Episode Transcript
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(00:00):
This episode of Soul Decodes is pre-recorded, but Sarah and Tia Jolie felt it compelling enough to share with you today. We hope you agree.
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Welcome to Soul Decodes. Join us as we wander off the path to find the ideas that fascinate. We talk about spirituality, the mind, the ego, wellness and hidden history with tips, tricks and tricks.
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Travels and tales, charms for a better life.
This is fantastic. I think we're on the air.
Are we? That's good.
It's been so crazy. It's so good to see you again.
Nice to see you.
You look all bright and sunny.
Yeah, I'm doing very well. I'm quite tired because being on a cruise for four days.
(01:23):
I know. The life you live. It's so crazy.
So welcome everybody to the show. My name is Dr. Tia Jolie Phillips and we're here at Phillips Island in the beautiful Treehouse Studio.
Many of you know our guest. You know, she's actually the owner of this podcast, which is Soul Decodes.
She's a writer, a philosopher and a thinker. And for me, she's a dear friend.
(01:47):
I just love having you here. I always look forward to this.
Me too. It's great.
What is on your mind today? What do you want to catch up on?
What have you been? So anyways, I had this cruise. That was lovely, but totally indulged. It's such a hedonistic nightmare.
Did you eat too much?
Yes, I did.
Did you drink too much?
No, I didn't drink too much. I had, I had, I did drink wine every day. I had some wine, but it was, I love bread and I don't have bread that much.
(02:13):
And so I had a lot of bread and butter and I'm heavy on the butter.
The butter. Where's the butter from?
It was lovely. It was, I didn't recognize the brand and they had it at perfect room temperature.
And it was so yellow and creamy. Maybe it was Mexican butter. Whatever the cow was, that was a good butter.
Did you just like take a spoonful of the butter and just eat it?
(02:35):
I love butter. I was raised on butter.
Really?
Yeah. My mom didn't cook with any oils. It was butter or lard.
Okay. I'll go with the butter, not the lard.
And the pig fat. Close the door at the pig fat.
Right. Yeah. No. So, yeah, I'm excited to have you back. There's so many things happened while you're gone.
What happened?
Well, the beginning of the month.
I feel like a drum roll.
(02:56):
The beginning of the month, we had a note from our internet service provider, because we live, as you know.
In the boondocks.
Way out here. Like when, when your closest neighbor is a horse, that's pretty far out there.
So we live out here in, in really the edge of, the edge of nowhere.
But yeah, but with million dollar homes all around you.
(03:17):
I would say people's at the edge of nowhere.
But the truth is, we're, we feel like we're at the center of everywhere.
Like, so it's like so beautiful out here.
And, you know, we have a two acre lake in the back and birds and bees.
I haven't seen this lake yet.
Birds and bees and butterflies. It's so pretty out here.
Have you been on the lake? Have you rowed on it?
Well, no, it's just a, it's more like a pond.
(03:38):
And you fish. Oh, you don't fish though. Yeah.
Well, I mean, I had a drummer, a former drummer of mine. Do you mind if I fish?
They threw his, he's like 70 now, but did he catch anything?
He caught this huge bass. He said, I've been fishing all my life.
This is the healthiest bass. He said it's so healthy.
It had like almost its gum line looked like it had teeth.
It was the best bass he's ever caught. And did he throw it back or did he eat it?
(04:01):
Yeah, I'm not going to let him eat my bass.
No, I was going to say that would be you, would it, on your property.
So anyway, we, so beginning of the month, we had this, this note that our internet service provider was going to no longer do business with us.
With you, or with the street? No, like with the whole street.
Right. Anyone who had this, and all of us are like, we have no service out here.
(04:22):
Like there's no cable, there's no anything. So out of the blue, we got this.
And they just arbitrarily say it's not, it's not cost effective for them, is it?
Well, I think, you know, he's just a young, he's a young entrepreneur and he's like, okay, I made some good money.
And he's, he's got a young family who just wants to move along.
And so I respect that, but that kind of leaves us in alert.
Yes. So we're like all talking about, okay, what's best? What's the next best? And everyone's like.
(04:44):
So you're going to move house.
So no, no, no, I'm not leaving here. Actually, I'll always have this. We'll have more other places.
For sure. This will be your anchor.
This will just be like an anchor just for growing stuff.
So we're looking around and everyone's trying to get their stuff.
Well, we're so remote that the signal from the tower that we had, because it was a, the signal for that we used to get was from a tower.
(05:05):
There was bounced off of a neighbor's house to our house. So it was like a relay to get to us.
So we were so far out. There was like a tower. There was transmitting to a house. There was relayed.
Beaming off a mirror.
Seriously, like a mirror. So anyway, so long and short was my neighbor ended up like getting his service from some place like Hughes net or something like that.
(05:29):
During the process, they actually cut the cable that relayed to my house. So we ended up losing a signal just like that.
Yeah, it was tenuous to begin with.
Yeah, it's actually been a really good connection. The service was amazing. I was quite disappointed that they were going away.
But so, but you know, people live their lives and they have to do their do their thing.
(05:52):
Well, anyway, so this guy, my neighbor cut the cable and I'm like, OK, now Robin, she, she had so much work to do.
She was literally like, she literally cried. She was like, no, she's so frustrating.
It's so busy in her world right now.
And that's so frustrating. It's happened to me. It's like this. They just couldn't come at worst.
I know. It's like and I just told her, give it some space. Yeah. Yeah.
(06:16):
The neighbor who's who cut the cable.
Is he a friendly neighbor?
Well, so no.
I mean, did he know he'd cut the cable? Did he come to tell you or did you discover it?
We just discovered it. So so we're in a place now where it's like, OK, I don't say negative things to people, but there's certain people.
But your rapport just isn't there.
But there's just no there's no it's not because I haven't tried.
(06:40):
We want to have friends. We want all of our neighbors to be friendly.
But, you know, we can be friendly to people.
But if they're not friendly back, there's not much you can do about it.
And, you know, they have different preconceived notions about who people should be.
And they're if you don't conform to who they say you should be.
You're my enemy, kind of.
It's like all or nothing. It's like you're either one of us or you're not.
(07:01):
It's like, well, no, I'm just one of I'm a we the people.
I don't have to like wear one color or wear the other color.
I think people find it's a security for them because if they can peg you, put you in a in a in this space,
then they can predict your behavior somehow.
And that means they somehow feel safe with you because it's a very petty thing to do to say you've got to be you've got to think and be more like me
(07:27):
in order for me to befriend you.
And it has to be a sign of weakness.
And I just don't give a shit. Just do you.
I mean, it's just like it's over.
And again, I don't have the answer because, you know, I've tried.
I think it's a security issue.
I think he just needs to be life needs to be predictable.
And he needs to group people into his way of thinking, his way of being, because this is gives him security somehow.
(07:49):
So we so we here we are with a cut cable and we're like, OK, we're going to be without Internet for 10 days because we well,
we decided on to go with Starlink.
And because they had a great deal.
Yeah. Is it more expensive?
Well, it's like one hundred and twenty a month.
Right. I mean, that's like less expensive than what some of my neighbors have.
(08:10):
But it's also more expensive than what we did have by like only ten bucks or so, because it's it's hard to get a signal out here.
But so anyway, we're like, OK, what do we do?
This guy clearly like I don't know if you know if it's this guy, but it's I think it's his wife.
Like, you know, everyone's accountable for themselves, but they don't even like really say hello.
They're like you could walk 20 feet from them.
(08:31):
They won't even say hello.
So a lot of our neighbors do.
They're just beautiful.
They'll go out of their way to say hello to you.
You know, it's so so it's just a one off thing where it just happens to be this guy.
So and you know, in the South, I used to get it was so funny because like I don't want to be that person where, you know, the southern girls, the southern bales,
they would say, oh, so and so she is this and she's that and she wears this and can you believe this and all of this negative stuff?
(08:57):
And then at the end of it, they say bless her soul.
It's like as if that's supposed to be.
But so I don't want to be that person.
And as a rule, I don't say things about people that I wouldn't say to themselves.
So these kind of knock on his door.
Let's bring him in.
Let's bring him in on the podcast.
I've already said I've already said this.
(09:18):
So what did you have to tell him then?
No, I've told him very clearly.
It's like I don't know what I have to do to be a good neighbor to you.
But no, with regards to the cable.
Oh, no.
So what we did was we I called the cable service provider.
I said, OK, look, you drop a bomb on us that we don't have cable 30 days from now.
And then my service drops off.
And at this time, I didn't know that this guy cut the cable.
(09:41):
So I'm like, yeah, so it was the company.
So he says, well, I told you we're not going to support anything, but I'll troubleshoot this for you.
I'm like, thank you, because I already paid for the month.
So he says, oh, yeah, it's your neighbor.
It's good. They could localize it.
So so the guy I have a guy, a kid that comes by once a month for six or once a week for six hours.
Yeah. And I just pay him cash.
(10:03):
I pay him really well.
But he keeps coming back and I just have like he's a burly kid.
And I just have him help me on the farm with some of this.
Oh, you need it. Some of the big stuff that I don't really want to do.
Right. And and he's happy to do it.
Take my cash and go. Yeah.
So but it turned out that he was working at my neighbor's house.
He actually fixed the wire.
(10:25):
He literally because, you know, when you take care of people, they take care of you.
So what this kid did was he took the wires, they were cut, and he actually pieced them back together, platter them all back together.
He literally because it was a cat five cable.
So there are 10 or 12 pairs in there. Right.
I don't even know how many wires are weaving a basket.
So he basically took every single wire and he pieced them together.
(10:49):
Now, the interesting thing is, last week, prior to this wire cut, I had given him probably about 80 dollars worth of nutrition just for nice because his wife was suffering with some.
I said, well, give her this and this and this because, you know, she needs to have stronger bones.
So I gave him like I said, just take this. I want you to have it.
(11:10):
So I just gave it to him. So that's the universe balancing itself.
I just gave him what is so I just gave him the stuff for his wife to help her feel better.
She actually her bones were so brittle, she broke both of her feet.
Oh, really? Doing what? Just something normal?
Jumping, jumping down from something, getting down from something.
So is that a lack of calcium?
We're going to go off on a tangent. We are.
(11:32):
We come back. We'll come back to your grouchy old neighbor.
Well, he's he's actually I don't I love everybody and he's he's got drama and he's got things in his world.
So I think the thing is, you can't take it.
Bless his soul.
You just can't take it personally. You just live, live your life.
And when somebody's got brittle bones, when somebody's got brittle bones, the first question I ask them is, is your mind brittle?
(11:57):
Well, close, close. How do you deal with stress?
Because if you're always under stress, I can give you the best nutrients in the world, but if you're always under stress,
then you're going to be in what's called stress dominance, which stresses your adrenals.
Your adrenals are great if you're trying to run away from a bear.
Yeah.
Under peacetime when you're not at war and there's no bear chasing you.
(12:19):
If you're stressed about what the Kardashians are wearing or if you're stressed about the stupid neighbor, if you let those things get to you,
the chemicals that your body produces endogenously, which is from within, will actually become very acidic.
It'll acidify your body, your tissue, your blood, and your body wants you to be not acidic.
(12:41):
So what it's going to do is it's going to surrender whatever it can to neutralize your alkalinity or your pH, which is your acidity, alkalinity.
So it's going to neutralize that.
Well, the number one thing your body, the number one resource your body has to neutralize that stress,
that would be the acidity that comes from stress, as well as other things, is the calcium from your bones.
(13:06):
Really? So it takes it from there?
So it literally leeches.
So it's not necessarily that people, it's not necessarily that people have a calcium deficiency.
It's the body is poaching it from another area.
It's literally your body is acidic because your diet, because your lifestyle, because you drink too much,
you're married to somebody that is always stressing you out and you need to kind of make some decisions.
(13:29):
You're maybe eating ice cream every day or, you know, processed foods, whatever it is, you're becoming acidic.
And stress is one of them. It's a major one.
But if you're always acidic, then your body is going to leech, leech, leech.
And a lot of people say, well, I drink milk every day.
Well, excuse me, but the milk you're drinking today is not the same milk that your grandmother's mother,
(13:52):
your great grandmother had right off the farm.
Yes. When you pasteurize milk, when you homogenize it, you warm that protein, you denature the milk.
Milk by itself, you don't, an adult human doesn't need milk.
Do you drink milk? How do you get your calcium?
From the ground.
Yeah, from plants.
(14:13):
Spinach, plants, kale. I mean, kale.
You can go, you can get calcium from moringa from just by eating moringa leaves.
I mean, there's so many places for calcium, but there's a big lie that you need milk to get calcium.
It's actually the opposite. If you drink milk and eat dairy and eat cheese, those actually acidify you.
(14:34):
And those, and I'll challenge anybody.
Now we're doing this to babies. So the babies have their mother's milk, which obviously has to be good.
And then we put them on milk.
Well, the mother's milk is great.
Yeah, but after that, they don't really need milk then.
So let's double back to that. So let's close the shop.
So you've got your internet back. The guy fixed the cable. That was good.
So anyway, my guy fixed the cable and that was all good. So any other questions about that?
(14:59):
No. So when do you get your Starlink in?
So that, oh, that's the other thing.
Will that dovetail so you won't be able to, you can't stress Robin out anymore.
Well, no, it's funny because I told her, I said, we're going to make it happen. So we went to the coffee shop.
You can come to my place. I'll rent you mine.
Can I rent your studio?
I'll rent you my office.
Can I rent your studio? No, that should be up.
They set my tick to the end of the month, but I just got a FedEx notification that it's inbound.
(15:23):
Oh, good.
Hopefully next time we broadcast.
So Ray gets up. He's our friend, mutual friend.
He gets up and he watches the Starlink. And actually it's at nighttime, I think.
And he watches this whole Starlink go into space and he tried to get pictures of it.
And I didn't see it. But this is Elon Musk's contraption.
Yeah, I call him Elon Mask.
Elon Mask.
Mask, like, you know, like wearing a mask.
(15:46):
Yes, he's very strange South African, isn't he?
Well, yeah, I don't think.
Is he, is he a good guy?
We don't want to slam Elon Musk.
I mean, he's doing great things with his life, I'm assuming.
Well, I mean, the person you see is not, I don't think the, the Elon, the original Elon Musk.
I think you have to ask questions about what you're actually seeing.
Back, way back when, back when Trump was president, you saw this, this thing with North Korea,
(16:10):
where North Korea was threatening with their rockets and, and Trump was always talking about...
Rocket man.
Rocket man. Remember that?
Well, everyone thought he was talking about rocket man, North Korea dictator,
but he was really talking about the original Elon Musk as the rocket man,
because Elon, the original Elon Musk was a traitor
and he was supposedly sending state secrets, selling state secrets.
(16:34):
Jesus.
So, so question that. Maybe I'm wrong.
Maybe I'm wrong, but I do have plenty of pictures and photographs of what we think is Elon Musk wearing a mask.
So, so there's lots of masks.
It's too weird for words though, because how do you know anything?
You just can't, you'd have to do a lot of research for me to try and uncover him.
(16:55):
It would take me weeks and weeks, 40 hours a week and I'm not that fucking interested to be honest,
because I've got bigger fish to fry.
But you can't, unless you can verify something with a massive amount of research.
I mean, me with my books, 25 years on this subject, constant research and it never ends.
It goes on all the time.
And you blow my mind with, like when I first saw your library, I'm like, what?
(17:17):
This is phenomenal.
Like you've read more books probably this month than I have in my life.
I listen to a lot of audio now.
Yes, I do that and I listen to it throughout the night because I'll wake up at two in the morning and then I go back to sleep.
I listen to some audio, but the weird thing that's happening to me, so I'll put this audio on, right?
And then I'll fall back to sleep and then the audio is incorporated in my dream.
(17:42):
And then there's a character in my dream talking to me, but it's the audio.
Now, a few things can happen.
Either I get really pissed off because I can't shut him up and I want to kill him in my dream or I'm asking him questions,
but he's not answering me because it's just a recording.
And so he's carrying on talking.
So in my dream, I'm sitting down and I'm listening to like a guru in my dream.
(18:05):
And then there's other dreams where I just get up and walk away because I'm not interested in what.
But I thought that's very interesting.
That's going into my subconscious and coming out in a dream.
So I'm actually careful what I listen to.
So now I'm listening to very, very complicated quantum mechanics,
because if that's going into my subconscious and it's coming out in a dream, what am I learning subconsciously?
(18:27):
This is a really interesting conversation because what is conversation?
Like you and I are having a conversation, which is a meaningful exchange of ideas.
And when you look at communication, the communication model, there's a sender, a receiver, a mode.
Like the mode would be I'm talking through the air and through the mic here, but through the air, there's a message.
(18:53):
And most importantly, there's feedback.
So even if it's like you're looking and going or nodding with your eyes.
Yes, I get it. That's feedback.
When you're listening to something at night, the frustration is that you're getting one way.
It's not really communication, because you're trying to give it feedback.
You're trying to ask him questions.
You're trying to ask or you're trying to tell him to shut up and go home.
(19:16):
Well, the shut up one happened because I thought his idea was really dumb.
And I had a much better idea of what it could look like.
And he wouldn't fucking listen. It was so frustrating.
You feel like smacking.
And I did. And I really did. I think I might have actually got my hands close to his neck.
And then I woke up. But it's an interesting mechanism for this to be.
So I'm receiving it's coming out in a dream.
(19:38):
But that's my point.
So what am I learning? What's going on in my mind?
Well, what you're learning is that, first of all, what I hear is that you, as a sovereign divine soul, you want to be heard.
Yeah. And we're frustrated when we're not heard.
But in the dream, in the dream, sometimes I'm sitting on a couch and I'm listening and I'm really happy to be listening.
And I'm taking it all in.
(19:59):
So that would have had to have been a good podcast I was listening to.
So it's not like I need to be heard all the time.
In this one dream where I nearly throttled him, it was because I thought his idea had so many flaws that I wanted mine to be heard.
But sometimes, and it's more often than not, I'm just soaking up in a dream.
But in this dream, I mean, I was in that I was on this couch.
I was in this room. I was eating some candy.
(20:21):
I was sipping some wine. There's butterflies.
So it's a real thing, this dream.
Welcome to my world.
So I'm programming myself at the moment with heavy duty concepts to see whether this weighs into my subconscious in a way.
And see when I next write, because I'm going into a writing binge when I go to England, whether this comes out.
(20:43):
So that's been interesting.
That's so cool. So I've never been that person that can fall asleep listening to a recording.
Maybe I can be in the future, but I also never really wanted to be because I treasure my sleep so much.
Well, I'm definitely sleeping because I'm dreaming.
So I must be in REM sleep.
Good.
So I'm hardcore in asleep.
(21:04):
That's fascinating.
Let's listen to something. We're working out what we listen to together.
And you have to be tired. And then let's just see what happens.
We'll both listen to it. And tell me whether this comes up in your dream.
So are you talking about like a specific recording?
Yeah, we'll find something. I don't know what it would be.
Something I'm mutually interested in.
My dreams have been really weird lately.
(21:25):
I enjoy, like I like cats.
But I can't be around them because they make me itchy.
My eyes itchy and stuff and sneezing and stuff.
So, but I really like them. I think they're cool animals.
I kind of like their attitude. They're like, they're kind of like there, but not there.
Very aloof.
They're very aloof.
And they'll love you if they feel like being loving.
But they're also like, like we have one in the back.
(21:47):
He's so adorable. He's jet black.
And he's like burly with a long tail. He looks like a baby Florida panther.
Oh, wow.
In fact, he might be. I don't even know.
Oh my goodness.
But he's so adorable.
And he lives out by himself.
Oh yeah, we have a lot of cats out.
So he's eating lizards and mice. Oh yeah, we love our cats.
They're just wild.
There's plenty to eat.
They take care of like, they literally take care of the farm.
(22:10):
They're so important.
You'd have mice otherwise.
Oh, well probably.
I mean, I wish they'd take care of some of my squirrels
because the squirrels are eating my watermelon.
He needs to attack the nest.
Well, so, but this black, so I, we had this black panther.
He's so pretty and so beautiful.
And I just love watching him like stalk.
In my dream, I had this white cat.
(22:33):
No, it wasn't mine.
It was just one that came to visit me, right?
So you were here in your dream.
This is, yeah.
Well, I don't know where I was.
It was, I don't even know if I was on earth.
I was probably somewhere.
But all I know is I had this interaction with this white cat
and it was adorable.
And it just, it understood me and it just wanted to be loved.
It wanted to come up.
But the problem, and it was so, it was the most pristine,
(22:55):
beautiful white, white, gorgeous eyes.
And it just totally understood me.
That's the thing.
That's what was cool about it is the cat understood me.
So you were telepathically communicating.
But this is, but here's the part.
This is so much my life.
This, this crap is my life.
(23:16):
Tears.
Jolie's about to have a breakdown for anyone listening.
Because this, as much as I love this cat,
it was like everything to me.
When it came up and it snuggled with me,
like it would like hug me.
And when it hugged me, its little claws were like,
not just claws, they were like razor blades.
And it was like, and they were like sharp.
(23:38):
And they weren't on just the paws.
They were like up its arms and stuff.
Holy shit, it's a reptile.
And I'm like, girlfriend, you can't be doing that.
And it just, it wanted to be by me so much.
It was grabbing my legs and stuff.
And I was just like, okay.
And I had to let it go.
Because it was harming you.
Because it was like, and it's so much like relationships.
(23:59):
It was so metaphoric.
It's like, there's so many people, so many times.
So you love this cat.
You wanted it to be a part of you.
But it couldn't be because it was, it's putting you in danger.
It was very, very excruciating.
And as much as I love the cat.
Are you dripping blood in this dream?
No, no, no. It was more painful, but I wasn't,
I wasn't bleeding out or anything,
but it was just very, very painful.
And now you couldn't handle the cat.
(24:20):
As much as I wanted the cat to be in my world,
I had to let it go.
And it was really painful.
It was painful to have the cat there physically,
but it was also painful to let it go.
Because I love the cat.
So kind of a weird dream,
but I was trying to think the meaning of it.
So although I wasn't listening to a recording,
I oftentimes wake up and try to interpret.
What does that even mean?
Yes. And what's the message for you?
(24:42):
What does it mean?
And if it's a metaphor for letting people go
who can't be in your life,
why is that useful to you now?
Why are you dreaming that?
Right? So it could be with some things
that you've got going on in your life.
And it's there to shore you up.
It's there to give you clarity over something,
I would think.
(25:03):
Because I think dreams, I mean, I don't,
I'm not a huge person about going into dream
and reading dream books.
A lot of people think it's fascinating.
I do because I don't know what this realm is.
And it's as real as any other realm.
I mean, it's as real as this, my dreams.
And what is this realm?
And in the Bible, it's like God's got many mansions.
You could do a Hiawaska trip.
You could do LSD.
(25:24):
You're going into, so where is it we're going
every night for eight hours?
That part's fascinating.
Huh. Yeah.
And then why is it useful to us?
There has to be some use in it.
I think we work out, I think you can be inspired by dreams.
I think you can problem solve in your dreams.
I think you can act scenarios out in your dreams
that you don't have to in real life
(25:45):
because you won't induce the karma.
Like a karmic free zone where you can express yourself
without inducing karma.
That would be a nice buffer to have.
But it's got to be useful.
Back up and tell me what you just said.
Okay.
So if you're in a dream and it's a violent dream,
I'm assuming there's no karma involved because these,
a dream to me feels like you're in some type of matrix.
(26:09):
And so supposing in your dream you end up having an argument
with someone, if you do that in real life,
there's going to be karma involved if you've upset that person,
if they've upset someone else.
It's all a very fine balance.
But in your dreams, perhaps you can work out issues
in a karma free environment.
It's just an idea.
I haven't, I've not heard that.
No, that's fascinating.
But it has to be, there has to be a reason for dreaming.
(26:32):
It has to be useful to us and productive to some degree.
Well, I think everything is useful and productive.
Just because we don't understand something
doesn't mean it's not to our benefit.
And that's like this dream with the white cat.
Same thing. It's like, well, why did I experience this?
Yeah.
The question is, what we have to do is continue to question things.
As I'm doing with Studio 17, you know, I call my interviews,
(26:57):
inner views.
Inner views.
Inner views.
Yeah.
Because I don't always just want to talk about the creator,
like what this person created.
It's like if they're an inventor.
I think it's great that they talk about their invention
or what they wrote or the artwork they did or whatever.
I do want to cover what they did.
(27:19):
But more importantly, I want to get inside of them.
Who they are.
And figure out who they are, what inspired them,
why did they move that direction.
It's my position in this space that everything is good.
That might sound really sophomoric, but.
No, I don't think, I think everything is good.
And I think if we understand reality to a greater level,
(27:41):
we can see that everything is good.
But you can't have a postage stamp view.
You've got to pull back and you've got to see the bigger picture.
And that's what I tended to do when I went through this stuff
with my mum.
I pulled right back and looked at the bigger picture
and everything is good.
And you can magnetise good.
You can create good.
It all has to start in your mind.
You were talking earlier about this lady that has a calcium
(28:03):
deficiency.
Sure, sure.
And I said, oh, she has a brittle mind.
You've got to control your mind.
You've got to control what you think about.
You have to be disciplined.
You can't just have a load of junk going on in your head.
And if you can control your thoughts and you think uplifting
pure thoughts or you think about, I mean, you and I are very
ambitious and we probably give a lot of thought to what it is
(28:26):
we're trying to pull off in this life.
That's a very healthy way of thinking.
But I think life is good.
But I think it's dependent on whether we have a healthy
thought life.
You brought with, you brought some books here and things
like that.
So I go into my library.
I don't know how long you're going to, you want to go to?
No.
So I just want to read, I want to read something out.
Let's just do another five minutes of this.
(28:48):
Sure.
No, it's your podcast.
So I go into my library and that's where I found this book I
gave you and I got this one.
This is called Blended Medicine and this is the best choices in
healing.
And so what I do when I go into my library, I look for a book,
but I'm kind of guided on the inside.
So I'll go to a specific shelf and I run my hands and whatever
book comes out, I always feel like this is for me, that
(29:12):
there's my higher self is this somehow linked to all the
information I have.
So I pluck this book out and I just want to read you a
paragraph.
Sure.
Because it's a very short one.
Does the book have pictures?
No, darling.
It's got an ear.
It's got a picture of an ear.
Oh, it's a chapter book too.
It's a chapter book.
So I'm into chapter books now.
Even if they don't have pictures.
(29:33):
So this is the chapter 14 music sounds that soothe the soul.
So this is what I read.
Opinions vary as to why music has such a profound effect on
humans.
At least some of its therapeutic powers come from its
ability to trigger the release of endorphins, the powerful
opiate-like chemical produced in the brain that induces
euphoria and relieves pain.
(29:54):
In fact, researchers have discovered that if they
administered drugs that block the production of endorphins,
they significantly blunt a person's enjoyment of music.
So I've listened to music all my life.
My mum played Radio One, and that was wonderful.
It was always a backdrop, and it was always the hits.
And then the DJ, he always played whatever song he liked,
(30:15):
and he could make an artist.
If he played you for a few weeks in the morning, you were
guaranteed a number one hit.
So music has been my backdrop.
And I didn't realize, and then it's to do with endorphins.
So it's releasing something.
So I really think that music has helped me be fit and healthy.
And I listen to it a lot.
I've got my own radio station, so that's pretty indulgent.
(30:37):
So I was listening to that last night.
But I think it's significant that people, my husband's father
didn't listen to music, but he had a hearing problem, and he
didn't like it.
And I wonder how therapeutic it really is, and that maybe
people should be introduced to music more.
And I think we'll go into this on the next podcast, because
I'd like to skirt back to this, the Light Age Church of
(30:58):
Transformation.
But music should be a big part of therapy, and it doesn't have
to be in an environment other than your own bed.
It could be in a bubble bath.
But it sounds to me that music is having a profound effect on
some stimulation in our brain, which is causing us to be healed
and well.
Totally.
Yeah.
Again, on my podcast, I'm going to be featuring people who use
(31:20):
music for those purposes.
It's very exciting.
And one of them I spoke about last week, she's all in.
She just responded and said, yes, we're going to do this.
The idea of sounds, everything is energy.
So when I project something to you, I'm using sound as a
conveyance of my conscious intention.
(31:43):
So my consciousness, I have different ways to express my
consciousness in this three-dimensional space.
Sound and music is one of them.
I want to say this about music.
I like rock and roll.
I am a Detroit girl.
Yeah, I love rock and roll.
It's true.
I love the energy, the vibrate.
(32:04):
And a lot of people will say rock and roll, evil.
I'm like, you know what?
If it brings me joy and happiness and it makes me dance,
it makes me jump up and down.
Excites you.
If it excites me, then that is okay.
But everything's got a season.
If you listen to enough rock and roll for a day, then sometimes
you need to chill out.
(32:26):
Beethoven.
Or listen to the silence of nature.
Listen to the beautiful trees.
So I think it's not so much like these people are all
categorical, like rock and roll bad.
Well, I think that's a psy-op.
I think rock and roll.
I mean, you can get some shitty rock and roll, but it's so
many good rock songs.
I mean, there's crappy country music.
(32:48):
Yeah.
I mean, there's crappy everything.
There's crappy everything.
There's some good rock.
Like a lot of rock and rollers, they say, oh, disco, back in
the day, disco sucks.
Oh, I love it.
I love disco pop.
There's some really cool disco.
Come get anything.
I love rap.
Yeah.
And there's some really good rap.
When you really listen to rap.
Well, the poetry in rap I love.
The poetry.
It's almost like when you listen to the rap and the words,
(33:10):
it's almost like an opera.
Some of it sucks.
I'm just going to show.
Sure.
Like if they're telling about shooting cops and stuff, I have
no interest in that.
Like that's ridiculous.
When you listen to some of the lyrics and some of the
beautiful things that come from those, you have to say, okay,
I'm going to keep a space for that.
So my point is anybody who says categorically that this type of
(33:32):
music is good for you or bad for you, there's no really
categoricals.
If it serves, Sarah, if it brings you joy and it brings you
happiness or it.
But it's doing something in your brain.
It's stimulating the release of endorphins.
Totally.
So we're supposed to be listening to it.
Well, yeah.
And what you're supposed to do is just kind of listen to your
body and say, does this resonate?
(33:54):
Is this what I need at this place and time?
Yeah.
Is this what I need?
And if so, why?
And music does have that.
Like if you listen back in the day, you know, any country has
got their like national anthem and you listen to their anthem
and it evokes this sense of patriotism and love of country
and all this stuff.
And any emotion.
I mean, it can just go anywhere.
(34:16):
You can listen to those things, but also you have to question
those things too.
Like, okay, this is eliciting this sense of patriotism might
country is better than your country.
Okay, that's fine.
But let's question that too.
The music can be positive.
It can also be kind of more.
It can also mobilize some masses to a direction that maybe is
not really a good thing.
(34:38):
Yeah.
Get the mob rallied.
Yeah.
There's that.
I just throw that out there.
I do have a book I gave to my brother up in Chicago.
He's an audio engineer and it talks about the music of nature,
about the wavelengths, about how different frequencies and
different octaves and different harmonics do different things.
And we actually have the work from over 150 years ago.
(35:01):
This guy was he had his laboratory rated.
He had all of his stuff taken.
He was discredited.
But what his name was Dr.
Royal Reif, Royal Raymond Reif.
And he had this technology.
He called it the Reif machine.
This is back before electron microscopes.
And he would take these compound lenses.
And I think it was like whatever, 11 to 15 layers of lenses where
(35:24):
it would magnify, magnify, magnify to the degree that with his naked
eye, he could see under the telescope,
the microscope individual like cells of cholera, malaria.
Right.
Like he could see the individual cells.
And what he would do is he would use sound frequencies and he would
find that he could, because everything's got a resonant
(35:47):
frequency, right?
Like you have a resonant frequency.
This room does.
Everything's got a resonance.
And just like, you know, an opera singer can destroy a glass.
They find the frequency.
They sing that frequency and it destroys the glass because that's
the resonant frequency.
I'd love to be able to do that.
He could do that with cells.
What he was doing is he'd take cholera as an example,
look at it under a microscope, find the resonant frequency that
(36:11):
stopped it, that sort of stopped moving.
And that was the resonant frequency.
And I think it was the 11th harmonic.
He would take the 11th harmonic and that would burst it so he could
freeze it and burst it with these complementary frequencies.
Well, he did, and he didn't consider it a success until he could do it
a hundred times in a row without a failure.
(36:33):
Yeah.
So he did this with malaria.
He did this with all of these diseases of the day and he just was able to
freeze and it didn't even affect the surrounding cells.
So you could literally.
Localize it.
Yeah.
You could just something, a pathogen.
Yeah.
And kill it without affecting any of the other cells.
This is pretty novel and this is definitely a risk to the early
(36:55):
pharmaceutical industry.
This was a challenge to the people who made money on you being sick.
Yes, who wants to profit out of you.
They want to profit on you.
They want you to use these petroleum based chemicals.
So they shut him down?
They sabotaged him?
No, they totally destroyed him.
Same way they did, they destroyed Nikolai.
Tesla.
Tesla.
Nikola.
Nikola Tesla.
They took all of his stuff.
(37:17):
They pretty much made him broke and destitute and then he supposedly jumped
out of a window.
Oh did he?
Jesus.
So I think that would be harder to do today.
It would be harder to shut someone down today and ruin their livelihood.
Well I think that, I think the deployment of the internet changed our lives.
It actually saved the world.
That's good.
It really did save the world and I think it was a white hat, a military white hat
(37:42):
deployment.
I don't think this technology was supposed to be for us.
Ah.
I believe that this, the internet technology was given to us to save us.
By whom?
By, I don't really know.
How's it be?
Or by an institution of some kind?
My opinion is mine but I believe it's the, I believe it was the NSA.
(38:07):
Wow.
Which is, we call it the no such agency because it's kind of behind the scenes.
But that was a benevolent gesture then to allow the internet to.
Yeah I think the NSA was taken over by some really, really good people.
Okay.
Who loved, who love humans, who love America, who love Zaire, who love Iran.
(38:28):
They love all people and see that's what people are not getting in today's day and age.
We the people is not an American thing.
We the people means that if you're in Chad and you're the president or the premier or
the, the king of Chad, you should be taking care of your people.
Your people are we the people.
(38:50):
Yeah.
Of Chad.
Yeah.
Or Germany or Australia.
Every country should take care of their people.
And so what we're seeing now is this, and you won't know this unless you research it
but there's behind the scenes this military alliance.
It's been in place since before 2010.
And it's about bringing forth goodness in the world and getting rid of the dastardly
(39:13):
people who have literally lied, cheated, steal, pillaged, raped.
I love that.
Good.
Oh yeah.
And you'll see this is happening.
So what I will say is for listeners is do your part locally.
Take care of your family.
Take care of your people.
Love the people who are around you.
Work from a position of abundance, not scarcity.
(39:35):
Right.
Try to grow things and do things and amplify the life affirming, amplify the things that
bring joy and goodness and happiness.
And if there's something that has got a deleterious aspect in your life, deleterious.
It's a great word.
Something that it's not good takes away from or deletes.
Okay.
Something that is negative or deletes.
I don't know if somebody can depletes.
(39:58):
It removes something maybe.
If something's got a deleterious effect, that means it takes away from.
Right.
If something serves you, then let it resonate and share it with others.
If it doesn't, then let it pass you by.
Yeah.
What we've learned from the farm by working here on the farm is you can work from abundance.
(40:19):
How many seeds are in a watermelon?
Well, I don't know, over a hundred?
I don't know.
How many watermelons are in a seed?
Yeah.
Right.
So, when you think about abundance, and like Robin right now, our kitchen counter, we've
got several types of basil that went to seed.
These are wild basil.
She's got like 15 types of basil.
(40:41):
And do you keep the seeds?
Yeah.
Well, we replant from seeds and from cuttings.
And then do you keep the seeds?
Because you can keep a seed in a drawer for 4,000 years and you could plant it and apparently
it'll be fine.
So, how are we keeping seeds is quite important.
Yeah.
What we do is we give them away.
Yeah.
We give away so many plants and everything.
That's lovely.
We just give them to people and tell them, put them in the ground.
(41:02):
The bees love this.
Stick it in the corner of your...
So, if I get a load of watermelon seeds from you, I can just plant a seed every hundred
yards right down your road when we leave and then we'll have watermelons growing on the
side of the road.
Technically, you could do that.
Totally.
And then the animals and the squirrels would have something to eat and they wouldn't come
and steal your pineapples.
Well, the cantaloupe...
The cantaloupe was...
The cantaloupe that we just ate two days ago, I just ate a cantaloupe.
(41:23):
It was a volunteer.
We call them volunteers because we take our...
They self-seed.
We take our food scraps and put them around our banana trees.
Yeah.
And so the soil gets really rich.
Nice.
But then something will grow and we have tomatoes growing under...
Oh, I love that.
Ad hoc and unexpected.
It's so beautiful.
It's just the world saying...
And you really enjoy it when you eat it.
Oh, totally.
It's so delicious.
(41:44):
Because this got its way into creation.
Well, it wanted to be here.
Yeah, exactly.
This cantaloupe wanted to be here.
It wanted to bring me joy and happiness.
And so I took its babies, its seeds, and I scattered them all over.
And I got a Johnny Appleseed.
Well, that's wonderful.
I want to thank you for the beautiful book.
Oh, yeah.
That will be good.
Sarah brought me another book on natural medicine.
Yeah.
And also a beautiful gown.
(42:04):
Thank you.
Yes.
Let me know how it looks.
It's going to look really nice.
So I have...
My sister is getting married for the third time.
Oh, is she?
And she's super happy.
Do you like her boyfriend or her fiance?
I like everybody.
Yeah.
I rest...
Apart from your neighbor.
Well, I love my neighbor.
No, I know.
I'm just busting my...
I truly love him.
I'm just using compassion for him because when you're in a marriage that's like 50 plus
(42:26):
years and your spouse is really, really negative, that bleeds over into your life.
I don't know how people stand that.
So he owns it.
He's the one that married the lady, but...
Were you married for better or worse?
Right.
And so...
But he's going to live loads of lifetimes.
He's going to be reincarnated.
Yeah, he can come back and do it again next time.
Jesus.
Maybe learn your lesson.
(42:47):
Yeah.
She'll come back as his daughter next time.
Oh my God.
There's a piece of work.
I just love everybody the same and if they don't resonate with me, that's okay.
Yeah, that's fine.
I just want them to be happy.
Yeah.
And if their happiness does not include me, that's okay.
Yeah.
That's all right.
I think one of the things that I've learned not to do is take things personally.
(43:09):
It's nothing to do with you.
It's nothing...
It's not your fault.
This is...
And for me, it's like, well, what have I done?
Am I not this?
Am I not that?
I've grown out of that.
I mean, I don't do that now, but I used to.
And I used to think I'm the problem.
And then I had to give myself a good talk and it's like, fuck, you're not the problem.
You're fine.
That's so good because last week I had this girl that she was paralyzed by what people
(43:29):
think.
Yeah, it's terrible, isn't it?
God.
She was totally paralyzed and I said, okay, girlfriend, come here.
We're going to talk about this.
I said, first of all, you take all this stuff personally.
You're so concerned about what people think.
Spoiler alert, most people don't think.
They literally...
Like you were talking earlier about the value of thinking and managing your thoughts and
(43:49):
focusing your thoughts and such.
Most people don't even give a thought to their own thoughts.
No, they're just caught up in thought forms.
They pass a bulletin board or a billboard or some TV commercial and they're instantly
moved.
Their thoughts are moved in that direction.
And so most people don't think.
(44:09):
The second part to that is...
Think critically.
They're always thinking.
They're caught up in thought forms or out of reality will distract them.
But you're talking about critical thinking.
Well, I'm talking about thinking in general, like in terms of focused, coherent energy.
Critical thinking.
The second thing is when they do think, they're almost always thinking about themselves.
(44:30):
I mean, I'm being brutally honest.
Most don't think.
The ones who do think are almost always thinking about themselves.
So the odds of them thinking about Sarah...
Yeah.
Don't flatter yourself.
Don't flatter yourself.
They're not thinking about anything.
And if they do, they're thinking about them, not you.
So if you want to wear those socks with those shoes, do it.
(44:53):
Good.
If you want to wear...
That's good advice.
And you gave this to her.
I hope that shook her out of her solitude a bit.
And you know what?
It actually brought her relief.
That's good.
And I told her, I said, you know what?
No matter what you wear, no matter what you say, no matter what you do, I love you unconditionally.
You're okay just like you are.
So set yourself free.
(45:14):
Did you used to think this way when you were five or three or seven?
No.
So you've learned...
This is a learned response.
It's not natural to be so hyper concerned about what other people think of you.
Let it go.
Let it go.
Be yourself.
And when you're yourself and you let your beauty resonate, it attracts people.
(45:36):
People come to you because they want to be by you.
Right.
Because you have something that they want.
Yeah.
They want to be true.
They want to be...
Free and resonant too.
Good.
That's great advice.
You're good advice.
So let's wrap up.
Any closing thoughts about today, but also for people who want to know how to find your
works.
(45:56):
Okay.
So my novel, The Star Side Prophecy is free on YouTube.
The Star Side Prophecy, Sarah Thierry, listen to that.
That gives a breakdown of what I believe the nature of reality to be.
And then I've got, Is This the Best God Could Do?
Which breaks down Christianity and why I believe the God is not separate.
And I have The Mirror World.
I have a load of books which are interesting.
So feel free to go online and nothing else today.
(46:19):
Next time I want to talk to you about the Light Age Church of Transformation, I had
some thoughts about that.
I want to hear about you too.
You also have an audio.
Like you recorded one of your books.
Yeah.
That's the one that's on YouTube.
So tell me about...
That's The Star Side Prophecy and that's on YouTube.
So they can find that on your channel on YouTube.
Yes.
Sarah Thierry.
Okay.
Thank you, dear.
We'll see you next time.
(46:39):
Thanks for stopping by.
Soul Decodes, a feature presentation, airs every Friday on the Earth Angel Media Network.
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