Episode Transcript
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Speaker 2 (00:10):
Good morning.
Speaker 1 (00:12):
Right, I forgot to
say good morning, oh my God.
So we are obviouslydiscombobulated this morning,
but we are all here, and so thisis Patty, with Patty Talks Too
Much and if you're listening,live, thank you so much for
joining me.
I'm with my dear friends Inokiand Taylor, and you can see that
we are already chatterboxesbecause you know Taylor's back
(00:35):
from vacation.
There's all kinds of stuffhappening.
We're talking technologybecause there's all kinds of
crazy stuff happening in theworld, and they obviously my two
dear friends, obviously areperfectly fine with being data
slaves, and I'm not.
Let's start there, your turnspeaking of data slaves.
Speaker 3 (00:59):
who's um?
Who's given their informationto Ancestrycom?
Speaker 2 (01:03):
Not me.
Speaker 3 (01:05):
Who's given their DNA
?
Did you read about this shit?
Oh my god.
Well, this has been going onfor a while hasn't it.
Millions of dollars of our DNAwere just sold to Blackstone.
Oh yeah, is it Blackrock?
Speaker 1 (01:20):
Blackrock, yeah
Blackrock.
Blackrock, yeah Black Rock.
We call it Black Stone, blackRock.
Speaker 3 (01:25):
Black Rock, yeah,
yeah.
So that's fun.
I wonder what they're going todo with all that DNA.
Speaker 2 (01:35):
Well, I have a lot of
family that did it, so I
figured I was screwed either way.
Speaker 1 (01:40):
You know, because
anyway it's funny.
Speaker 2 (01:42):
Anyway, they do it
because, anyway, anyway, anyway,
they do it, they, they can likethere's been people that have
been arrested because their youknow, brother or sister went and
did a dna test and they hadtheir dna and it was close
enough match.
You know that they looked intoit.
Speaker 3 (01:57):
They could arrest.
Speaker 2 (01:58):
I mean, you know,
they could find anybody just by
what they have already you knowbefore all that.
Speaker 1 (02:05):
Well, I mean, I think
like some of the you know.
And then there's biometrics,you know.
So now the computers are kindof automatically doing the bio
biometrics?
I think yeah right.
Speaker 3 (02:18):
So my advice to women
who are slaves to technology
Anybody who uses their phone totrack their cycle through their
iPhone stop.
Delete your information If youcan.
You should be able to wipe it.
Speaker 2 (02:47):
It's none of nobody's
business.
I can't figure out why anybodywould want to know when I was
bleeding or not, you know.
Speaker 3 (02:50):
Wait a minute,
because what is?
Speaker 2 (02:54):
what does that matter
?
Why does it matter like?
Speaker 3 (02:57):
how many?
Speaker 1 (02:58):
times like how come
we're not?
Speaker 2 (03:01):
my pee.
You know what is it, whathappens to my menstrual cycle
that they need to know?
Speaker 3 (03:07):
you know what if?
And I'm just throwing this wayout yonder what if, collectively
, the whoever the power that beknew when the collective was
(03:28):
menstruating and they couldaffect us in certain ways?
Now I'm not.
This is way out there.
This is way out there, but I'mjust saying it's nobody's
business.
Government wise when I bleed.
(03:48):
The selling of my biometrics isabsolutely not happening.
Speaker 1 (03:56):
Yeah, but I think it
is no, but it is yeah.
Yeah, I mean you know, and Iand I'm not saying that, that
it's you're doing I mean, Ithink it happens in ways that
we're not aware of.
Oh for sure.
Speaker 2 (04:06):
Yes, I think it's
inescapable.
I think it's inescapable andyou know, like it's just, you
know, I don't know Like.
I think about all this stuff orwhatever you know and like all
the trouble that I could be inin the world you know, like all
the trouble that I could be inin the world you know, and the
fact that fucking my exactlittle path is followed
(04:30):
throughout the whatever you know.
I mean it's like there was likesomething happened, Like
something happened.
I would you know, be strippednaked of all this shit, you know
.
Speaker 3 (04:41):
Absolutely and take
off.
Speaker 2 (04:42):
Without it, you know,
or freaking, I could
consolidate everything and getit the fuck out real quick, you
know, and absolutely off.
Without it, you know, orfreaking, I can consolidate
everything and get it the fuckout real quick, you know, like
if it was the end of the world.
But I kind of need it tosurvive right now, and right now
, like it does nothing butprotect me you know, oh yeah.
Speaker 3 (04:59):
I mean, if this
shit's going to go to my head,
I'm good.
Nobody can say that I fuckingmurdered somebody.
Speaker 2 (05:03):
Nobody can fucking
say that I fucking was this kind
of person.
There's tons of shit out thereabout me, tons of content
Fucking.
There's all the music stuff.
That's my soul, you know.
I was like here's my soulfucking YouTube, you know.
Speaker 3 (05:20):
Downloading my soul
to YouTube.
Speaker 2 (05:21):
yeah, you know like,
I just just shared, you know,
just shared parts of myself.
You know like, I still have,you know like, but what harm is
that part of me gonna do toanybody?
No, none, because I'm good, I'ma good person, I, I do things
with a good intent, it's notwhat harm.
Speaker 1 (05:41):
It's not what harm is
due to others.
It's my energy going out intothe world.
Speaker 2 (05:56):
I feel like my energy
is bigger than this energy.
Speaker 1 (05:58):
You know, like, like,
like the ocean could drown you,
but you could also ride a wave.
True, true, I think it's.
I think it's just a veryinteresting time that we live in
, when we accept that everysingle little thing about us is
known by entities that we haveno idea who they are and what
they're doing.
Speaker 3 (06:14):
I was having a baby,
and I was so steadfast that they
were not going to get my kids.
I do not know why I felt likethis.
You are not getting my kids DNA.
You're not touching my child,right?
(06:37):
You cannot take his blood.
You will not give him shots.
You will give me my placentaright now.
Give him shots.
You will give me my placentaright now, and it's Tupperware.
You're not taking that either,right?
I did all of these to protectmy child, only for my child to
get cancer and me to then signoff on a paper that said we have
(06:59):
your son's DNA now andessentially we can do whatever
we want with it because it's forresearch.
So all the work I did toprotect him from I don't know
what, it really blew up in myface because his DNA belongs to
all.
I mean, it's everywhere.
(07:20):
It's been shared, his tumor'sbeen put in rats and been sent
around.
Speaker 2 (07:26):
I bank my kids for it
because, in the event, knowing
you, knowing what you wentthrough and stuff, knowing other
people that have had similarsituations, seeing the things
that they do with themselves,they could grow a whole new
(07:46):
organ.
Speaker 3 (07:47):
Yes, but what are
they doing with your son's cord
blood while it's there, do you?
Speaker 2 (07:53):
know the measurements
of cord blood that they took.
Yeah, I have a set amount ofvials.
It's all documented exactly howmuch is in each vial and it's
cryogenically banked or whatever.
However they bank it, you knowit's cryogenically so that, so
that nothing happens to it ever,they could pull it out and it's
(08:17):
just like the day that theytook it from us.
You know, um, it also couldhelp people in my family, other
people in my family, you know if.
I have a relative, that's aclose enough match and court.
Speaker 3 (08:29):
banking is awesome.
Speaker 2 (08:32):
It can save their
life too, you know, and the best
part about it is it could savetheir life and they really would
only need one of the vials foreach major situation need one of
the vials for each majorsituation.
You know, yeah, it could savehis life, or four other family
(08:53):
members life and his life, orhis life five different times or
something you know like.
So so when I looked at it thatway, you know like they already
have everything.
Speaker 3 (09:04):
They already have
every fucking yeah, like even st
jude, for girls who are goingthrough treatment.
They take their eggs, they theyask the parents before they
start treatment before your kids.
I mean, we're talking aboutlittle girls, we're talking
about seven eight year oldlittle girls.
They will take their eggs outand hold them cryogenically
(09:25):
until their treatment is done oruntil they're ready to have a
baby, so that their eggs are nottainted with radiation.
But still, these companies thatwe trust to hold our children's
eggs and to hold our, our cordblood, what a huge
(09:47):
responsibility for a corporationyeah, and to assume that it's
always like the benevolent.
Speaker 1 (09:57):
Benevolent and um, I
mean, like you know, I've I've
gone down lots of rabbit holesand you know um a lot of, a lot
of fringy stuff and um, whatI've come across is that, if you
look at it, um like beyond this, this planet, and are
interfacing with other um races,other species, and some of them
(10:21):
are nefarious, some of them arenot.
One of the.
One of the biggest commoditiesthat's traded is um is dna, and
human dna is very, very valuableout there.
So there are potentially umoff-world races that are trading
in our dna and I I think that'skind of mind blowing, but I
(10:48):
think like there, but evenbefore you even get to that like
, so I think that some of theDNA goes off world.
Just my personal opinion.
I think some of it does go offworld.
I think a lot of things kind ofgo off world, off world.
I think a lot of things kind ofgo off world, humans go off
(11:08):
world, whatever happens to them.
But I think our, our data, Ithink data is now you know it's
the new and you can control youcan you know that that movie
with um tom, with um tom cruise.
Um, that movie with that wasabout um, they predicted, like
(11:35):
if someone was going to commit acrime and they would arrest
that, like they would.
You know what I mean?
Like that's scary.
Speaker 3 (11:40):
That's like what's
happening in china yeah, it's
all, it's all data everything isbased on your yeah, it's all it
was scary, yeah, and the thingis is that it's all database and
like how close are we to?
That.
So I watched the matrix againfor the first time in a decade.
Let me tell you what that shithit different as uh someone my
(12:06):
age and, like you know, I don'tknow.
It was crazy to watch it with adifferent perception.
Speaker 1 (12:16):
Yeah, I wish.
Speaker 3 (12:17):
I originally watched
it.
Speaker 1 (12:19):
What was your
takeaway?
Speaker 3 (12:22):
It's absolutely
fucking terrifying.
Speaker 1 (12:26):
So are there aspects
of it that are more terrifying
than others, or like yes?
Speaker 3 (12:30):
yes, yes.
Human farming is absolutelyfucking terrifying.
Thinking about pods towers fullof just humans growing in pods
is insane.
And then so are we dreaming ourlife while in that pod and and
(12:54):
we're in the matrix, but we'reliving inside of this pod right
yeah, like how close to realityis that?
Is that is so scary for me.
Speaker 1 (13:06):
I think a lot of
people are are kind of waking up
to how close our reality is to,to movies like that, you know,
and I think, like movies likethat are what you call like
disclosure or soft disclosure.
It's like, yeah, this is whatwe're doing to you, but we're
going to put it in a movie.
But it's in a movie, it's in,this is what we're doing to you,
but we're going to put it in amovie.
Speaker 3 (13:26):
But it's in a movie.
It's in a movie.
Speaker 1 (13:28):
Entertainment.
Speaker 3 (13:29):
Normal, it's normal.
Yeah, it's just kind ofnormalized, I forget who it was
talking to Joe Rogan, I want tosay it was.
I think it wasn't Joe Rogan,Maybe it was Pat Williams.
Somebody said it was a comedianand he said something along the
lines of it's really cool thatmovies and film and Hollywood
(13:54):
entertainment entertains you,but that's not its first purpose
.
Yeah, there's a reason whythere is an entire part of the
pentagon whose job is to go overmovies and TV shows and
(14:15):
programming.
Why do they call it programming?
it's television programmingthat's what it's called.
He said it's really cool, thatit's entertaining and fun to
watch, but that's not a painpurpose.
And that's all he said, and wewere just like okay but we know,
(14:36):
we know that the things thatthey show us in movies I mean
patty and I always say that it'slike 20 years behind yeah, at
least what they're showing ustoday like the movies that are
coming out today is shit thatthe government's been doing for
20 years, yeah, for decades,decades, yeah, and that's kind
(14:56):
of, you know, and I think peopleare.
Speaker 1 (15:01):
I think I sense, in
the sense of so many people, is
that we're really at a breakingpoint.
It's like I know we weretalking about data and
everything, but it's kind oflike this is not and we've
talked about it, um here it'slike this is not how life is
supposed to be, like we're, thisis not how our lives are
supposed to be.
(15:21):
Where we're working all thetime, we're taxed to death.
All of our information is outthere and sold.
Um, we have a birth certificateas soon as we're born, so that
even who we are, like our body,like our persons, are literally
traded on the stock marketthrough a straw man, you know,
(15:42):
in like all.
So we are a human farm and Ithink people are really waking
up to the fact.
It's like what the hell isgoing on here?
Speaker 3 (15:50):
Why do we have social
security numbers?
It's pretty far.
Speaker 1 (15:53):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (15:54):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (15:55):
You know, or you know
the birth certificates and all
capital letters.
I mean, it's just becomingcommon knowledge.
It's like, wow, there'sliterally like my, my personal
entity, has been bought and soldon the stock market since I was
, since I was born, like, youknow, if I looked at that
account, I'm probably worthmillions and millions and
(16:17):
millions of dollars, but will Iever touch a penny of that?
No, someone else is makingmoney off of that, you know, but
but not me.
I'm still.
I'm still working my ass off at65 years old.
You know what I mean, like, andthat's kind of what it is.
We kind of like work, our, ourwhole lives and in the meantime,
(16:38):
you know, there are entities orwhatever making, making bank on
our essence, on our, on our, onour lives.
It's really, it's, it's justincredible and I think that
people are waking up to that.
People are waking up to thefact that our, our, you know,
our government is totally intoforever wars, like we just know
(17:02):
there just has to always be awar.
Is that?
Why does there always have tobe a war?
Well, that's kind of themilitary, military industrial
complex.
That's how we, how we make ourmoney it doesn't, doesn't matter
that you know, yeah, we'regoing to ask your kids to go and
fight it because you know, andwe're going to make up all this
shit and have false flags sothat people are like rah, rah,
(17:23):
we have to go to war, and youknow.
Meanwhile, you know it's just abig, big, big business.
It's a big evil business, and Ithink people are waking up to
that, not just in our country,but globally.
People are waking up to that,not just in our country, but
globally.
Speaker 3 (17:38):
I couldn't believe
California speaking of
industrial just completelycovered in wheel rigs for, as
far as I can see, just fracking.
As far as you can see, I'venever seen anything so ugly in
my whole life, it's just so sad.
Speaker 1 (17:57):
That's so crazy
because I was on the phone with
taylor yesterday I think it wasin and and she was describing
like driving through thiscountryside with all of these,
like you know, great uhvineyards.
Speaker 2 (18:06):
Right, I'm talking
miles and miles because you know
they do produce a lot of wineyeah, but in the middle I I
dropped your upstate um on theway back from Standing Rock.
Speaker 1 (18:19):
Yeah, but I mean it's
like there are oil rigs
everywhere and they're frackingand the thing is it's like, well
, wait a minute, I thoughtCalifornia was totally green.
I thought it was likeeverybody's going to own
electric cars.
Speaker 3 (18:35):
Your car can't have
any exhaust come out of it, but
but the fracking machine.
That's because we're rocking allthe, all the little bobby
towers, you know yeah, yeah, Imean it's just kind of it's
saying so this was the craziestpart of noki is that in the
state of California you can ownacres and acres and acres of
(18:59):
land, but guess what?
You don't own your mineralrights ever.
In the state of California, thegovernment owns all of your
mineral rights and at any pointthey can come onto your land and
say, hey, you know what?
We need that you just builtyour house right here in Okie,
but we need this land because wethink there's oil there.
So we're going to build frackingshit here, we'll throw you some
(19:22):
money, but that's our land now.
So we're driving through thesevineyards and I'm thinking like,
hey, I bought wine from thisvineyard recently.
Meanwhile we're driving throughthe vineyard and there's
fucking fracking machine.
They're pulling oil out of thecenter of the entire vineyard of
(19:43):
grapes, so you're just frackingin the middle of farms and then
we're buying that wine andwe're buying that produce not
knowing that it's having oilharvested all around it.
That's disgusting.
Speaker 2 (19:57):
Having oil harvested
all around it that's disgusting
well, oil is like a like, soit's a renewable resource.
So anywhere that certainminerals are are built up, it'll
create itself, and prettyquickly.
Um, that you know honestly like, if we wanted to, you know, fix
our problem, we could processour garbage in the appropriate
(20:20):
way, instead of burning off themethane and stuff at the garbage
plant, turning it into oil inthose areas.
And the earth is always going toproduce its own oil, because
it's an organic breakdown thatcauses oil deposits well, but
it's not.
Speaker 1 (20:40):
It's not a fossil
fuel on the ground.
Speaker 2 (20:42):
Yeah, it's not a
millions of years, it's not a
fossil fuel, it's not, uh, it'snot like that.
You know, but we're told thatit's like that.
No, we gotta you know, go tothese wars and we gotta do all
this stuff, you know, and oil ispretty easy to make it is and
it's, it's right there.
Speaker 1 (20:59):
It's abundant in the
earth, you know.
Speaker 2 (21:01):
So our own organic,
but we have our own.
Speaker 3 (21:05):
That was another
thing that was made to me.
Speaker 2 (21:08):
What's like if we
were compost in the right way,
we could just make our own oil.
Speaker 1 (21:13):
You know, all in one
spot with the garbage and not
have like landfill issues andstuff yeah, I actually think
that oil exists in the earth andit is an integral part of her.
Speaker 3 (21:26):
Like, yeah, yeah,
yeah, I think it's her.
Speaker 1 (21:30):
You know it's her,
that's right, it's her, it's her
system, kind of like, yeah,like our blood, you know, like
so the ocean is her bloodtechnique right and okay.
Speaker 3 (21:39):
I mean, would you say
that the blood of the earth
would be the ocean?
Speaker 1 (21:43):
I don't know because,
like if you, if our bodies are
like, let's say, we're thechildren of earth, right, so our
bodies, um kind of, I meanwe're made 80 percent of water.
Speaker 3 (21:52):
But exactly, but the
80 percent of our water isn't
blood exactly.
Speaker 1 (21:57):
it's not, it's the
water in our body isn't, isn't
our blood, so, but it's anintegral part of who we are.
In other words, water conductselectricity.
Water is, is like energeticallyit's, it's huge.
And so I think like the waterin our bodies is very much part
(22:19):
of how we, we function every day.
So it's not our blood, but it'san integral part of how our
body is electric.
Yeah, the energy.
Speaker 2 (22:32):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (22:33):
I feel like the
energy of you know.
Speaker 2 (22:36):
Energy is what moves
everything you know, and I think
that the earth you know as abeing, as a being is, you know,
a completely different compoundyou know.
It's like saying you know,because the air, you know,
itself, is a thing you know.
So it's like every part of yourbody is important.
(22:59):
There's not a part of it that'snot connected.
And none of it really workswithout all of it.
You know, at least before youknow, we started to evolve to
the shit that we're in you know,and things like our tiny land
shriveled up because we're notusing it
and stuff you know like, likethe earth as an organic being
(23:23):
you know, has always followedany change that it's, that, it's
, you know, been faced with andthere's so many components to it
that it's like.
It's like saying you know theuniverse or space as a being you
know like, and when you breakit all down, like we're just
little pieces of this big beingand it all has a purpose and a
(23:48):
part.
But I don't think that we couldcompare it to anything that we
would know here on earth or inthis life.
I think that that's why allreligions and all you know
belief systems and sentient, youknow thoughts or whatever.
You know all of them.
Um say you know you can't knowthe universe because it's beyond
(24:11):
what you can ever see.
It's beyond anything you'veever experienced or felt.
Speaker 3 (24:18):
You know and you have
yeah, our minds can't even be
here yeah, you have to not behere.
Speaker 2 (24:23):
You know, and even in
each dimension you break
through, you're seeing more ofthe universe, but you're still
coming back and trying toexplain something that's so
complex and like the most basic,simple language that it's like
impossible to do.
That you know, like like reallythe only true understanding of
(24:44):
the universe, or anything or youknow that you could have, would
be.
You know that energetic oremotional feeling you know like
the experience of it around you.
You know let that speak to youmore than than your brain
(25:04):
putting it into a a box, itcan't fit in ever you know and
somehow, by taking out thecomplexity of it, you're, you're
, you know.
When you're, when you're simple, the universe responds because
it likes for you to just flow.
(25:26):
You know and yeah it's kind of.
Speaker 1 (25:29):
It likes also some
simplicity you know.
Yes, I mean like, like you wantto talk to god metaphorically.
Speaker 2 (25:34):
You know you want to
talk to God metaphorically, you
know you want to talk to spirit,you want to talk to.
You know aliens, or you knowhigher beings, or or you know
they're all kind of here in thatsame space.
Speaker 1 (25:51):
They're all in the
plane.
Speaker 2 (25:52):
Yeah, you want to
talk to them in the space.
You know you ask a simple,stupid question and then you get
a really clear answer.
But if you're demanding of it,you ask with a good heart and
you'll get an answer.
Speaker 3 (26:10):
It has to be simple
and pure.
I asked the other day for signswhen I did some work and the
next morning I woke up to myentire just my yard, my entire
yard covered in June bugs, greenglistening little scarabs
everywhere and I was like holyshit when I asked for signs.
(26:34):
I really didn't expect to wakeup the next morning to this,
this good omen, this abundantsign right in my face from the
universe.
It was really something.
Speaker 2 (26:51):
I definitely had been
asking for rain after a month
of it like completely avoidingtiny little mountain.
Yeah it hadn't rained heresince before we put the building
, like a week or two before weput the building damn so it's
dry yeah, so it it's been.
It's been a little nuts, youknow, and I really wanted it to
rain because I wanted everythingto settle, you know, and make
(27:15):
sure everything was good, youknow.
Speaker 3 (27:17):
Let the dirt settle.
Speaker 2 (27:19):
Yeah, and I reshaped
the whole driveway.
My hand was a rake, you know.
I wanted to know if that wasgoing to hold up Gangster.
It did, it did it, totally heldup.
Speaker 3 (27:29):
So speaking of what
you were just saying, I have to
tell you about the whales.
Speaker 1 (27:36):
It was really
interesting.
Speaker 3 (27:37):
I called in.
We had been riding on the boatfor a while and April, you know
she had said like we've beenhaving to go further out for
them and so nobody had reallyseen anything.
We were looking for spouts andI closed my eyes and I asked the
(27:58):
whales hey, you know, I reallywould love to connect with you
and I'm going to put my energydown into the water.
Right, I'm going to send myenergy out to you and if you
would be so kind as to showyourself so that we can share a
(28:18):
moment, right, I said all ofthis in my mind and I stomped my
foot on the boat to send myenergy down into the water
electrically.
Within a minute I looked outand there were spouts and I was
like starboard straight ahead.
I'm like yelling at the deckhand.
(28:39):
I'm like there they arestarboard four o'clock and we
ended up getting to them and shewas like, oh, my God good eye.
But I was like it wasn't myeyes, it was my soul that asked
the whales.
So we get there and it is amama humpback and like a newborn
baby, yeah, and it was so cool.
(29:01):
They let us just kind of ridewith them.
Speaker 1 (29:04):
It's a mama to mama
connection.
Speaker 3 (29:07):
Yeah, While I was
holding my baby you know she's
nursing her baby and it was justreally, really magical, really
magical, really magical.
But for me it was proof thatcommunication is really easy if
you want it to be.
Yeah like the ability tocommunicate with animals and
(29:31):
connect with beings that are nothuman is so much easier their
heart.
Speaker 1 (29:37):
Yeah, well, yeah,
it's it's really just about
consciousness, you know, becauseit's like we're all kind of
consciousness and so we, we'reable to connect.
You know, that way I had, um,well, I had a.
It's not really the same asyour same kind of experience, as
yours, taylor, but you, I havethese hummingbird feeders on my
(30:00):
back patio now, because, youknow, I liked the other bird
feeder but it was so messy Iwasn't able to use my patio
anymore, I was like there'ssomething wrong with this so let
me change it up.
But I really love the bird, so Iput up the and I was sitting
one day and a hummingbird camewhizzing by and hovered in front
of me and I was likehummingbirds.
So I put out to actually my.
(30:23):
I had this conversation with mysister and she gifted me to
hummingbird feeders.
I just got them in the mail.
I was like, oh, that's reallysweet.
So anyway, I put them up.
But my concern is is that mylittle rocking chair it's a
small patio and my littlerocking chair is really close to
these hummingbird feeders.
You know, it's like three feetaway and I was like, well, I'd
(30:45):
really like them to come tovisit when.
So there have been times whenI'm sitting in my, I'm sitting
in my chair and I see the little.
I see the little hummingbird onthe branch close by and I'm
like all right, I'll bring mycoffee inside, you can have the
patio, right.
But just the other day I waslike, oh, you know you're hungry
, okay so, but you know, I wassitting on the patio and I was
like I'm going to be really illand in my intention I would.
(31:09):
I would like us to share thespace.
You're safe, I'm.
We can share this space.
You don't have to, and you knowthey're very skitterish, you
know, and twice I hadhummingbirds come to the feeder,
which was literally just threefeet away from my chair, and so
(31:30):
they were able to enjoy theirbreakfast, and that was while I
enjoyed my oh.
Speaker 2 (31:36):
I love it.
Speaker 3 (31:37):
So it was yeah, it's
communication.
Speaker 1 (31:42):
oh my goodness,
they're so special, fantastic,
so I'm you know yeah, I've got,I've got a hummingbird now, yeah
, so it's, it's really lovely.
So I look out my my window.
Now I've got two little and youknow there's usually a little
hummingbird out there, butthey're getting, they're getting
used to my presence and so.
But that's kind of what I did.
(32:03):
So it was a little differentthan what you did.
I didn't stop my foot oranything.
Speaker 3 (32:08):
Well, I just felt
like we were in the ocean.
No, you needed to.
Speaker 1 (32:12):
That was totally
appropriate.
It made sense for me.
I felt like I needed to stillmy energy like depends on who
you're talking to exactly andkind of put out that energy that
I am.
You know, I I am humbly here inyour presence.
What's?
Speaker 3 (32:29):
the same, when I'm in
the forest with the boys, I put
out a, a fierce mama bearenergy, you know, like, like a
circle of protection type ofenergy where I walk in the woods
and I'm like no, I am a fuckingmother bear.
So just so you know, sis, I'mout here with cubs too.
That's right, and I think thatthat's why we never see bears on
(32:53):
trails.
Speaker 1 (32:55):
Yeah, they feel that.
Speaker 3 (32:56):
Yeah, yeah, that.
Speaker 1 (32:57):
Yeah, that makes
sense, that really does make
sense.
Speaker 2 (33:03):
I've always had a
certain energy with animals that
there's always been anunderstanding one way or the
other.
I feel like I've always kind ofjust talked to them, you know
understood them.
Speaker 3 (33:22):
You know a
communication.
Speaker 2 (33:24):
You understood I just
talked to them with my heart,
you know, like if they're, andeven through their eyes, because
you're speaking to them throughtheir soul.
That's pretty yeah, eyes are.
Eyes are really important withcertain animals.
Speaker 1 (33:41):
And certain animals.
Speaker 2 (33:42):
It's important to
look at and certain animals,
it's good to look away.
Speaker 1 (33:47):
Oh, it gives me
goosebumps.
Remember when I started readingJamie Sam's.
Speaker 3 (33:53):
She showed us the
ability to communicate with
animals and I had been soindulged in this book.
I mean full-fledged chills.
I don't know if y'all can seethem, but we went to that little
place in Jupiter, that little Idon't know if you ever went
there.
It's like Tequesta, it's alittle, it's like a preserve the
(34:16):
banyans and stuff.
Speaker 2 (34:17):
It's got the banyans
and stuff.
Speaker 3 (34:18):
It's got the banyans.
They have a Florida pantheryeah, yeah, yeah, the sand dunes
and stuff so we used to takethe kids there all the time but
there was one day when thepanther was up and she was
walking and her and I made eyecontact in this one particular
(34:41):
moment and it was the first timeI called patty afterwards it
fucking terrified me.
You remember this shit.
It terrified me, enoki, we madeeye contact.
I look into her eye and she letme in her mind hmm, it was
instantaneous, it was a blip,but I could feel her muscles
(35:06):
rippling like I could.
I was in her body.
I could feel her mind and howshe thought and what she saw and
how she felt.
It was so intense that when Icame back in I was like holy
shit, I had to walk away.
Have you ever been to Corbett?
Yeah, of course.
Fucking wild hogs all day, dudethe wider canal.
Speaker 2 (35:32):
It's not really wide,
it's pretty narrow when you
first get out, but it's got whenyou, when you're all the way in
the back of it or whatever andit's got that straight stretch
or whatever.
Yep, yep, I was there likesunrise, you know, and uh, I
camped out there that night withmy sister or whatever, and uh,
(35:53):
we were riding out, you know,just riding around as we were
getting ready to leave, you knowand it's like dawn, you know,
and it's got that beautiful likesmoky fog.
Speaker 3 (36:05):
You know it's like
it's a light fog, though it's
like just enough for that likegolden mist to start happening,
but it's still magical, it's sopretty.
Speaker 2 (36:17):
It's like the Smoky
Mountains, but on flat ground.
Speaker 1 (36:21):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (36:24):
So we're coming right
up to the last part of the
Taron on the south side of thepark or whatever going towards
the North Lake exit on the longpart of the canal.
Right there in the corner, Ilook out to the right and and
stopped the car and got out andthere was a mama panther with
(36:46):
two cubs twins and I just satthere and like it was so, it was
so magic.
I just sat there and looked ather and she stopped and the cubs
were walking kind of slow andjust messing around a little bit
while they walked, you know,and she stopped and she looked
(37:07):
at me and I looked at her and wehad a moment where it was just
you're, you know, so magical.
Thank you for letting me seeyou.
Nobody gets to just see a wildfucking panther with two cubs in
Florida.
Speaker 3 (37:25):
Thank you for showing
yourself to me.
Speaker 2 (37:27):
Yeah, I was so
thankful to see her, just to
have that moment in the open,Straight open, Nothing but that
little canal.
It was dry season too.
Just to have that moment in theopen, straight open, nothing
but that little canal.
And I mean it was dry season too, so it wasn't like it was all
filled up or anything there waslike a 13-foot drop down, you
know, to maybe six, seven feetof water across, you know, and
(37:52):
it was magic because I couldhave been there and she could
have been to me you know, and itwas it was magic, because I I
could have been there and shecould have been to me, you know,
and we were just right therelike it's, it's fine, it's cool,
you know, yeah I'm not here,you and not me yeah, yeah
exactly, and she knew it was an.
It was an understanding I lovecorbett I I love that whole
(38:16):
place.
I love just walking around inthe woods.
Speaker 3 (38:18):
I remember taking
Peyton to Corbett on my two feet
.
We got way deep in there andthen he was like two and I
turned around and the boars werebehind us.
Ah.
The whole family and I lookedat him and I was like mommy's
(38:40):
gonna run now we gotta go andeverything was freshly rooted
and I had to like run throughthe mud where they had been
rooting and I'm like dude, Idon't even have a knife, bro,
I've got nothing.
Speaker 2 (38:55):
Just a child.
Speaker 3 (38:58):
No, we're just fully
surrounded.
The shit and the pee is allaround you.
You can hear them scufflingthrough the bushes.
I'm like dude, I'm going to getbored with my child in my hand,
get me back to the car.
Speaker 1 (39:13):
I chose not to
communicate with the animals
that day stay the fuck out of myway, stay the fuck away from me
and my baby.
Yeah, they can be really.
They can be super aggressive.
Speaker 3 (39:27):
I would feel more
comfortable swimming with an
alligator than walking besideher oh yeah and they're huge too
.
They're not like they aregnarly big.
Speaker 2 (39:37):
You think like oh, a
pig, you know, like, like, pigs
are freaking huge, you know, butboars are like four times
bigger and they're like scaryyeah, they're, they're, they're
back, like comes up to my busline.
Speaker 3 (39:51):
They're as big as me.
Speaker 2 (39:53):
Their back is as tall
as you, the boars in Florida
are the size of bears in.
Speaker 1 (40:01):
Tennessee bro, I am
all set.
Speaker 2 (40:05):
Yeah, well, listen my
dad lives in Jupiter and she's
got a bunch that are always outby her property.
Speaker 3 (40:13):
Yeah, my dad said
that's the only thing he can.
He can hunt now he went to gohunt a deer?
Yeah, and he said that, yeah hewent to go shoot this deer, my
father.
Speaker 1 (40:25):
He said yeah I
couldn't do it.
Speaker 3 (40:27):
The deer in
california are so pretty.
They're different.
Speaker 1 (40:31):
They're different
yeah, they're different in
different regions.
Speaker 2 (40:34):
Oh yeah, yeah, they
got like antelope in north and
south dakota and stuff, and thatwas this particular part of
there's a field.
Speaker 3 (40:42):
There's acres and
acres and acres where this man,
william hurst, had a castleright and he had in the early
1900s it was the only.
It was the.
It was the only it was the.
It was the country's biggestzoo right.
So he had the first polar bearor some kind of bear.
He had the first enclosure thatwas made for polar bears.
(41:06):
It was like state of the art inthe 1920s right.
He had all of these crazyanimals, but to this day you're
driving down the street in Okiand on one side is the ocean and
you're watching whales jumpright, and on the other side of
the highway it's just mountainsas far as you can see, and then
just zebra, this zebra justrunning the mountain and you're
(41:28):
like where am I?
Why are zebras here?
Why Antelope and zebra are onthis mountain.
Where am I I and where have I?
Like the mists of avalon.
Speaker 2 (41:37):
I know I went to
school.
I went to school for zoology.
I was always really intoanimals and stuff and I was mind
blown when I saw a wildantelope in south dakota and I
was like why I?
Was like.
I thought that home on therange was like from australia or
something, because of rescuersdown under you know did you guys
(42:02):
ever watch the movie andre?
Speaker 3 (42:05):
oh no, I don't think
the little girl with the sea
lions no oh, my god, patty, youwould love I'll look it up, I'll
watch it.
We went on and on about freewilly last week.
Yeah, we did so andre was thefree willy of the 90s.
Speaker 1 (42:22):
But with a sea lion.
Speaker 3 (42:23):
Okay, so when I tell
you when the sea lion started
popping his head up out of thewater, like hey, you guys, what
are you doing?
Speaker 1 (42:32):
I almost jumped in
the water.
Speaker 3 (42:35):
I want to play with
you.
Speaker 2 (42:36):
Good thing you didn't
, because you're small enough
that they could eat you.
Speaker 3 (42:40):
They would just throw
me around a little.
Speaker 2 (42:43):
Oh no.
Have you ever seen what happenswhen you throw a piece of meat
off a boat in deep water.
Speaker 1 (42:50):
No, I've seen it on
film.
Speaker 3 (42:51):
I'm from.
Speaker 1 (42:52):
Florida.
So I think, about sharks.
Speaker 2 (42:53):
Yeah, not even sharks
, the fish that are in the ocean
.
Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1 (43:06):
The fish that are in
that deep water are very hungry.
Speaker 2 (43:08):
Yeah, very hungry,
very hungry fish.
Speaker 1 (43:17):
Big fish.
Well, I think it's um at the.
You know, I'm trying to bereally disciplined about like
keeping it to and I know andit's terrible because our
conversations are so goodkeeping it how do?
Speaker 2 (43:24):
you think,
disciplined it's fun we're gonna
stick to the 10 o'clock planthat we originally had what 10?
Speaker 1 (43:30):
what 10 o'clock?
Oh, you know, to end by 10 theboys are like I thought this was
an hour long.
It's almost 11 o'clock, I know,right, oh, but and I, you know,
I, I and I could.
We could go on and on, and ofcourse it's been a little while
since the three of us have beentogether, so we could talk for
the next three hours, but um I,I really we we really do like
(43:54):
the, you know, ending it withthe card pulling and talking
about what the card is, you know, and okay, and I had some fun
with that last week yeah, no, no.
Speaker 2 (44:08):
So.
So patty, patty, wonderful card, but I I just have the book
with me so she had the card, butyou had the book yeah, listen,
yeah, but no, no it's betterthan that I was like, oh, let me
just open the book and see whatspirits got for us today, you
(44:29):
know.
And Patty's like no, no, no, Iwant to get the card.
And I peek right, and I look no, no, no, I want to get the card
.
I want to get the card.
And I peeked, I peeked right,and and I look, and Patty goes
and gets the card or whatever.
You know, and I had closed italready, I like lost the number,
you know, like, but Iremembered the animal and and
(44:50):
Patty goes and gets the card orwhatever, and she comes back and
she pulls the card and it's thebadger, and the badger was what
I opened up to.
Speaker 1 (44:58):
Yeah, so we both
picked the badger.
Speaker 3 (45:02):
I love badger
medicine yeah.
That is good woman medicinebadger.
Speaker 1 (45:08):
Yep, yep, it was very
apropos.
Speaker 3 (45:12):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (45:13):
Very apropos.
Yeah, I'm definitely bados.
Speaker 3 (45:15):
Yeah, very apropos.
Yeah, I'm definitely badger.
I definitely doesn't, yeah, Ican see that.
Speaker 1 (45:19):
I can see that, but
we've been loving the medicine
cards.
I see that you don't have themedicine cards, though You've
got.
Speaker 3 (45:25):
I do not have the
medicine cards today she's got
something Jamie Sam's is myultimate favorite Of all time
you got the sacred bath guard.
What do you?
Speaker 1 (45:36):
got.
What do we have today?
Speaker 3 (45:38):
I've got the Wild,
unknown Archetype Guidebook.
Speaker 1 (45:43):
Okay, all right.
Speaker 3 (45:45):
Now these cards are
super cool because you can just
pull a card or you can do aspecific reading where they have
cards where you can separatethe deck four ways into the
selves, which gets really deepinto the where, into the tools
you need and into the spirituallesson, so it can be like a
(46:07):
super in-depth reading.
And they're versatile, like youcan do different types of
readings, and so I really lovethis deck.
Speaker 1 (46:14):
I'm going to go ahead
and pull and just see what we
get so we're as always, we'relike what can inspire us or
instruct us for the coming week,and we have the sirens, the
(46:36):
sirens, the sirens.
Speaker 3 (46:38):
Wow, the siren is a
self, it is an aspect of the
self.
Okay, so we'll look there andsee what she's got.
Was that a whale tail?
It was a mermaid tail.
Speaker 2 (46:53):
It's a mermaid tail,
or it's a siren tail, which is
really funny.
Speaker 3 (46:57):
Um, I got called a
mermaid so many times while you
were on vacation in california,people would just walk by me and
go do you think I'm a mermaid?
Like at one point peyton waslike so you're a mermaid?
And like if you, if you getwater splashed on you when you
(47:18):
swim, to the ocean, do you?
I don't know about this, mom,I'm starting to actually wonder
if you're a mermaid, you know itwould have been so cool, if you
know.
Um, when people said, oh, youlook just like a mermaid, you
could have said shh, I'm tryingto blend it's the hair all right
(47:41):
, all right, so let's, so let'sthink about what we've discussed
today and what the siren canrepresent in technology and in
today's current time yeah thechallenges, the challenges as we
move forward.
Speaker 1 (47:56):
Yeah, how can she
help?
Speaker 3 (47:59):
The siren calls and
the world spins.
What we thought we wanted palesin comparison to the sweet
allure of her song.
We find ourselves lost in aspell of desire and longing,
perhaps even lust.
Whether the thing calling to usis ultimately good or bad is
(48:21):
somewhat irrelevant.
It's the journey that matters,and the work of the siren is to
take us on a deep psychicdescent.
Following her songs, we go waydown, down down to a place where
lessons are learned and couragemust be rallied to find our way
(48:42):
back to dry land.
Try as we might, resisting thecall may not be an option unless
, like Odysseus, we bind ourhands to the mast of our ship.
Like Odysseus, we bind ourhands to the mast of our ship.
It's likely, though, thatfalling for her call is the only
(49:03):
way we will come to live morefully on the surface.
Embodying the siren archetyperequires that we explore things
that are taboo.
The siren laughs at conventionsand constraints.
She eats rules.
Other iterations of the sirenarchetype include the nymph, the
mermaid.
Speaker 1 (49:24):
She's breaking up.
Taylor, where'd you go?
Speaker 3 (49:30):
The mermaid.
Speaker 1 (49:33):
You froze for a
moment.
The nymph, the mermaid, otheriterations of the siren
archetype you froze for a moment.
Speaker 3 (49:36):
I'm so sorry, yeah,
the other iteration of the siren
archetype include you guys aregoing to love this the nymph,
the mermaid and the fairy.
They often come in sets ofthree.
A Trinity of temptation, oh.
Speaker 1 (49:54):
God, okay, a Trinity
of temptation, oh god okay, a
trinity of temptation am I?
Oh, I wanted to be the fairyokay, you can do this.
Speaker 2 (50:03):
Okay, I think we can
both be either one.
Speaker 3 (50:05):
you're the nymph,
you're the nymph enoki, I don't
know.
I love tree nymphs.
I love water nymphs.
They're so hot and beautiful.
Okay, so when light, we areawakened in our sensuality,
absorption of knowledge andarousal.
(50:26):
When dark, it createswickedness, wreckage, betrayal
and insatiability.
To go deeper, it asks us tolook at JW Waterhouse's nymph
painting, or listen to Lana DelRey's album Ultraviolence.
(50:47):
The siren, the siren.
She reminds me a little bit ofEris energy and the fact that
it's not necessarily labeled asgood or bad.
Like we are so quick in ourminds, we're trained to label
(51:12):
everything good or bad.
Like the siren lures men totheir death, oh no, but she has
her purposes for seduction.
And what is seducing us, youknow what?
What?
What is our siren in today'stime could be technologies.
(51:32):
Is you know, um?
How do we use the siren for ourown power as well?
Speaker 1 (51:44):
so yeah, yeah and I
like the.
You know the diving deep belowthe surface.
Speaker 3 (51:53):
You know because it's
all inward.
The deep work is all inwardwork.
Yeah, yeah, we want to fix theworld.
We want to fix the world, butwe have a world yeah, yeah, we
have to, we have to go deep andand sometimes, you know, look at
the things you know, look atour own shadows.
Speaker 1 (52:13):
So, in a way, you
know the the siren, you know,
helps us do that.
Look at the things you know,look at our own shadows.
So, in a way, you know thesiren you know helps us do that.
Look at our own shadows so wecan, you know, step back out
into the light more full.
You know, you know, wiser, yeah, so awesome.
(52:34):
So the siren this week, I thinkI think also that card was
drawn to taylor this week,simply because she's she's, so
she's still basking in all ofthat energy from the california
beach.
Speaker 2 (52:47):
It's like it's like
california yeah, that california
, you know beach thing, thatbeach thing, that mermaid energy
.
It was like the siren card justkind of grew to her like a
magnet.
Speaker 3 (53:01):
This woman, literally
this shop owner, was like I'm
going to send you guys a picture.
Peyton took a picture of menext to this painted mermaid on
a storefront door and the ownerof the shop was like so you look
more like a mermaid than thegirl on my door.
It's just hair something she'slike I need to repaint my
mermaid.
Speaker 1 (53:21):
She's like wow yeah
well, I'll also send you guys
the picture yeah, and alsodidn't you notice like your hair
behaves differently inCalifornia?
Speaker 3 (53:33):
so it.
I mean, it definitely isn't ashumid.
But I've never, I've nevergotten so many compliments on my
hair.
Yeah, we walked in thedispensary and there was this uh
, indigenous younger guy, longbraided, double braids, and as
he walked by me he was like yourhair is magnificent.
(53:56):
And I was so like taking a bathand I was like so is yours,
that's awesome.
We left there and april waslike well, that was funny.
I was like was it because no,you're pretty that's awesome so
(54:28):
you guys go out there and andsing a song and see what what
gets called in when you sing.
Speaker 2 (54:34):
I just got an iPad
and sing a song and see what
gets called in when you sing.
Oh yeah, I just got an iPadyesterday.
Speaker 3 (54:39):
Oh, you can do so
much worse now.
Speaker 2 (54:48):
I haven't done
anything really since my iPad
got stolen out of it when Ifirst got my truck while I was
doing the pool company.
Speaker 3 (54:53):
You're going to have
so much to catch up on, I'm so
happy with it, Are you guys?
Is the moon full?
This is why I have a watchTomorrow or the day after.
It looks really full.
Speaker 1 (55:08):
Yeah, so tomorrow
officially but, it looks really
full now.
Capricorn.
Speaker 3 (55:14):
Second Capricorn moon
.
Speaker 1 (55:16):
Two Capricorn moons
in a row, yeah, awesome.
So it's really, but maybethat's why I love you, I love
you guys so much.
Have a great week.
I love y'all.
Bye, until next time.
Until next time, until nexttime.