many fish
, to what season the fish are in, to the fucking length of the
fish?
Nobody respects the rules.
Everybody does whatever thefuck they want.
They take all the fish theywant.
(19:22):
It's even on an individuallevel.
The selfishness and thedisrespect for the animals is so
nobody gives a fuck.
Speaker 3 (19:33):
We're regular people,
limited for what they can fish
and carry off by hand you know,and then you have boats out
there raking the ocean formillions of fish at a time.
It's okay for them.
They don't have any.
You can't get what you need foryour family, but but they can
go out and take it all you knowand make you buy it at a fucking
(19:53):
grocery store it's.
Speaker 2 (19:54):
And it is really sad
because when they rake the ocean
like that, of course they're,they're also raking the seaweed,
but, like when they rake theocean like that and they're
looking for a particular fish,they'll keep that fish and all
of the other fish that have beendragged up they die.
The fishing industry it's, it's.
It's a mega industry thatnobody's really talking about.
(20:16):
But what they do to our oceansis just, and then we worry about
oh, should I, should I use thisplastic straw?
It's going to end up in theocean hurting a turtle.
And it's kind of like, okay,well, we can do that and we can
not.
I don't use straws myself, butlike we can do that and we're
kind of taught don't use itbecause you're hurting the sea
(20:40):
creatures.
And it's like, well, is anyonepaying attention to these mega
fishing industry boats?
Speaker 3 (20:48):
out there.
It takes the human crew to runthose giant boats.
You know and participate in it.
Who's flying?
Speaker 4 (20:56):
these fucking planes.
How much money could youpossibly be making that you
don't give a fuck about humanityand you're gonna get in that
plane and spray that shit in thesky?
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (21:07):
Yeah, with the
chemtrails.
I mean like I cannot fathom that.
You look at like these, likeglobalist agendas and everything
right and the 2030 vision forthe world that the globalists
have and all of that andeverything, and if you really
look at the stuff that they'rewriting, the future that's being
envisioned for the world is apost-human future, in other
(21:30):
words, moving it totranshumanism, where it's like
we're going to evolve beyondhumans.
And I wonder, like, hashumanity gotten to a point where
we can't save ourselves anymore?
Like, are we at that point?
We might be some of the lastactual humans.
(21:52):
Are we going to become anextinct species when, at some
point in the universe, peoplewill be sitting around saying,
well, over there, there used tobe a species called human, but
they don't exist anymore?
Speaker 3 (22:09):
In the next Atlantean
, in the next Nephilim.
We're all just waiting for thatmoment when the Earth is like,
okay, I can't do it anymore.
Speaker 4 (22:20):
I can't do it for you
guys.
Speaker 3 (22:22):
We are a parasite.
Speaker 4 (22:23):
I'm going to cleanse
now.
Speaker 3 (22:25):
Have you seen what's
going on in Texas right now?
Yeah, 110-mile-an hourrainstorm in texas.
My number one, my number onetiktok is is weather.
That's the number one thing Itype into tiktok, because if I
want to know what, what theworld, what spirit, what earth,
what everything is fuckingactually saying to us, that's,
(22:46):
that's the way it communicates,you know, and right now it's
like get the fuck off of me, getoff of me we have to factor in
that our weather has beenweaponized right, so how?
Speaker 2 (22:59):
much of this is
natural and how much of this is
weaponized.
And it's really hard sometimes,straight down to the aurora
borealis, all of that shit.
Speaker 4 (23:09):
There's patents for
that.
Everybody was like oh, auroraborealis in florida, check this
fucking patent out that showsthat they were actually
performing these fucking thingsin alaska to create.
Now, when I watched thosevideos in texas, immediately as
soon as the sky turned all theway black, like somebody turned
the fucking lights out, like wewere in a real-life simulation,
(23:30):
I was like this is geoengineeredweather.
There is no way in hell thatthe sky.
We live in Florida.
We've seen the worstthunderstorms roll in.
Speaker 3 (23:42):
I've never seen some
shit like that A hundred and ten
miles an hour.
They have boulder sized hailfalling from the sky I do think
that this is all you know beingI.
I saw the pulse waves comingoff from south south africa on
that island I can't rememberwhat it's and and it's, and it's
(24:03):
this little island south ofafrica, south of south america,
like in between the two, setright there in the ocean where
this blob keeps orienting ohyeah, and when you look at, all
the radar, yeah that.
Whatever that island is that hasa huge harp station with like
18 big tunnels off the bottom ofit and whatnot, you know, I
(24:27):
definitely think that'scontributing, you know, but I
think at the same time, you know, the earth is a very powerful,
oh for sure and this is what Ithink about it.
Speaker 4 (24:37):
This is my personal
opinion.
You keep manipulating her.
You keep fucking with herweather.
You think you can control herweather.
She is ultimate power.
Speaker 2 (24:49):
And what would it
mean?
What would it mean if we hadanother, what you call a
Carrington event, which happenedin 1859, where we only had,
like, the telegraph lines, butthey were fried, you know, from
this major solar flare?
So if we had another event likethat, like the Carrington event
, and our infrastructure whichis not in great shape anyway,
(25:12):
right If that gets fried andlet's say we're without our cell
phones and we're withoutinternet, would that be, you
know, or even withoutelectricity for a period of time
?
What would that?
Would be disastrous in someways and certainly chaotic in
some ways.
But would that be an invitationfor humanity to check ourselves
(25:34):
?
A reset, a reset, a reset, yeah.
Speaker 3 (25:38):
I think we're fucked
here, all right.
Speaker 2 (25:41):
On this planet.
Speaker 3 (25:42):
We're pretty fucked
right now on this planet.
I look at everything that Ilook at from every angle that I
can look at it, and this issomething that I've looked at
for a long time and I cannot,cannot make sense of it.
And you know what it's.
It's life, and you know.
The simple part about it isit's just supposed to be life.
(26:03):
It's not supposed to beeverything that it is.
So what is it?
If it's, if it's something thatit's not supposed to be in
every sense of the word, thenwhat the fuck is?
this is this life, you know noit's not really, you know, it's
this, we're, we're, we're in thesimulation we are fucking
babylon.
We are the fucking problem.
(26:25):
And even though there are someof us that are good, you know
like we still have our houses,we still have our electricity,
we still have whatever.
You know, when I was at thegathering, I was in the woods,
when I was fucking on my own,you know, fucking living in a
bush, like I didn't have any ofit, and at that point in my life
I was not part of the problem.
(26:47):
But right now, in this car, youknow, with these windows and
this gas and this fucking drinksand this stupid plastic cup and
this fucking crack, you knowall this fabricated crap that I
have in here, I am the fuckingproblem all right and there's
nothing you know.
No matter how good my heart isand how much fucking I gotta say
(27:09):
, the one true thing that Ican't fucking say is I am part
of the problem, even though Idon't want to be yeah even
though I don't want to be, eventhough you don't want to be,
even though we have great hearts, even though we manifest the
best fucking intentions, eventhough we're putting that out in
the world, even though we'retouching people around us and
giving them little bits of thatyou know, it's little fucking
(27:31):
bits and then we still go to thestore and we still buy
paperback, fucking books and westill buy, you know, cell phones
and computers and fuckingheadphones and all of it.
Yep, you know.
So, at the end of the day, Ican't say that I'm not, you know
, and I, I, I don't want to be,I don't want to be.
Nobody wants to be, nobodywants to be the fucking bad guy,
(27:53):
nobody wants to be the fuckingproblem.
Nobody wants to be that.
But we are, you know, and all Ican say is that my friends that
are out in the fucking woods youknow that, only have the
clothes that they need to notget arrested woods, you know
that only have the clothes thatthey need to not get arrested
fucking who are, who arecarrying around tobacco in in
little cloth, fucking wraps, youknow, sharing their tobacco and
(28:18):
smoking it out of fuckingsticks that we fucking made
holes in and eating food that wepicked off of trees and brought
together to share witheverybody so that everybody had
at least one fucking meal a day.
They're the only people that Iknow that aren't the problem.
I wish that I could legallyfucking live like that.
I wish that I wasn't going togo to jail fucking for being in
(28:40):
the bush.
I wish that I didn't have tocarry $15 in my pocket all times
for vagrancy money to provethat I have enough money to get
to the next town.
Speaker 2 (28:50):
All of that is true
and I think it's beautifully,
beautifully and passionatelyspoken, anoki, and I thank you
for that.
I think you're trying to beauthentically honest and real,
and that's true, and I thinkthat you wrapped up, you
articulated the conundrum thatwe are in up, you articulated
(29:11):
the conundrum that we are in Ifind myself in, taylor finds
herself in, and those people weknow, you know, who have the
same kind of thoughts andfeelings as we do, find
ourselves find themselves in thesame conundrum.
There's no easy answer to this.
Speaker 3 (29:25):
I think it's
something that we easy, and
here's what it is.
If we ever see a solution, itwill be that everything is
fucking wiped out.
And you know what?
There will be a couple of peoplethat survive.
But if those people keep theright intention and keep the
right broken path, then theworld might survive again.
It might survive forever.
(29:45):
So what we can do right now isis is real life.
Talk about how bad it is andhow we are part of the problem
and how we have no idea how toget out of that problem, so that
these kids, when we're gone orwhen everything's wiped out,
know that that was what messedeverything up and not to do it
again and not to do it again.
Speaker 2 (30:13):
Hey, taylor, before
we get too far into it, I did
want to have you pull a card fortoday.
It's a hard conversation, andso we've gone down a road where
we're really talking for realabout the state of things and
the state of humanity and youknow this sense of feeling kind
of helpless in a way, in termsof like the direction of of
humanity.
I'm always holding out hope,but I do think that sometimes
(30:38):
it's a little overwhelming whenyou look around.
And so let's pull a card likefor you know, you know, just
based on kind of what we've beentalking about and looking
toward the coming week, ifthere's some, a card that can
inspire our vision, can inspireour heart, can shed some wisdom
(30:59):
on, you know, on kind of wherethe path leads.
Next, you know, in the comingweek, we'd love to see what the
um, what the animal, um, whatanimal would like to step
forward and share.
Is that what you're doing?
The animal totems today no, Ipulled it.
Speaker 4 (31:15):
I pulled a hard deck
for a hard day okay, so what
kind of deck is this?
So today we're doing thearchetypes guidebook.
Okay, okay, this is.
This is also by Kim Kranz.
Okay, wonderful, wonderfulillustrator and wonderful author
.
This, this, this deck, is alittle more forward and
(31:44):
oftentimes has a lot of punchbehind the message.
Speaker 2 (31:49):
so we'll see well,
good, I mean I, and, of course,
I trust your intuition.
You're you're really good at um, you know, picking the kind of
cards that are appropriate forthe moment.
So I, I trust that this theseare the cards that are
appropriate for this moment, andso let's, let's see what they
have to share they pulled theflame okay it is a tool on this
(32:16):
deck um, and I think that toolsare impeccable ways to deal in
times like this.
Speaker 4 (32:28):
I feel inspired burn
it all.
Speaker 3 (32:34):
Let's see what the
flame has to say.
Speaker 2 (32:36):
Yeah let's see what
the flame has to say taylor so
the flame and the precursor.
Speaker 4 (32:45):
Anoki's saying that
people with hearts like us right
.
So I think about like when thegiants return, right, yeah,
there will only be a few of usleft, but that spark, that, that
hope and you know I use thatword very lightly because I have
a complex relationship withhope but there are people who
(33:10):
know the earth, who know motherand who will carry on those
beliefs and loves and traditions.
And for me that is the spark,the hope in humanity, the true
humanity, the true origin ofhumanness, the connectedness
(33:30):
with the earth.
So the flame, the fire, thespark, the glimmer In Sanskrit
the word fire is agni.
The ancient yogis saw thisflame at the center of the
abdomen and believed it to beresponsible for our vitality.
When it is lit don't turn mypilot light out, bitch when it
(33:55):
is lit, we are connected to ourpurpose and our sense that life
is a sacred gift.
Yes, it is said that those whocannot see sacred around them
have let their inner flame goout.
They must have went to thatwoman's class.
Think about this card as a callto reignite that fire, to cup
(34:22):
your hands gently around thosethings you've forgotten, and
protect the flame, no matter howharshly the winds blow.
It could be an inner archetypethat begs you to light its wick.
It is likely that the poets,the mystics and the shamans
(34:45):
would call to you with thelanguage of the flame.
The fire is at the beginning ofall transformation,
purification and manifestation.
Nearly every spiritual lineageon earth honors the flame.
To enliven the connection withthis energy practice, candle
(35:07):
gazing techniques called TratakaNotice how lighting a single
candle in any space brings magicto the room and creates a sense
of reverence.
And so that is my challengethis week for everybody to sit
with a candle and focus on thatflame and allow it to reignite
(35:33):
the flame within us all, toremember the remembering, the
honoring of earth and what wecame here for oh yeah yeah, I
love that.
Speaker 2 (35:47):
And you know, I've
heard that, um, fire was the
original shaman.
You know to look into the fire,to tell your stories to the
fire that there was analchemical process that would go
on when one sat with a fire.
You think about all the storiesthat have been told around
(36:10):
fires and how fire story.
Speaker 4 (36:12):
The fire can listen
to your stories.
The fire can send messages tothe stars, to your loved ones.
The fire is very powerful,magic.
Speaker 2 (36:25):
It is.
And you know, if you thinkabout it like I know, we feel
like we're living in the lastmoments of humanity right On
Earth.
Have we crossed the Rubicon?
Have we gone to where there'sno return from here we have to
face our own death and demiseand destruction as a species.
(36:46):
And I think about the elementof fire and how it has existed
from almost the very beginningand um, the fire in the hearth
of homes going back thousandsand thousands of years.
How that was the heart of thehome.
How, you know, fire was, um,where you know, a whole village
(37:11):
sat around a fire all the wayback to neanderthals all the way
back, I mean memory in us ofthose caves.
Speaker 4 (37:20):
In that time it's
with us.
It gives me goosebumps to thinkabout.
We can get back there and itcan ignite ancient knowings
within our souls.
Fire is really special that wayand it is a cleanser and the
earth may choose to cleanseyourself in such a way.
(37:40):
Um, but right now I kind offeel like, in a sense, you know
and nobody's saying is thathumanity's on fire?
What are we going to do withthat?
Yeah, and I think it startswithin little tiny steps.
Speaker 2 (38:08):
It could be the spark
that ignites and inspires life,
or it can be destructive, and Ithink we're at a moment where
we can we can choose which waywe want to go.
Speaker 4 (38:12):
There's so much
destruction in the world.
At the same time as firedestroys, there are certain
things on this planet thatcannot grow without her.
I was born on a day that mymother was picking pine cones
out of the Ocala National Forest, and those pine cones she was
collecting were for the forestry, because those pine cones can
(38:38):
only grow if a fire opens thepods up enough.
They only come from fire, andso it is a point that new growth
always comes from destruction,no matter what.
Speaker 2 (38:55):
Yeah, it's part of
the cycle.
Speaker 4 (38:59):
And if, tomorrow,
technology turns off, we will
find a remembering.
We'll need warmth and we'llneed earth and we'll need food
and we'll find fire.
Fire will be there for us.
If, tomorrow, the world turnsoff, fire will be there for us
if tomorrow the world turns off,fire will not right.
Speaker 2 (39:19):
Fire will represent
life, light, heat, food, you
know, community gathering,storytelling, all of that.
So I think that that's that isa beautiful card to pull.
It was perfect.
It was perfect as always, right?
So?
(39:40):
And I appreciate the light thatyou and Inoki bring into my
life and the light that we share.
It's like we have our ownlittle fire that we sit around
on saturday mornings, share ourstories and our thoughts and our
rants and raves andperspectives, and it's um, it's
(40:02):
all really beautiful.
Yeah, so, always, soappreciated.
We're going to leave it there.
Are you crying?
Speaker 4 (40:12):
are you crying?
I'm not crying.
I was trying to unmute becausePorter was being unruly and his
brother came to get him, but Iam very emotional, very
emotional.
Well, the moon is in your sign,yes, and so I thought it was
gonna feel really good and I wasgonna feel in my power, but it
was quite.
No, it's really emotional, butthat, but that's okay.
(40:34):
Like I'm wriggling in my skin,you know, I just don't it's,
it's really been, um, I don'treally want to sit with myself,
kind of feelings.
I have a friend from work, uh,who had been asking for some
herbal remedies and, you know,although it's been a long time,
patty, I thought I'll make hersomething.
(40:55):
And, you know, although it'sbeen a long time, patty, I
thought I'll make her something,and so I made her these oils
and I made her these salves.
She has, uh, plaque psoriasis,um, and has diabetes, and so her
skin is just really unhappy andand so she gets plaque
psoriasis on her hair and itmakes her feel very
uncomfortable when she's waitingtables and her elbows get
(41:16):
really bad.
And so I put a lot of intentionbehind these things that I made
for her and manifested healingin them before giving them to
her and, in turn, in terms ofthe, I told her they were great
on.
She went home and she usedthese products.
(41:36):
Patty, she came back to worklast night or when, after she
had used this product, herelbows were pink with fresh skin
, her hairline was perfectlyclean and she's like taylor.
(41:59):
This was on like how did you?
and it gave me this ability tobelieve in myself again what I
do this is what you do easy toget caught up in the matrix and
be like, well, I'll just work,just work, a full-time job, and
yeah, I make products.
But what are they really doing?
(42:19):
No, we can heal people and helppeople, and while the world
burns, that's where you'll findme.
Speaker 2 (42:30):
Yeah Well, if the
world is burning, it's going to
need a solve the heart bomb.
That's going to need a solve,that's right, some heart bomb.
There you go, so it seems likea perfect time to be making
these things.
Speaker 4 (42:47):
And I just thought
that was so beautiful.
Speaker 2 (43:01):
And it really touched
my heart to know that something
that I made was able to givesomeone else healing and hope.
There you go.
That's beautiful.
Yes, I see that happening moreand more with you as we move
into the future, taylor.
I'm looking forward to hearingmore about your wonderful
products and their healingproperties.
Thank you, I love you so much.
(43:23):
I love you too.
We're gonna.
We're gonna leave it there.
Thank you so much, taylor.
We look forward to you knowanother.
We'll see what this week isgoing to bring us, but we hope
everyone has a beautiful week.
Stay, you know, keep your pilotlights on, go light a candle.
Go light a candle.
(43:43):
I love you guys, thank you.