Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:02):
And actually, things are a lot more simple than that.
The more common sense we have though, and what does common
sense mean? It means not just using your
vision, but using your touch, your taste, your smell, and your
all of your 5 senses and even your sixth sense, which is
(00:22):
basically the accumulation of all of them together when you
have them all together. That's common sense.
Yeah, that's true. And how often do we do that?
We we just think with the brain and the brain can't feel like
that. Cornerstone technique doesn't
depend on the brain you hold andyou feel now a child.
(01:02):
Aloha and welcome to another show, guys.
Today, we're embarking on a profound exploration into
nutrition, Wellness, and the hidden truths of health with our
esteemed guest, Adam Bergstrom. A pioneer in holistic living and
nutrition, Adam Bergstrom bringsdecades of expertise and insight
(01:23):
to our discussion. As a prolific author and
renowned expert, he has illuminated the intricate
connections between diet, health, and longevity,
challenging the conventional wisdom and revealing deeper
truths. In this enlightening
conversation, we delve into a wide range of topics, from the
(01:43):
role of salt and sugar in our diet to the wisdom of common
sense in gardening. And thank you, all of my amazing
listeners, for your unwavering support and dedication to this
community. We've hit a remarkable milestone
of 5400 followers, and I want toexpress my deepest gratitude to
(02:07):
each and everyone of you. As we dive in today's episode, I
want to encourage you to follow,subscribe, and leave a positive
review on Apple Podcast or your preferred podcast platform.
Your engagement fuels our growth, attracts incredible
guests, and ensures these vital conversations reach more people.
(02:31):
Remember, you can also support this show directly by donating
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(02:57):
There is no charge for Patreon. Donation is always appreciated.
All right, that's enough for me guys.
Let's dive into this mind expanding conversation with Adam
Bergstrom. Enjoy the show.
Maybe good to go? I think so, Mr. Boogie Woogie,
it says. Mr. Boogie Woogie, do you want
that to say that? That's that's OK.
(03:21):
They used to call me Professor Boogie Woogie the Aces.
Did they really? Face they did ring her 6 foot
one and full of punda, voodoo, hoochie, coochie man on the
coaster, tight rats etcetera. I had all this wrapped down one
time. That's funny.
That's too funny. So are you still?
You wrote a what? I'm sorry.
(03:42):
Go ahead, you tell me. Oh, I just said I wrote a slang
dictionary back in the day. I've been obsessed with slang
for a long time. Slime.
Slang. Slang.
Yeah. Yes, that's why you wrote that
dictionary, right? Yep, I sent away for something
called a beatnik lexicon. So when was it you got 1961 or
(04:08):
something like that and copied afew words down and it led to
more? So now I don't go to movies or
watch any show without a pencil to write down slanging top terms
and things been a habit for a long time.
Wow, that's pretty cool. Are you still in the same place
that you were? Still aren't.
(04:30):
We're in the in process of moving, finding a place, that
kind of thing. Yeah, we'll, we'll see what
happens here. We're things are looking good.
OK. So you haven't.
You haven't tied down to one place yet.
You haven't figured which one togo to or where.
Well, we might, but but we'll see before I before I spout off
(04:55):
about it, you know, we might notbe going there, right?
And, and we've got some other plans too.
We've got some big possibilitiesthat could happen, but they're,
you know, they're they're speculation.
Yeah, we could have some really good things happening.
Also, we're going to start a think tank, which no.
One has the. Health food think tank, you
(05:16):
know, like the Democrat against the Situations and all these
other places that they have the Hudson River Institute, all
that, but we're going to start one for health and convivial
therapy and convivial meaning it's easy access for simple
people that the Amish can do it.We don't need technology.
All you need is your hands and common sense.
(05:39):
Wow, OK, that's awesome. And when will that start?
Well, it's really started, but it's phantom right now.
We we would like financing because if we get financing we
can really change things. Things are made like Rube
Goldberg machines, You know, themore complicated you can get it
(06:01):
and it's really simple. Like health is really simple.
It doesn't boil down to geneticsand all those things.
They want to make it that. The tech Bros want to make it as
complicated as possible. So you have experts.
It's like cars. When I was going to high school,
I could work on them with a wrench.
Now I'm going to interfere with some computer chip and knock it
(06:25):
out. I could change my oil, I could
change my wheels. I could change simple things.
Now, I wouldn't even dare to try.
They don't even give you a capable Jack and see when you
have things that you can do yourself.
That's convivial. And they don't make it
convivial. They want to make it.
We're an expert. You have to see somebody or get
(06:48):
something from a foreign land ora foreign place or far away.
They don't want you to live locally off the grid in other
ways than just electricity and information and health and
whatever. They want you to consult an
expert. And most health and other
environmental things are common sense.
(07:12):
They're not critical thinking, they're just common sense.
That is true. And I think even I heard someone
talking about, you know, the medical terms.
It's Latin, but it's basically, they make it sound so
intelligent, you know, but it's really, when you break it down,
it's something so simple and it's not, you know, I can't even
(07:36):
think of a word, Arthritis, you know, something like that.
It's inflammation of your your bones.
But it sounds so genius. Even arthritis, stiff joints,
you know, they don't tell you the real problem.
And then they give it somebody'ssyndrome, you know, like
Asperger's syndrome. And then they have a Latin name
(07:58):
for that, and then they have other names.
And you get lost. And it just means you're losing
your mind, you're losing some brain cells.
Yeah. And that's true, by the way,
most of that is caused by omega-3 fatty acids, serotonin,
some things like that, nitric oxide.
And all you have to do is take sugar and you can get some of
(08:21):
that back. Like Jay, what's his name from
the Today show. His wife has got dementia now
and bunch of sugar. She could recover some of her
some of her mind brain. Actually, the mind is fine.
It's the brain that's the transmission point between the
(08:43):
mind and the environment. Right.
I I think you, our brains, they need sugar, don't they?
Definitely, definitely. Fat burns in a fire of sugar,
they say. And that's true.
They want to make it like you want to be keto and all of that,
but actually sugar is the healer.
You can actually, you can't absorb minerals without sugar.
(09:06):
So if you're taking minerals without sugar, they're just
going in the toilet or in the wrong places where they're, you
know, just because we put something in our mouths does not
mean it's going to go to the right place.
People think I put magnesium on my mouth, it's going to go to my
liver or wherever I want it to go.
How do you know that? They just speculate on that.
(09:28):
And often it does not go to the right place.
It goes to the wrong place because of the time they're
eating it, because of the the way they're eating it, etcetera.
There's a lot of etcetera you're.
Right, that's true. Is there a best place or time to
eat sugar? It depends on the growth zone of
(09:51):
the sugar like if you have palm sugar or you have date sugar
morning. If you have cane sugar midday.
If you have beet sugar night time.
It depends on the zone like is it a tree?
Is it a vine or is it a root basically.
And that determines it now because all beet sugar is is non
(10:15):
GM is GMO. We just eat cane sugar and it's
not too bad choice because we totally refined sugar.
It just Cho. Just like when you when you buy
vitamin C, you just want vitaminC.
You don't want pollutants or other nutrients in it that you
don't know about. So we just get the plain sugar
(10:38):
Cho. That's all that's in it.
Everything, including the glyphosate, is filtered out of
refined sugar, so it will have to do in our civilization as it
is. Is there 1 sugar substance
better than another? Like how about honey?
Is that better than sugar? Honey's good again, it
(11:01):
determined. It's determined by growth zone.
Tupelo sugar is a good sugar because it comes from the Tupelo
tree and it's mostly fructose, and fructose has got a bad name.
But actually you cannot procreate without fructose or it
would be very difficult. And also the liver's primary
(11:23):
fuel is fructose, not glucose. Wow, so what's the difference
between sorry, fructose and glucose?
Well, glucose is actually the type of sugar that we usually
run on, and they give you that in the hospital.
But long term use of glucose canhave actually be
counterproductive. But sucrose divides into glucose
(11:47):
and fructose and works out better.
So you give a person sucrose, just plain cane sugar or beet
sugar or whatever in the hospital.
You can save their lives. Often because it works on shock,
it can prevent heart attacks. It can prevent cancer, it can
(12:07):
prevent a lot of things. And of course they tell you
sugar causes cancer and feeds onit, but actually cancer eats
anything we eat because it's an isoparasite, meaning it's an
evil twin. It's us of only us going on
strike or become a rebel. It's like a union where they
(12:29):
they don't you, you won't give them any work.
So they go into constructing a construction company of their
own inside your body. Interesting.
What about dark chocolate? Dark chocolate is actually good.
Yeah, it's a good chocolate. And that's morning.
It's a. Morning.
(12:51):
And you get sugar in it and you get other nutrients in it too
that are very helpful for the brain.
Yeah, but it also has caffeine in it.
Is caffeine good for you? Yes it is.
It's an anti cancer ingredient. In fact it's the major anti
cancer ingredient in tea, like even Lipton tea or coffee.
(13:13):
But they don't tell you that because it's too simple and they
don't want you to think simple. See they blame sugar.
When if you look at a candy bar and you see 40 and 40 chemicals
that they have added to it, thatexplains my sugar.
Before we ate plenty of it and didn't get obese.
And now you eat sugar with all those new chemicals in it, and
(13:36):
you get obese. Interesting, so if we just had
sugar in tea it would be healthier than obviously a candy
bar without all that other. Exactly.
Now I put sugar on everything. I put it in my avocado, I put it
in my coffee, I put it in my lunch, I put it in my potatoes,
(13:57):
I put it in everything and I'm still alive.
Right. How much sugar, right?
He drank Coke, doesn't he? Or he.
Even getting his type of sugar, which is high fructose corn
syrup, keeps them alive. Well, other people look how many
health gurus die because they avoid sugar and they do things
(14:20):
they leave in their 60s, seventies, and some make it to
the 80s and they don't make it past there.
Now I've made a lot of mistakes in my life, so I'm lucky to be
here at 84. Wow, I didn't know you're 84
because I was a A. Health guru, but I retire from
that profession now. I'll give health advice, but.
(14:45):
So do you, have you changed yourideas back from, I don't know,
maybe the 70s, eighties to now? Have you learned a lot?
Definitely. I believed in in supplements and
things like that, especially when I first got out of high
school. I believed in but but also food
was there. When I met a Donald Lace Swami
Nitty Gritty, he really convinced me of the value of
(15:06):
food and that vitamins are more like energizers rather than
nutrients. And so after that I went pretty
much on food. I still recommended certain
supplements and I still would, but as medicines, not as ongoing
drugs. The secret of pharmaceuticals is
(15:27):
you don't want to give people a drug that cures them.
You want to maintain them. So a person with a kidney
problem is a lifelong client, you know they so they don't want
cures. They look for maintenance and
really, cures are available. They're very easy to get.
(15:50):
One goal of our think tank, for instance, is that 2.
Let's see how many 2 million people die of cachexia or
wasting syndrome every year. Well, doctors abandoned people
and maybe they give them a drug to help with the pain or
(16:10):
something like that. And actually, by just giving
them sugar and giving them foodsthey can eat, no matter how bad
it seems to be for you, will keep them alive.
One of the reasons we're able tomove is because someone at their
desk gave me basically $20,000 for keeping her alive an extra
(16:32):
year. She was 85 lbs.
She couldn't move. Her friends had to carry her to
the bathroom which she was running out of her body about 20
times a day, perpetually could not move and so I got a hold of
her by e-mail and convinced her to eat sugar and anything she
(16:53):
could hold in her mouth. She went up to 103 lbs, was
doing art again, was going to stores and everything, and just
had a relapse at the end. But she got an extra year of not
only extended life, but quality of life, and that's possible.
And frankly, if we hadn't been going through our own crises
(17:15):
here and I couldn't contact her on a regular daily basis, she
might still be alive today. Unfortunately, fortunately,
excuse me. And and again, we have 2 million
people that their quality of life could be changed once
(17:36):
they're out of the hands of the doctors, it would be easier.
This is an example of a convivial therapy.
You don't need anybody to do this.
You just put it in your mouth yourself.
You don't even need friends if you're mobile enough and the
same the other one is there are 300 up to 300,000 people at any
(17:58):
time in a coma. Well, with, with the cornerstone
technique, you can actually findout if they're brain dead or
not. And there's something that
doctors can't do they they don'tknow if they can get to them.
And also we have ways to bring them back from the coma that
they don't know about. Wow, what is that cornerstone
(18:22):
that you're talking about? The cornerstone technique is you
just simply turn the people's feet and and determine if it's a
man or woman trauma and and for instance, people will ask what
would you do to find out if a person is conscious in a coma?
What questions would you ask? You wouldn't have to ask a
(18:45):
question. You just turn the person's feet
and you say, well, it looks likethey're going to unplug you
soon. And that evil Uncle Fred of
yours, he's going to take over your estate.
Left foot jumps. Now you know two things.
The person is conscious and #2 he doesn't like Uncle Fred.
He has a trauma with Uncle Fred.Wow.
(19:08):
And it's so simple. It's just like this.
You do not need an instrument. You don't do not need a
biofeedback machine or some kindof fancy Internet guru thing.
You're all set by your hands. Your tenant assistants will tell
you the answer. Have you ever done that to
(19:30):
someone that's been in a coma? I haven't had the opportunity
no, but I but I have had people vain sleep and things like that
that have had like they one person when they pretended to go
asleep. I was working on this person's
sister who was had gone crazy and I turned her feet and I
(19:53):
said, for instance, this person is taking sleep and then the
left leg jumped meeting me and she suddenly woke up and said I
want to go home. I want to go home.
Let me out of here. And I told the sister, you know,
you're the one that should get the the treatment because she's
taking advantage of you. She's being it's a fake insanity
(20:19):
and a certain amount of insanities are fake.
I see. I see.
So we talked about how importantsugar is.
What about salt? Is that something important in
our in our diet? Very important.
It can prevent a heart attack too and it can bring a person
out of shock. Yes, enough for taste.
(20:41):
It varies between people. If it tastes too strong for you,
but then it's no good If it tastes just right, it's the salt
of life. Salary comes from it.
We get it. It's a very important and of
course they want to tell you that salt raises blood pressure,
right? In some cases it does, but most
cases it doesn't. And you can usually tell you
(21:03):
take your you take your blood pressure before and after eating
salt. In most cases it reduces blood
pressure. The other way is just some
people have that and it really needs to be examined on a really
thorough level, but there's no money in it.
They want they want money in drugs for blood pressure not
(21:24):
simple salt, because it's so easy to get.
Yeah, I know that when people get a heart attack or if they
get an emergency situation wherethe ambulance come or you have
to go to emergency room, a lot of times the doctors or the
nurses will put that salt, saline in your, you know,
(21:44):
intravenously in your vein. And I believe that one bag of
saline has like 9000 grams. Is it It's a lot of salt.
That saline solution is a lot ofsalt.
I can't remember if it's milligrams or grams, but it's a
lot of salt. And if somebody's having a heart
attack or something else, why would they do that, right?
If it's if it's bad for you, butthey're but they're putting that
(22:08):
in you. You can revive a person at home
by putting salt in their mouths too.
It gets there. Interesting.
Definitely gets there quickly and salt can prevent a heart
attack. Yawning and stretching salt and
sugar and so many heart attacks would be prevented.
That's interesting. So for the I forget, I just lost
(22:35):
my my training of thought there.But what about magnesium?
Is that really important too? No.
No. No, everybody's in.
No magnesium. Magnesium.
You can get magnesium everywhere.
If you eat Whole Foods, even junk food, you can get
magnesium, but it's but if you eat Whole Foods and particularly
(22:58):
solar morning, noon and night, then you get all the magnesium
you need and then some. And without sugar, you can't
absorb that magnesium anyway without salt and without other
things or direct it where you wanted to go.
Magnesium has can be can result in techni if you get too much,
(23:19):
but but if you eat Whole Foods, you're going to get plenty.
There's no way now people take magnesium baths.
It doesn't absorb to the skin but they think it does.
And placebo effect. Oh I feel so great after I took
my magnesium bath what are you talking about?
But it's placebo. In fact, almost everything is
(23:40):
placebo. That's interesting.
Yeah. Yeah, I heard of the.
One of the things I've discovered recently is I I was
into Satya Sai Baba. You've probably heard him.
The guy with the Afro and the orange robe.
(24:01):
A guru that walked around. Well, at.
What time I didn't realize how many miracles he he did.
And I got into him because the girlfriend of mine was into it.
So she took me to the meetings and everything and I got
interested. I read some of the books and
found them really interesting. And then I met a man named Al
(24:24):
Drucker, who if you, I'll actually send you the video
because Al Drucker, when I met him and he told his story of how
his cancer was cured. It was the most remarkable story
I'd ever heard and that Sai Babaknew about it and actually gave
him the the cancer to take on for Gregory Bateson, the famous
(24:51):
anthropologist who at once time was married to Margaret Mead and
how preserved his life and then how he was remarkably saved by
it. So I wrote a book called
Mesmerism and Miracles Were which showed that we live in
(25:11):
kind of a delusion, that we don't have superpowers.
And many people when mesmerized have superpowers.
They can heal their cataracts, they can heal things.
Well, Sai Baba has actually one time there was a woman that had
a gallbladder problem and had a cancer and he said don't go to
(25:34):
the doctor, I'll take care of it.
So for 30 years she had no problem.
She didn't go to the doctor and finally she got dengue fever,
went to the doctor and they examined there was no trace of
any cancer after 30 years. But then they said this woman,
your wife doesn't have a gallbladder.
How? How could that be?
(25:55):
And she was diagnosed then with gallstones is what they wanted
to remove the gallbladder. Now mysteriously, her
gallbladder had disappeared without an operation or surgery
and there was no gallbladder andshe was living fine without a
gallbladder. Those are the kind of things he
did. And another thing he did was he
(26:17):
could, he could through his hands produce what's called
babuti, which is sacred ash. And he could bring, he could
bring on pounds of it at a time.And people who had photographs
of him, the babuti would appear in the in the frame.
Now, I had a good friend who hadAIDS and she was, was at
(26:41):
Muktananda's successor. I do not remember her name right
now in Fallbrook, New York. And she noticed friends of mine
who had seen Sai Baba had some Bibuti they got directly from
them. We emailed, we, we mailed by
post office some Bibuti to her and she called me up and said
(27:07):
what is that ash you sent me? Because I found out that the
surety Sai Baba, the predecessorto the Sathya Sai Baba was in
the line of Muktananda. And so I took a picture of
Muktananda, put it under my pillow and it was full of that
Gray ash. So and one and more than a few
(27:30):
people have said, I know how he does that.
He has a tube down his sleeve and and he just produces the ash
like that. Well, on both of those people,
Sai Baba walked up to him, rolled up his sleeve and
produced the ash all over into his hand.
So how do you explain these things?
(27:52):
He also there are so many miracles he created.
If you see the AL Drucker videos.
And have you heard of Isaac Tigret, who founded the Hard
Rock Cafe in the House of Blues?No.
Yeah. Anyway, he was a initiate too
and Sai Baba has saved his life from going over.
(28:15):
He went over. He was drunk at one time when he
was Hard Rock Cafe in. He said his other St. besides
Sai Baba was was Jimi Hendrix. He went over the side in Malibu
of a 60 foot Cliff. The car was squished, but he
walked out totally unhurt. He didn't even have, he didn't
(28:36):
even have a scratch on him. And he claimed that Sai Baba
appeared in the car with him andprotected him.
So anyway, there's these storiesthat if you just heard a few of
them, they would be hard to believe.
But on the Internet there are hundreds of accounts of people
who have similar amazing storiesof how Sai Baba has basically is
(29:02):
an avatar who comes to balance the karma of the age.
I'm not a guru follower. I'm not going to go kissing
Guru's feet and everything, but it's really very difficult to
explain this person. If you look at his entire
history and that he could affectpeople enough that at puja party
(29:24):
where he lived, he would have asmany as 2 million people attend
his birthday party, obviously. And and people have tried to
disprove him and couldn't they claim they do and then and then
they go and for direct contact and can't.
So anyway, it's a, it's pretty amazing stuff and it validates
(29:49):
so that we basically are living in the Matrix just like we have
these superpowers, we're told wedon't have them and we're
acculturated by our culture and civilization that we're helpless
individuals and can't do anything without them.
And one of the things is that wecan do now having superpowers
(30:13):
takes a very strong mind, like for mesmerism with mind hacking,
anybody can do it. In fact, a child, if you can tie
your shoelaces, you can do mind hacking because it's easier.
You just have to hold 2 feet, ask a question and if the left
foot jumps is a male trauma and if the right foot jumps it's a
(30:35):
female trauma. And every disease.
Please. I've never found an exception to
the rule yet is caused by a WHO,not by a WHAT.
It's always associated with a WHO in some way.
You clear up The Who and you canhave miraculous cures.
And yet it is so simple and medical science refuses to
(30:59):
acknowledge it. Well, yeah, there's no money in
making that. They'd rather sell you these
chemotherapy or whatever they want to call it radiation.
And I forget there's another onenow with that they're trying to
sell. Yeah.
And The funny thing is, chemotherapy is just a counter
shock. You could get stung by bees and
get cured of cancer. I heard about that.
(31:22):
Yeah, and you could even get being an automobile accident.
Whatever the counter shock is, is what it is.
So chemo, they make it out like it is a therapy specific, but
it's a general therapy. That's why it works sometimes
and doesn't work other times. My friend Judy Utley, I've told
you about had spinal cancer, breast cancer, liver cancer,
(31:44):
cancer, every place. The doctor said, how are you
even living to walk in the office?
And she had a counter shock by having zinc burn a hole in her
back about 8 inches across and it cured her completely.
For nine years she lived. I'm not, I'm not even sure what
she finally died because I was only in semi contact with her
(32:09):
after eight or nine years. If a person, I was going to say,
if a person is pretty healthy, how long can they live?
What's that? You know, I think we can't go
beyond 120. I think a lot of people have.
The Shiva pure Ababa apparently lived 129 to 139.
(32:34):
Master Chen who I've studied with had a guru that lasted to
100 and 29130 in Chinese terms because they count from
conception, not from birth, so so yes.
And Ray Pete has reported possibly cases as long as 140
(32:55):
and 150. Even on the Internet they have a
possibility, but because they don't have a birth certificate,
they can't acknowledge it. But it's to their advantage to
make us phase out as soon as possible.
The hospital system is now basically a like in the movie
with Charlton Heston and Edward G Robinson, where you go to die.
(33:20):
It's not a place to live anymore, it's a place to to die.
Yeah, I know. It's kind of scary.
Yes, if it when people stay at home, it's like the whole COVID
thing. If people had just stayed at
home it would be a lot more survival rates.
Exactly, I think that respiratory thing didn't help
(33:42):
them. No.
In fact, if they had carbon dioxide, it would have saved
lives. They knew that back in the 1930s
they rediscovered carbon dioxidetherapy and it was an almost
100% cure for pneumonia. Wow.
Why don't they use it now? Pneumonia is a common way of
(34:05):
dying in the hospital. I have friends who have died
from pneumonia, quite a few of them.
And if they're only known to do is carbon dioxide, even bag
breathing if you can't do anything else, it would have
saved their lives. Sugar would have too, because it
provides carbon dioxide. That's it.
Yeah, that's one of the things even even if you, you know, the
(34:28):
giant pumpkins and everything that farmers grow, they put,
they put sugar on it. That's how they do it.
And if you have an orange tree that's in a foggy zone and it
doesn't have enough sugar to complete from the photosynthesis
from the sun, because the photosynthesis makes it sugar.
You just pour sugar on it and then it will make the fruit that
(34:50):
it wouldn't have made because itdidn't have enough sun.
So when they go and darken the sun, we'll just put sugar on the
food and sabotage all this nonsense they're going to do by
dimming the sun. That's interesting.
I didn't know that I have AI have a citrus tree and it
doesn't, it has never flowered or blossomed.
(35:12):
So I I don't think it can produce fruit yet.
It's not a it's not a very big tree.
Plus I have what do you call those, those butterflies that
come and eat them? It's, Oh my gosh, it's the
swallowtail, the Asian swallowtail.
So they're, they're the big green butterflies and they love
(35:33):
citrus trees, or at least the lime trees that I have.
They they'll eat it. So they eat all the leaves.
So it's constantly going into shock.
My tree, it's like it, it's bareand then it'll come back and it
keeps going back and forth. But maybe if I put sugar, what
is it? Sugar water.
You might try it. Just sugar.
(35:53):
Water, yeah, and just. Spray it on.
Spray it. Spray it on the leaves.
Yep, there's a man called Gary Matsuoka.
I'd suggest watching some of hisvideos.
He does a weekly class on YouTube every week and he knows
most about it. Especially soil.
We think soil is for food to eat.
(36:16):
No, that's for the stuff on top.The dead stuff goes on top.
The soil is pure sand or quartz.In fact, the space program grows
all their food in space on spun glass because it's light.
Oh my. Well, I didn't know that.
You know, that's the the the purpose of ignorance that they
(36:40):
tell us all these things. So I believed all that that you
needed compost and all that kindof permaculture things until the
reason is fertilizer business. The fertilizer business is huge.
Just think if all you had to do is grow your food and sand and
(37:02):
then let the leaves of the plantfall down on the soil and that
is enough for compost. No other compost is needed the
leaves. And if you have some extra
leaves from the tree next door, put that there too.
And that so-called soil depletion is actually the plants
(37:23):
do not like growing on their dead relative.
That's why you rotate crops, notbecause of nutrition.
Like, how would you like it if you went in the kitchen?
You have a fish there, OK, You have beef there.
OK, But what if your Uncle Phil was lying in the kitchen dead?
You wouldn't like it. Plants are the same.
So they sometimes they call it replant syndrome.
(37:45):
A tree may not regrow. Like if you take an apple tree
out and put another one in, it won't grow unless you sterilize
the soil or dig all the soil outand put new soil in because it
doesn't want to grow on it's dead relative.
That is interesting. You know, just recently I, I
(38:06):
noticed, so on my roof, I guess the wind has been blowing a lot
and there's still sand particles.
So it, and I know that's a, that's bad 'cause it's like
chemicals from the roof. But a lot of those sand blew
over onto my pot that I had outside and my plants was
growing like crazy out there, but I didn't wanna eat it
(38:28):
because I'm like, it's from the roof, you know, so I'm not gonna
eat it. So I, but I had ginger.
My ginger was huge. It was amazingly big and, and
more than half of that soil in there was the sand that came
from the roof that got blown down over maybe the month or
(38:50):
two, you know, which just kept blowing down.
And incredibly, my ginger grew really amazingly big.
I couldn't believe it. So, so recently when I just got
some new plants, I actually put,I actually bought sand and I put
a bunch of half sand and half dirt and I mixed it in there and
(39:10):
my plants are doing amazing. Just with sand and that's all.
Just from sand, Yeah, I didn't know that.
I only knew that because of my roof was falling apart and
blowing over. From the 1980s they started
telling people, academia did that you need compost, you need
(39:31):
that to grow in and you have to mix it into.
The soil? Yep.
Actually in the in the plants, it doesn't kill, it makes them
smaller. So Gary Metsoka will get
blueberries that are like twice as big as anybody else's
blueberry. And some plants are so
sensitive, like English lavenderwill die if you.
Put it in. Compost other ones like tomato.
(39:54):
Tomato was bred to grow in steermanure.
It can grow any place and a lot of gardeners to prove their soil
which is really compost works. They grow tomatoes in it.
Well, tomatoes will grow in anything.
It's meant to grow. In compost or any kind of junk,
but compost actually kills because it suffocates.
(40:17):
It causes sewer gas. Like in nature, you don't have
ground up wooden and soft sawdust in the woods.
In fact, when the tree falls over, it could last for 500
years. They have a trunk line there.
Even put a piece of wood in the in your swimming pool and it
won't rot for like for maybe a decade or two or three or four.
(40:41):
And meanwhile you put sawdust inthere, you're going to have a
sore if you go in swimming. And so it's common sense.
But academia doesn't work with common sense, and common sense
is the cure for overthinking. Interesting.
I want So I guess these compost people or I don't know,
(41:03):
fertilizer people. They're like the pharmaceutical
people, they just advertise something so they can make
money, right? Exactly, exactly.
And and they kill plants and so you have to keep buying it and
buying it. And then they blame you.
They say you're over watering. You cannot over water anything.
(41:24):
Look at avocado trees. They're the most susceptible to
to over watering when you use compost.
But yet you can take an avocado and grow it hydroponically.
You can. Can't explain that.
That's true. You put a, you put a big avocado
seed and then water. It lasts forever.
(41:44):
Yeah, you're right. That's true.
Wow. And they never explained that.
And again, it's common sense. It's not academia which will
claim, Oh no, you have to have compost, you have to have
nutrients. The nutrients are provided above
for the plant. But the root needs to breathe
and the oxygen needs to breathe.That's why just like a goldfish,
(42:07):
if you don't change the water togive give the goldfish oxygen,
sing with the plant. If you leave the water out in
the sun, all all the oxygen goesout of the water.
And when you water your plants, they drown just like a human,
because they don't have water. Just like if they don't have
(42:27):
oxygen, just like a goldfish doesn't.
They have to breathe oxygen evenif they're in water.
The plant is no different, and that is not accounted for at
all. Wow.
No, Yeah. That's interesting, Adam.
The most oxygen of all comes from rainwater because it comes
(42:48):
out of the sky. The carbon dioxide comes out,
the carbon dioxide and the oxygen, and so the plants do
much better in rainwater. But also.
But also now actually watering more times actually helps.
But here's Rube Goldberg thinking how the dystrophy, the
(43:09):
dystopian cyberpunk tech Bros think.
OK, if they have a satellite system and they can actually
save 30% on their water bill by watering 18 times a a day in
tiny amounts while computing it by computer, they save 30%.
(43:33):
But what they forget to put up that satellite system and to
operate it, it takes twice as much water to make the
batteries, to drive the trucks back and forth to do all of this
work. And so they're not thinking it
through. They just give you part of it.
They have a saying. Statistics don't lie, but liars
(43:54):
use statistics. That's true.
That is so true. Yep.
And a lot of this is common sense.
It's not critical thinking. You just, you just look at
things like like there's a famous story about the the truck
can't get through the bridge because it's a, you've heard
(44:15):
this one. Right.
Yeah, yeah, they can't get through there.
So the guys should just let the air out of the.
Tires, actually. The kid, the kid says.
Yeah. The kid says why don't you let
the air out of the tires? Yes.
And that's what we need in our system.
You need lots of kids to take over, actually.
Yeah, because they're so innocent, the innocent minded,
(44:36):
they're not corrupt yet. Yes, in fact, an adult is an
adulterated child. Yeah, true.
That is so true. But wow, that is so interesting
about this sand that that is so true.
That is so true. Sand is the best soil.
Now in Hawaii, you have that black soil.
(44:57):
That's OK because that's ash. It's like it's carbon with all
of the oxygen taken out of it. So that will grow just as well.
If you have black soil from other ways from from compost,
not good. But if you have charcoal in it,
no problem. In fact, some.
Of the best. Some of the best soils have like
(45:17):
2% charcoal, makes it black and it grows plants.
Great sand and a little charcoal.
That is true because I, I believe when there is a fire
that charcoal wood will actually, I don't know what's in
it. The minerals I guess from the
fire makes the plant grow better.
So I know like in New Jersey andNortheastern side, they would
(45:42):
have controlled fires to preventwhat typically happens in
California, although it can happen, I think recently kind of
a fire went out of control, but typically it doesn't and that
actually grows the forest betterand thicker after they do that
because of the the fire minerals.
(46:03):
It does. And also here's an interesting
thing. You will have a mono forest in
California, but in the jungle you will have as many as 130
trees growing beside each other.And that's the dead relative
syndrome. When you when when you have a
fire, it sanitizes the ground soone plant can grow and another
(46:29):
one doesn't. Interesting.
Yeah, you know, plants can communicate underground to each
other and to its like when a when a big tree drops its
seedlings down and they have maybe daughters or sons or
whatever you want to call them, they're the seedlings.
They can communicate through underground roots system.
(46:54):
They do, and Aspen forest is actually one tree.
What is that? What's Aspen Porous?
Aspen is just one tree. It's all connect, one tree that
grows and spreads outside. And by the way, they not only
use roots and fungus to communicate.
They use. Both infrared radiation and they
(47:15):
use solicilates as a transmission fluid.
So that's why they couldn't figure out in Africa why all the
antelope were dying and there was a drought.
So the plants, the trees usuallylet the antelope eat them
(47:36):
because they weren't going to kill them.
But there was so little food, the antelope were eating too
much of the trees. So the trees sent out messages
to each other to make a poison to poison all the antelopes, and
all of the antelopes died, and they finally figured out it was
the plants that killed them. Yeah, it's intelligent how they
(47:58):
communicate. I mean, there's no other way for
them to protect themselves but to communicate like that with
the roots. And I remember Fungus, I saw
that documentary on that. It's amazing.
One of the healthiest foods to eat is celery.
But if you have a celery that isattacked by insects, it puts out
(48:20):
a poison that can poison a humanbeing when they eat that celery.
In fact, at one time in the 80s,they used natural selection to
increase that poison, figuring it would be keep the insects off
it. And they killed a lot of people.
It was called exercise induced anaphylaxis.
(48:40):
You would eat one stick of celery, jump on the treadmill
and drop over dead. That's how fast it worked.
And it can still happen under certain circumstances.
But they withdrew to that plant and they put 39 more that were
not GMO. They were naturally bred, and
naturally bred can kill just as much as GMO's.
(49:03):
They don't tell you that either.That's true because they need to
protect themselves, so that's what they do.
Yeah, I get it. They can't run away like we can.
Exactly. Unless you're in The Lord of the
Rings, you know where the trees are marching around.
Yeah, yeah, that's true. What about iodine?
(49:25):
Is iodine bad for us? Yes, for most people now it
actually is an essential element, but we get it through
so many. For instance, it's used to
sanitize dairy, so you get it, and they also use it as food
coloring, so you get so much. There's a increased thyroid
(49:48):
cancer, including in Japan. Now, actually, in northern
Japan, Hokkaido, it's increased because they don't eat as many,
what would you call it? Iodine blockers, glycrogens such
as Chinese cabbage and things like that.
They eat a lot of that there. That protects them from it.
(50:10):
But yeah, you can get thyroid cancer from eating too much
seaweed even, and too much otherfoods.
And in fact, we need a lot less.We shouldn't even be using
iodized salt. I use a salt that has nothing,
No additive, no but nothing at all and no pressic acid.
You will find that in some of it, which is cyanide.
(50:32):
They put cyanide in salt. Why would they do that?
And even sea salt, right? Pete Ruined warned about the
uranium being in in the Celtic sea salt and now it's out on the
Internet. Everybody thought he was crazy
and now it's on Facebook even. Wow, how did he know about that?
(50:56):
You know, he, he was a very goodresearcher.
He researched I, I don't follow all of his beliefs and in fact,
I think he made some mistakes like any researcher, but he got
a lot of hits too. And he saved my life.
Of course, I had yellow fat disease.
That story's been told before over and over, and I still have
(51:17):
it ongoing. I still easy bruise, like on my
hand here from washing a jar. I have to be careful because
I'll bruise myself, but I don't have petechia and where I just
spontaneously bruise without touching anything, I don't have
edema. I don't have all of those things
for 10 years now, and I had edema on and off for 10 years
(51:40):
before because not understandingthat tuna was killing me because
I ate too much. You know, if someone's going to
have a can of tuna once in a while, no problem.
But when you eat it every day and when you're a fanatic about
it, you get into trouble. And, and I was raised on cod
liver oil. That didn't help either.
(52:01):
Is there a way to detox that outof your system?
Because it seems like it's it. It may still be in your system
or. It is unfortunately Lipofusskin
is 3 is lipofusskin, and lipofusskin only comes out when
the cell comes out. So as your cells multiply and
you get new cells, the faster you can do that without getting
cancer of course then the more lipofusskin you can get out.
(52:26):
Most people have about 40% lipofusskin in their cells when
they get to be, they have like 80s like like I am.
And they used to think well, it was just like living in a
crowded apartment or house whereyou have all this stuff and you
can still move around but actually the life of us can can
(52:47):
bite you. It can infect other cells.
They didn't know that till recently.
So it's not good. It's basically contagious from 1
cell to another. And in fact, it's the secret of
aging because you can take a fish or most animals and measure
its life of Buskin and find out exactly how old it is to the
(53:09):
weak sometimes. And how you can do that is they
eat a certain type of diet. They don't eat a variety of
diet. Human beings can do keto, they
can do vegan. And so it varies.
That's why you have some people that seem to age very slowly and
other people are old when they're 50 limping around.
(53:29):
And you have people like like Gypsy Boots and Jack Lalanne,
they don't seem to age the same because they have less
Lipophuskin. It's there are 7 deadly sins of
aging according to Aubrey de Grey and three, maybe even 4 are
(53:52):
involved with Lipophuskin. Wow.
What do you remember what those deadly sins are?
Yes, let's see. One too many cells.
Cancer. Too little cells, you're
cachexia. And the other is lipofuscan in
the mitochondria, lipofuscan outside of the cellular
(54:13):
structure. And the other is glycation,
which is supposed to be sugar damage like on your windshield
wipers, but it's actually involves oil partly and
distorted protein. And let's see #7 or was that
seven? I lost count.
Those are those are the main reasons we age.
(54:35):
And of course, there's tangential things that
contribute to it. But those are the major saying.
Aubrey de Grey unfortunately wants to use drugs to fix the
problem, but he of all people correctly identified that that
those were the causes of aging and that supplements would not
(54:55):
help whatsoever. Other aging people are more
popular because they recommend supplements.
Right. So how would you detox and how
do you stop the aging? How do you stop?
It's not even detoxing because the body will detox itself if
left on its own. So if you eat tree foods in the
(55:19):
morning and you eat vine foods midday and you eat root foods at
night and associate that there is obviously some exceptions to
the rule, your body will detox. Samuel Hahnemann, who came up
with homeopathy, was against detoxing.
(55:42):
A lot of people don't realize that allopathic medicine is
detoxification medicine, he said.
Don't detox, cling correct the cell with a poison meeting
another poison but in exactly the same amount and you will
cure it. Now that's called a thief to
(56:03):
catch a thief and it has validity.
But but sometimes a policeman tocatch a thief is valid, but it's
overdone. Because when you think about it,
when people detox, instead of getting people well and building
the body, it's about, oh, let's sweat it out, let's pee it out,
let's poop it out. Let's even blood let it out.
(56:26):
Let's blah, blah. All these kind of like that is
what allopathic medicine is. If someone says I detox but I'm
against allopathic medicine, they don't understand where
allopathic medicine is because it is detoxification medicine
where you're going to clean things out of your lip, clean
things out of your blood, clean things out of your bladder.
(56:47):
As soon as you're doing that, you're an out path I.
See, so you think that we shouldn't do that?
We should just let our bodies cure itself in.
Some cases we should, but usually if you support the body
so that it can detox, it does a much better job.
Like they have these foot baths and everything.
(57:07):
You're going to detoxify yourself.
Your skin is waterproof. So I don't know how that works
exactly, despite Iconic or whatever they call it, but your
kidneys, a bad kidney is 100 times better than any kind of
foot bath or magnesium soak or whatever you're going to do.
Our body is made to detox and wewant to mess it up by thinking,
(57:31):
oh, let's see magnesium detoxes or this detoxes or that detoxes.
And basically if the chemists don't know what they're doing,
that modern medicine is based onmythology.
There are no receptors. There aren't none of that.
They made it all up and they have these fancy charts.
(57:51):
Looks like they know what they're doing.
If they don't know what we're doing, how is the average person
on Facebook? Aren't the Internet going to
know because they just parrot what they they see and don't
really think about it. In fact, here's a here's a
bulletin for people. They're all happy now because
fluoridation is finally going tobe taken out of the water
(58:15):
supply. But why is it because they have
they can kill you with fluoridation now through drugs,
20%, more than 20% of drugs havefluorine in them to increase
their their effectiveness and it's growing.
They want to put all drugs to fluorinated, so now we're going
(58:37):
to have fluorinated or mRNA drugs.
How happy we're going to be. We're all going to be basically
wiped out. And what about these, I guess
this new drugs that's out the Ozempic that people are taking,
right? Really.
(58:58):
Bad. For weight, well, they're taking
it for weight loss, although it's for diabetic.
Yes, and and also if you, if youread the New York Post, which I
used to check the headlines juston an ongoing basis, amusingly
almost every other day, they hadOzempic forks at this for this.
(59:20):
Also, if you put it all together, it's the everything
drug. So I wonder why are they pushing
it? Because it kills people.
I hate to say it but it's true. You know, even even paranoids
have enemies. Hey Ohana, I hope you're loving
this conversation as much as I am.
(59:42):
I just wanted to pause for a quick moment to ask for your
support. If you're enjoying what you're
hearing and feel like we've earned it, we'd be so grateful
if you could leave us a rating or review.
Your honest feedback really helps us grow and reach more
people who love exploring these fascinating topics.
And if you think this episode would resonate with someone, you
(01:00:03):
know, don't forget to share it with them.
Mahalanui Loa for being part of our journey.
Now back to the show. Yeah, but everyone's taking it.
You know, if it's not Ozempic, it's Ozempic, the generic brand.
We go V or whatever. They all do the same thing.
Right? That.
The, I forget what it's called, the semi gluten kind of drugs
(01:00:24):
that they're taking. There are so many side effects.
You know, AI is our greatest aidnow because the tech Bros made a
big mistake. They made AI know everything.
Well, that means what we know too.
So when you first question it, if you don't know how to
question AI, it will give you the standard answer.
(01:00:47):
But if you ask it in peculiar ways, like I asked, are statins
bad? Oh no, they're good for you.
They do this and that. Then I ask, what are the side
effects of statin? And then they give you
everything from liver cancer to the diabetes to what is it, the
(01:01:10):
muscle deterioration, seizures, on and on the list goes.
So AI, they made a mistake with AI, if people know how to use
it, but they're probably thinking that people are getting
degenerative like in the 2006 movie Idiocracy.
(01:01:32):
They probably think people won'tthink.
If you use common sense, you cantake AI and find out anything
you want now and get behind. Like say I want to find out what
are the toxic ingredients and the Snickers bar.
I couldn't do that before AI. Now it will reveal all of that
if you ask the question, right? It'll tell you anything you want
(01:01:55):
to know about the deep state. Even they have made themselves
totally vulnerable and people don't realize that they they're
afraid of AI and AI is our greatest weapon if we use it
against the tech Bros. Wow, I have to try that with the
the elite like you were saying. What?
What kind of question did you ask?
(01:02:17):
Well you you ask different questions like also different
time of day, it'll give you a different answer.
So I ask you so and so toxic andit'll say no.
Then I ask it is it toxic when you eat food with it?
Or if you is it toxic this way or you ask the same question an
hour later that gives you a different answer.
(01:02:38):
That is crazy. I, I found I, I asked that a
question once and it gave me an answer I couldn't get again
because I think it got wise to what I was doing.
So they also have a policing function in there, but you can
get around that. You just, you have to use AI
like a, a prosecutor. You know how they trick question
(01:03:02):
they they get a person yes or noand then they can only answer
one way. And believe me, I found
everything I want there. Even though it's it's against
the narrative, you can find it. So before they could hide it, it
used to take me a lot more to get behind their defenses.
(01:03:25):
I I had tricks already, but now it's simple.
And in fact any books I write after this now will be done with
AI too, because they're much more eloquent than me.
I'm going to forget how to how to write eventually, but I will
find the correct answers that I that are mine, that are out
(01:03:47):
there. My ideas are out at AI too.
I will find them and they will. They will phrase them better
than me. I'll lose my ability to write,
but I really regard myself as aninformation broker, not a write.
I want to get the information out there to help people at this
point. Love all, serve all.
That's something that Sai Baba goes with, and I agree with
(01:04:11):
that. Yeah, that's true.
Because when I listen to other podcasts or read other books and
people may say something that I'm not familiar with, I will do
my research as well. And AI, just like you said,
sometimes it tells you no, that this drug doesn't do this, this,
this is not that. But if you ask it in a different
(01:04:34):
roundabout way, it will reveal it.
It's like, well, you just told me that it didn't have it in it,
but it does, but because maybe you say it in a different way.
So I was listening to, I won't say his name.
I actually I forget his name, but he's talked about how a lot
of these drugs have venoms in itand they do.
(01:04:57):
I didn't know that. So, but if you just ask AI does
da da da have venom in it? It'll say no.
But if you say what is the enzyme is that you know, and the
enzyme is derived from the venom, it's like, well, it's the
same thing, but it it's being you know, it won't say it
(01:05:19):
exactly, but it will go around about way.
And you know what? I also found out that the word
virus actually meant it. Virus is Latin and the original
meaning from it means poison or virus or venom, Sorry, venom,
venom or poison. That's what virus means, which
(01:05:42):
is really weird. You know, viruses, most viruses
are helpful, yeah. They actually.
Agree. Well, actually the bulk of all
viruses on the planet have no interest in us.
They're thoroughly severed from us.
Then we have the good viruses that help us.
And then of course there are thebad viruses.
(01:06:04):
Now with all this stuff going on, they want to deny viruses
instead of a common cold. Viruses actually often help our
immunity by by helping us. But now they've made it like
denying viruses exist. You know, now they even know
there are giant viruses you can see with a regular microphone
(01:06:26):
microscope. You don't need a a below the
light microscope they have. Interesting.
No, I didn't know that. Yeah, so, but, but in fact, now,
because they have given antibiotics which only kill
bacteria and that they're becoming immune to it, their
(01:06:48):
next step is to take viruses andkill bacteria with viruses.
And by the way, Emmanuel Rivisi explains, if you look at the
periodic table, why a antibioticwill not kill a virus because
the fungus level that they're based on are on the fourth
(01:07:09):
period of the periodic table. The fifth period is the
bacteria, which is vulnerable directly under it, but they
buffer the 6th level, which is where the viruses are.
So if people would study the periodic table and learn it, it
would. You wouldn't need all these
material medicas and everything.You could explain how you can
(01:07:31):
how you can work with the body by simply memorizing the
periodic table, which is a lot easier than these medical books
and everything like that. The periodic table also proves
that we were that we were started life on mud on earth,
not in the ocean. We migrated to the ocean and
(01:07:54):
came back as movable animals dueto the sodium and it's provable
by the periodic table. Oh interesting, I didn't know
that. You know, they, they, a lot of
times they protect their career.Like, have you ever heard that a
comet is an icy snowball? Yes, I have.
(01:08:15):
There's no water in a comet. It's an asteroid.
It's a dumbbell shaped asteroid.And even though in somewhere
back in 2008, the European SpaceAgency landed on an asteroid,
it's a rock with an electrical trailer.
There is no water. You can land on it.
But to to correct their careers or to protect their careers.
(01:08:38):
If you look at Wikipedia, it's anicely snowball.
There's ice on it. There's water.
On it lots. Of water.
It's a total lie, so this is common, though I use this as as
an example of lie after lie after lie.
How can we trust the science? You have to be insane to trust
the science. I don't know why they trying to
(01:09:00):
deceive us. I don't understand that why?
Money. Money usually gets involved in
money. And sometimes I think they just
perverse humor. They love to say I'm tricking
the person. You know, one of the greatest
protectors of, of yellow fat disease and which causes
Alzheimer's and all kinds of things in the mega tree is
(01:09:22):
Monsanto. They've known about yellow fat
disease since the 60s. And also did they use glyphosate
on plants? No, they used it in boilers.
So it's in all of our water too and may still be there.
No one has reported why they that they've stopped using it in
in home boilers and commercial boilers and all kinds of water
(01:09:45):
plants and everything glyphosate.
They put glyphosate and glyphosate is a what did you
call it? Originally it was a boiler
clinger. Now, now it's supposedly it
kills. It kills no matter.
And they're big on it and they still use it.
(01:10:06):
And and by the way, they blame glyphosate on Monsanto.
They lost three. They had three patents on it.
They lost them all. China provides most of the
glyphosate to us now. Maybe we should put a tariff on
the glyphosate. Yeah, I get mad.
I know. Well, China kind of makes
(01:10:27):
everything for us. Our antibiotics, our medication,
all kinds of stuff they do. And most of our additives and
our vitamins and minerals too. They.
Have. That industry is 80% there.
And if you look at the companies, they're like paint
and the paint and vitamin company and things like that.
I mean, it really is humorous because I've, I've gone and
(01:10:47):
tracked a lot of those companiesdown.
What do you mean paint and vitamin company?
They're the same company. Yeah, same company paint, or
they'll have linoleum and nutrient company and things like
that. When I find some, I'll send you
some of the names. It's a hoot.
Oh my gosh, that's it. Wasn't so bad for us.
(01:11:08):
Yeah, that is crazy. Oh my gosh.
I know. They don't Vitamin C.
What did they use to make vitamin C in China?
It's not. It's not what you think it is.
It's something different. I forget now what it is.
The citric acid is something poisonous.
Yeah, well, the truth is you canbuild it out of anything.
(01:11:30):
If you have carbon, if you have hydrogen, oxygen in the lab now
you can make it out of anything with a computer.
So this is one of the things that people don't realize.
You can have a paint on your house that will last for 1000
years. You won't have to repaint your
house. They know how to do this, but
they hide it because it's going to put Sherman Paint out of
(01:11:53):
business. It's going to put them out of
business. They want you to repaint your
house every few years. But they have a way.
There are people called Adam Smith's who have found that they
can change the electron field ofsay, silicon.
They can make silicone as big asa Volkswagen, as big as a
basketball, or as big as a houseproportionally.
(01:12:17):
And by doing that, you get different colors, different
properties, different strengths,and and can mimic other elements
in the periodic table. So you don't need expensive
things like gold. You can make gold or a gold a
fake gold out of silica or out of carbon or out of whatever you
want to. They don't tell us that they
(01:12:39):
have many other secrets. There are a lot more that I
can't even tell because because I'm not allowed to let's.
Put it, Yeah, That's interesting.
Yeah. The electronic field, yeah.
It's just a matter of manipulating that.
So the entire field, the proton and the neutron, to protect
(01:13:04):
themselves, made a field. And so the room they live in is
the electron field. It's their universe.
Now in the periodic table of theelements, this increases upward
like a Russian nesting doll. Once the electron field is safe,
it needs something to live in, so it creates A molecule.
(01:13:29):
It's now an atom and a molecule,so it lives in it.
This is very similar to I'm a person and I need to be able to
feel protected. So I'm in our house in a room
that's protected. Now my house needs protection, I
have a yard, my yard needs protection.
I have a community, a neighborhood.
(01:13:49):
My neighborhood needs protection.
I have a town, my town needs protection.
I have a county, my county needsprotection, I have a state, my
state needs protection, I have acountry, and so on.
The body works in the same way like a Russian nessing dot job
upward from the bottom of the periodic table to the top.
(01:14:10):
The country is at the the top ofthe periodic table the first
period and the individual is the7th period of the periodic
table. Wow.
But do you think any doctor knows this?
No, Nope, of course not. It would that be different than
the chakra? Because that's about the same
(01:14:31):
amount of chakras. I guess you could have more,
but. You know, the chakras work in
several ways. They work from the middle, from
the bottom or the inside of us to the outside.
They work up the spine and they start here and go to the medulla
(01:14:51):
oblongata. This is the ovum's chakra system
and this is the sperm. You notice how the spine is just
a sperm. What they call kundalini is the
sperm swimming. It wags its tail like a red
rattlesnake and like a fish and swims.
So we have different chakra systems and, and there are some
(01:15:13):
other interpretations too. Many of the chakra systems are
overlapping. Like say we're driving across
the country, we have a geologist, A cartographer, a
real estate salesman, and you see the different types of
people going, they're going to have a different interpretation
of what the chakra system are, what the geology is.
(01:15:36):
When they report, a lot of confusion happens out of that
type of of variety. Ultimately, all is 1.
That is true, yeah. That's interesting, yeah.
Variety is for entertainment though.
(01:15:58):
The mind needs to be entertainedand actually things are a lot
more simple than that. But the more common sense we
have though, And what does common sense mean?
It means not just using your vision, but using your touch,
your taste, your smell, and yourall of your 5 senses and even
(01:16:22):
your sixth sense, which is basically the accumulation of
all of them together when you have them all together.
That's common sense. Yeah, that's true.
And how many, how often do we dothat?
We, we just think with the brainand, and the brain doesn't can't
(01:16:42):
feel like the cornerstone technique doesn't depend on the
brain you hold and you feel now a child can feel.
In fact, there was a doctor one time that taught the
biofeedback, Elmer Green, Elmer Green, He taught biofeedback and
one time a doctor phoned him up and said, how come it's taken me
(01:17:04):
8, eight months to learn how to use my brain to control my blood
pressure when you can teach kidsin a day or two, easy, they're
children and you're a doctor. That's true.
We have fixations that we can't do it.
(01:17:24):
But you, you take a child and you teach them and they have,
no, they don't know. It doesn't work.
So actually, that's why Buckminster Fuller was for what
did he call it? Basically simplicity or even
ignorance to a degree. Simplicity was his motto.
(01:17:47):
But we make, we use our brain inways to make complicated Rube
Goldberg machines. If you've ever seen some of
those, you know they just like dominoes and they make
basketball, go through a hoop and then knocks.
It yes. Yeah, that kind of thing.
But that's what most of our science is.
And if people would just sit back and think about it,
(01:18:08):
actually not think about it, feel it, feel, Does that make
sense? Does that make common sense?
And most of it doesn't when you really think about what they do.
Wow, genetics. Are a total scam.
It's like. A.
It's like a. Stage.
Yeah, it's a stage now. It registers.
(01:18:29):
You can tell history. You can't tell Destiny from it
though. Destiny it.
Works both ways and now they usemRNA and they say, well it does
work both ways when we're in control before.
Oh, no, The, the, the sacred, the law of genomics was it goes
one way. And then when Barbara, whatever
(01:18:51):
her name was, came out with jumping jeans, oh, no, her
career is gone. But now they have regenerated
her again because, oh, yeah, yeah, we can control jumping
jeans. You can't.
Which is a lie. Yeah, I mean, I guess, I guess
jeans can work maybe with color of eyes, maybe a height, things
like that, right. But you can.
(01:19:13):
Change that. Even I've seen eyes change color
overnight. Oh wow.
Yeah, see, we put those limitations on it reminds me of
one of those walkabout books. I forget the author.
She went to Australia and did a walkabout and the witch doctor
or whoever told her that you canchange your, you can be sick
(01:19:38):
instantly and you can be well instantly.
So her interpretation of it in the book was, well that means
you can start to be sick instantly and start to be well.
He didn't say that. He said instantly.
Time is not an illusion, but a delusion.
(01:20:01):
Once we know how to use time, wecan surpass those beliefs.
I've had it happen to me now I'mnot in control of it because
it's happened to me and I didn'teven know how I did it.
I still I'm attempting to figureout the times I've instantly got
well. Like a cold.
(01:20:21):
One time I meditated for 10 minutes and my serious cold was
completely gone. And another time I read that if
you deny you have a cold, it will go away.
So I'm at her at a Kinko's, copying things as I often did,
and the lady says, Oh my God, you have an awful cold.
(01:20:42):
I don't have a cold. Then they were afraid that I was
a lunatic, so they kept their distance.
And I kept telling people I don't, I'm not sick.
I went to work at the health food store and my boss says, Oh
my God, you have a serious cold.And I said, I don't have a cold.
And he burst out into laughter. Belly laughed.
(01:21:04):
And my cold went completely awaywhen he laughed, completely
gone. So I've gotten rid of colds in
varieties of ways, and can I duplicate it?
It hasn't happened, but I can give you about five others, but
I'll I'll stop right there. That's funny, you wrote a book
(01:21:25):
about diamond body lifestyle. What is that?
Well, basically it's that we sell ourselves short.
We can live a lot longer than wecan and longer than my
imagination even provides. For instance, if if Sai Baba is
really real, he was here as a shirty Sai Baba, he came back as
(01:21:47):
a Sasha Sai Baba, and he's coming back as Premiseai.
So who knows if this is true. And yet you look at his
miracles, who can say it's not true or not?
And after Donald Lay went on cosmic vacation, he left traces
of roses in various places around, even even as much as ten
(01:22:09):
years later, he's promised to walk through the walls.
But he hasn't done that yet. And I'm still waiting.
OK, so you have, is this like a series of books that you write?
Well, actually the oh, oh that, you know that one.
Basically I did a series of journals and they don't sell
(01:22:33):
because there's no real subject.And now I have certain friends
that want to know the whole science.
I I have one friend from Germanywho buys everything and he's
become a good friend. And we finally met him at the
farmers market here. And he's now seeing another
friend of mine who lives in Idaho, has a farm there and is
(01:22:53):
kind of a prosperity guru tangentially.
And if, if I any book I do from now on is going to be on a
specific subject like mind hacking or whatever, because
that didn't work out too well. But anyway, I do have a complete
library that people can buy it at a certain price and, and
(01:23:14):
support our cause because we need help right now with our,
with our moving and everything. And, and we've been very
fortunate. The people though have been
buying our books. At first, we'd be lucky if we
sold 3 or 4 books a month. And now we're probably selling
at least a book or two a day andgetting donations, which is
(01:23:36):
really nice. Yeah.
And then we have the I haven't mentioned for a while, we have
Sunsink Nutrition too, which is a 99 dollar membership where the
solar as explained, I have 2000 blogs.
We have a color recycling chart where you recycle your brain
through black and etcetera. Oh, here, thank you.
(01:23:59):
Oh, and then solar timing, of course, this is our, this is
where we sell the books. So anyway, people, people, we
have customers now. We have people from Facebook has
helped a lot. Instagram has helped a lot.
And, and we're XX has helped too.
(01:24:20):
So we get the word out and we encourage people to spread the
word. And your show has helped a lot
too. So we thank you very much.
Yeah, I know there's a lot of people that love you, they
really do. They enjoy whatever what topic
you have to to say. Yeah.
(01:24:41):
Yeah, I've a lot, a lot to mouthoff about so.
Yeah, you had mentioned yesterday that you have a lot to
say. Did you say everything you
wanted to say? You know.
No, because we went off the tangent on other things.
I didn't even ask you. What did you want to say?
I forgot what we were going to talk about this time of time.
It always happens. A lot has happened our our think
(01:25:05):
tank. It would really is about
feelings and things like that and simple ideas.
By the way, in puja party where sat guru where where Sai Baba
had his 2 million people turn show up for a birthday party,
what they did is plant trees andnow instead of a hot desert,
(01:25:29):
it's actually a temperate zone that can be done in California.
I don't know how Elon Musk thinks he's going to terraform
Mars when he can't even terraform California because
California can be terraformed. I've written, it's actually in
one of my books called trees where countries before knew that
(01:25:49):
when the when the water stopped flowing, when the rivers dried
up, if they planted trees, all the water came back.
It happened in the desert in puja party and it can happen
here in California. Why we have our droughts?
It's because they cut down the trees and the trees.
When when you cut down the trees, it makes dry trees so
(01:26:10):
that you have desert and now youhave the terrible fires we have
that we didn't have before. And so we can actually terraform
California. That is another think tank
convivial, which means you're incontrol.
That anyone can do. We can put our water outside and
(01:26:31):
let the water evaporate. If everybody in Montecito, for
instance, just Simply put tubs of water outside, there'd be
more water in the air. But plants particularly
evaporate water and and if you leave leaves on the ground, it
makes moisture. Like if a farmer leaves leaves
on the ground, he only has to water about 110th of the time he
(01:26:54):
normally does. When they take those leaves away
and cart them away, they actually need more water and
they take the nutrients away from the plants.
Too many farmers are wise enoughnow don't take the nutrients
away. Like they'll notice the forest
right next to their farm never needs water and it's always wet
(01:27:15):
and damp in there. And now they leave the leaves on
the their own crops and they have no problem on top, though
not in the soil, but on top is fine as as much as 5 feet deep
in avocado orchards, 5 feet deepof just leaves.
Just leave it there. Well, that's funny you said
(01:27:35):
that. I forget his name now, but he is
a, or was I think he's still alive, a farmer from Japan, and
he has big apples. Big dingo.
Dingo is apple, Japanese apples.I forget the name of the apple
now, thinks it starts with an M But anyway he went through a lot
(01:27:55):
of process too, like figuring out how to make my my apples big
and sweet. And so he did many things like
poison right? Putting the fertilizer and, and
spraying poison to, to stop all the bugs infestating the tree.
(01:28:17):
And that didn't help the apple. But he, he did all, all, all
kinds of stuff. But what really helped was to
leave the weeds in its place. Don't pull the weeds.
Just let the weeds grow around the tree.
And he would speak to the tree and talk to the tree and water
(01:28:39):
it. And I think that's pretty much
all he did. And the, the apples are
amazingly beautiful. It's it tastes delicious.
I never had it. They're very expensive, so I
can't order it. But they're big, they're juicy
and they're sweet. And he does nothing.
He just lets it, nature takes its place because nature knows
what it's doing. So he doesn't pull the weeds.
(01:29:00):
He doesn't poison it. He just lets it grow.
And that's that's a secret. I know who you're talking about.
Do you? I don't know his name either.
Yeah. In fact, even Gary Matsuoka.
Yeah, I'm sure. Because he's Japanese, yes.
Knows about him and mentioned him in one of his classes.
Yes. Yeah, he's, he's famous and he
(01:29:20):
really does know what he's doing.
Yes. Most farmers don't.
Well, actually farmers, ironically the ones who have
huge acres no more. They don't put fertilizer fix
their food. They grow them in sand and put
put a layer on top. But they don't tell people but
what they want to do, the commercial farmer, they want to
(01:29:43):
thrive. They don't want the local farmer
or their personal person people growing their food.
They want them to think it's complicated.
So conspiracy or not, that's howit is.
So the gardeners are the ones that spread this.
The farmers got wise because they they couldn't grow a crop.
But but meanwhile the gardeners keep on having to Oh, my tree
(01:30:06):
died. Oh, you over water here by
another tree. Oh, it died again and I didn't
water it this much. Well, that's OK, You must have
done something wrong. Here's another tree and whatever
or plant or whatever. Now in the East, it doesn't make
that big a difference. The plant doesn't die because
you have to grow your food by the time the snow comes or it's
(01:30:29):
dead. So you just get a smaller plant.
You don't get a dead plant in California where you can get 3
crops a year, then they die. So it's more important in
California than back east. But still, even back east,
you'll get bigger plants and more nutrients in them.
Why not? Yeah, exactly.
(01:30:51):
And I can't fertilizer. Yeah, that's true.
Except the leaves. The plant, No, you don't take
you. You take the leaves of the
plant. You can't.
If you take the roots of a dead relative and put it in, it will
die. But the leaves coming down,
that's just food, so it takes itright back into the system.
Usually leaves from a tree will be reabsorbed into the into the
(01:31:16):
tree within about three months. Oh wow, that's interesting.
Now I didn't read the book. My mom read the book because
it's in Japanese. I don't think it's been
translated to English yet. So that Japanese farmer, he was
trying to commit suicide one daybecause he was fed up with all
this. But I think I don't remember the
(01:31:41):
story. I know my mom told me it a while
back and I can't remember if something broke.
So he he didn't commit suicide, but everything in his life was a
failure, a failure, a failure. You know, everything he did he
failed at. So he wanted to do this apple
tree and I believe he had a visitation from aliens or
(01:32:03):
something. My mom said that, like I said, I
didn't read the story, but in this story he said that he had.
I guess there was other people that was there with him when
they were doing the whatever what the aliens do to you.
(01:32:23):
And he said something about that.
He remembered a a lady that likean American lady or an
Australian lady, blonde hair, blue eyes.
And he was watching a show one day and he had saw the lady that
he thought that he was on this spaceship with her or something
(01:32:44):
like that. And she said that she was
abducted and she was up there with an Asian man.
He was like, that was me, but something to do with that.
And I don't know if the if they were the ones who kind of told
him the secret of letting it just be grow and be natural,
(01:33:06):
something like that. I know I'm terrible at the story
because I don't remember the story.
I didn't read the book. My mom read the book.
There are cases like that. There was someone down in Palm
Springs at I think it was calledBig Rock, where all the flying
saucers were supposed to land. Oh wow.
He went down and Howard Hughes wanted them to build an airport.
(01:33:29):
He claims he was contacted by aliens and he and he built a
center that I visited. It's the most amazing place
because you can get in circles and have your voice amplified
and if you're not in the circle,it's not amplified.
So if you were in my circle, youwould hear me like on the
(01:33:50):
microphone. But if I stepped out of the
circle, you wouldn't hear me andall the circles in between.
And yet it wouldn't record on the cassette tape to the voice
quality and that would not work.A very extraordinary place.
Now they have new age that then ruined it.
And so I don't think you can have the access that we did at
(01:34:12):
that time. We got him for $5 a person, six
of us, including Swami Nitty gritty.
So, but there were cases. He supposedly was got learned
how to build the Integratron. That's the name of the
integratron. You can look it up and he got
instructions from aliens how to build it so who knows.
(01:34:37):
I used to pray for aliens to take me away when I was in the
5th and 6th grade. Particularly.
They never did and the most I'veseen.
One time I was driving back to Texas and I'm in New Mexico and
I see a huge green light beamingout of the sky.
Now, if it was a Searchlight, itwould have to be.
(01:34:59):
It would have to be about 200 feet across.
I don't know of any searchlightsup in the sky or in satellite
could be 200 feet across. The green light stayed there.
What? I drove about 20 miles and then
I went behind a hill, of course,and lost track of it.
But to this day, I can't explainhow a giant green light could
(01:35:21):
shine out of the sky. That is my only flying saucer
experience. I saw something something
strange here probably about I think it was 2021 or 22 I think,
but it was a red. It was like an orange and blue
(01:35:46):
ish light that kind of swirled around and it kind of made it
look purpley greenish and it waslike a like an energy ball over
the water. I know and it was very strange.
I was like, whoa, what is that? I thought it was AI thought it
was a helicopter crashing. I thought it was a helicopter
coming down because we do have alot of helicopters going back
(01:36:09):
and forth. But it, it just stood there for
a bit and in fact, it lit up thewhole kitchen area in my house.
That's why I ran to the lanai area, but at the glass door to
see what it what was this glowing light coming in the
house? And I ran out there and I looked
and I saw this ball of of energy, like ball just kind of
(01:36:30):
twisting around. And I was like, Oh my God.
And it's and before you know it,it was gone.
And, and just a blink of an eye and about 20 minutes later, I
smell Ion in the air, which is really weird.
I, I can't explain what it was or what I saw.
Yeah, but it was, it was interesting.
(01:36:52):
Interesting. And, and it could be some kind
of alien presence or it could bea technological thing.
And also, have you heard of Saint Elmo's Fire?
Yeah. What is that?
I have but what is that? It's like a ball of lightning
that a person called John Nordberg has made an entire new
(01:37:13):
theory of the universe and how to use unified field to make
free energy. He's seems to have given up.
I was a big fan of him. I I heard him on radio a couple
times ago against physicists andknew more.
He said you can prove you can prove that the regular laws of
(01:37:34):
magnetics are false by going to RadioShack for $20 worth of
equipment and prove that magnetic magnetism does not work
the way it is. But anyway, Saint Ano's fire
when I was in the phone company,we don't have that kind of
phenomena out here at West. But we heard in the Midwest,
(01:37:56):
there would be a ball of light about 3 feet across come down
the phone line And the phone manwould be on the phone line in a
bucket and would be so afraid hewould jump out and break his
leg. And yet it wouldn't really hurt
the person but but they would light up.
Saint Elmo's fire was named by people on ships because sailing
(01:38:20):
ships particularly headed on themast and airplanes often
attracted to. But according to Don Nordberg,
it explains how the universe works and how we can get energy,
basically 0 point energy out of the universe.
Now he's in a person discouragedbecause he he's in he's in
(01:38:42):
Wisconsin. He just goes hunting and forgets
it all, which is very disappointing.
They do that to to people like that.
Have you heard of John Hutchinson?
The. Hutchinson Effect.
He has an anti gravity machine and I met him when he was on the
Lam from the Canadian government.
In fact, I actually did a session with him and he took
(01:39:03):
solar nutrition workshops for the weekend.
But he invented a anti gravity machine and the government said
that's nonsense. But then Germany and Japan were
bidding to buy the anti gravity machine, so they locked up his
lab and put a warrant on his arrest.
(01:39:25):
And when I met John, he was hiding out in an Indian
Reservation in Bellingham, WA. So see how they discourage
people who were in. Yeah, John Hutchinson.
Now he just works with cheap materials.
So you'll see. It looks kind of like, well, he
raises bowling balls in the air and things like that.
(01:39:45):
But if he was paid money by standard science, he could
change our science. But they won't let him do that.
That's also why John Nordberg isin hiding, because he knows more
than the physicists do. And I've I've heard him go
against standard physicists and just destroy them verbally in in
(01:40:07):
what he knows. Saint Elmo's Fire That's that's
that guy. Yep.
So. It's I I think I'll send you
Nordberg's old website. He also has a YouTube series,
but the guy is a nerd. He needs an agent.
The show is so bad. He his introduction on all I
(01:40:33):
think he has about 30 YouTube videos is 2 minutes long.
The introduction with a clock spinning in big deal.
And then he he's in his tie and he's not a good speaker.
His ideas are fabulous. For anyone who has the patience
to skip through the 1st 2 minutes and listen to the entire
(01:40:54):
videos, you'll learn a lot from John Nordberg.
Wow, is he like a what do you call them?
He believes in electric universekind of theory.
Is that what it? Is, you know, similar.
I think that's partially true. In fact there is a guy out
called Diamond. His first name is David Diamond.
(01:41:18):
His last name, I forget it. He has two sites, Oppenheimer
Ranch project where he gives amazing cosmic weather for the
day daily. We watch it daily and then on
Saturdays he has magnetic reversal news where he goes into
(01:41:39):
Electric Universe ideas. Really.
Yeah, and it's very fascinating.Now some of it I don't know
about. They seem a little too far going
about Venus. Oh yes.
Yeah, all of this kind of things.
Yeah, yeah. But a lot of it's true, and I
know personally that NASA lies about a lot of things.
(01:42:01):
I really. Believe we've been to the moon,
but one time when they were talking about how they could go
to Mars because of polynuclear hydrocarbons, which are on Mars,
and they found it in an asteroidfrom media, a meteorite from
Mars. And I got up, we were invited to
(01:42:22):
ask questions. So one person, one professor
that was an astronaut and three professors, they would answer
your question. So I said, but polynuclear
hydrocarbons are in space. They're floating around the
universe. Four of them attacked me and it
was really surprising. Why are they attacking it?
(01:42:44):
I mean, they stood up and they took turns ranting about that.
I was absolutely false information.
And so so I went to the library at the University of Texas at
Houston and looked through the textbooks.
There it was. I've seen it in all the science
magazines. Why would they hide it?
Then I found out that Clinton was attempting to get money to
(01:43:07):
go to Mars and they had to have an excuse to get the money.
So it was all, all fake because probably nuclear hydrocarbons
are floating around in space. Anyway, that's how I know that
NASA, you know, Swarm and Nitty Gritty was an advisor to NASA.
Actually, he. Really.
(01:43:27):
How to, what to eat and things like that.
Yeah, he was through the Tidwells, who were a family that
lived in NASA Bay in right by Johnson Space Center.
Her sister knew a lot about it was the nutrition was for NASA
and the sister, Betty Tidwell, told her that that the food to
(01:43:51):
eat for outer space was peanuts,according to Swami Nitty Gritty.
And her exact thing was Bo, you know, crap, basically, she said
over the phone. But then they found out he was
right. So then they made him an
advisor, a nutritional advisor to that, and he could go and
have security clearance to any of the other places, including
(01:44:14):
Space Camp. And where the heck was it?
Georgia or someplace like that. And he went and saw the
demonstration where they breatheliquid.
You remember the movie The Abyss, where they breathe
liquid? And 1st, they're like they're
choking. Yeah.
Yeah. And so a friend of mine
accompanied Swami Nitty Gritty, his name was Jonathan Doone.
(01:44:37):
And they had this showed how it was like bursts.
You breathe liquid when you're in the womb and then you you
learn. And at first when the astronaut
was getting the liquid in his lung, he thought he was drowning
and then he adjusts and then it's just as bad to switch to
oxygen back there. So he was for that demonstration
for one, and advised them. So a Swami actually ran part of
(01:45:03):
the space program. That's pretty cool.
That was back in the 60s or so when he did that.
That would have been no the 80s.I believe it was Wow.
During the Let's see, I believe it was the 80s.
OK, OK. When the Challenger blew up like
during that? Time around that time, yeah,
(01:45:24):
that was, that was a shame, yeah, Nitty Gritty said.
That was a that was a shunt for worse things that were going to
happen. There's some weird psychic
things that happen that are interconnected that prevent wars
and things like that, which I don't understand.
(01:45:45):
But spiritual teachers, sea levels on levels on levels that
that we are not accustomed to sea until we breakthrough that
we have events where you get bumped on the head and suddenly
you're Peter Herkosi, fall off aladder and suddenly you know
things that you didn't know before.
(01:46:06):
Accidents are often involved in psychic.
Yeah, yeah, Lightning bolts too.I I heard about those too.
Lightning bolts too, yeah. Changes you.
I know a couple people. I, I, you know, one person that
survived a lightning strike in his house.
He was sitting between his siblings and certainly it hit
him. But you know what?
(01:46:27):
He got the ability. He can hold an electric circuit
and pass it through his body. He can hold wires 110 circuits
which. Usually kills people and.
Not even not even phase him. Me a fanatic.
Electricity bugs me exactly, but.
What made him decide? Let me go hold a live wire.
(01:46:49):
You know, I, I'm not sure, but Ihung out with him at my
co-author of yes or no, maybe Colonel Biotic Nutrition.
She, he was a good friend of vonHarding, Marcella von Harding.
And I think he was doing her computer work, if I'm not
mistaken. But anyway, really nice guy and
(01:47:12):
really had some interesting stories.
Wow, Is there anything else you wanted to mention?
I I don't want to over over. Buy our.
Book over. Yes, over shop.
Yes, support. Us, yes, support you,
absolutely, absolutely. I am interested in the $100 one,
(01:47:35):
the $99.00 that you that's what,that's what I want to do.
Yeah, that's it. And how that came about, I was
on when Patrick Tamponi was still alive.
I was on his show and I mentioned that we need a
Internet guru to to help us set up some kind of a site.
(01:47:59):
And so we got a call on the showfrom a man called Guru and
Giacente. He said my name is Guru and I'm
an Internet guy and and believe me, this guy could go against
Facebook and stuff like that. He now he's doing quite well
these days and he set up our site.
(01:48:19):
So we've had it in operation since maybe 20/14/2015.
Wow. I've written 2000 blogs on it.
We have a color recycling chart,We have all the herbs on time
and things like that and things I forget even we have on it.
It's a Palisades Park of the mine.
(01:48:42):
There are a lot of things on it.And Guru Help, check that out.
Lately he's been busy doing other things, so we communicate
with him when if there's a problem, sometimes people have
trouble with their passwords or forget it and we contact them.
Great guy though. Great guy doing other projects.
A meditator flies back and forthbetween India and here, and his
(01:49:07):
base is in in Appleton, WI actually.
So he's up there in Houdini land.
That's where Houdini was born. Oh wow, that's awesome.
Well, I want to thank you for coming on again and sharing your
deep knowledge and your insightsevery time we talk, when we have
(01:49:28):
these conversation, you really challenge the norm.
You open up new doors of understanding and you definitely
push us to question what we think we know, so your work is
definitely invaluable. I truly appreciate the time and
wisdom and energy that you bringto the show.
Again, before we go though, where can people find you, your
(01:49:51):
work, and where can they follow you and learn more?
Solartiming.com actually, and I have a page on Facebook under my
name and Vibrant Gal helps me a lot with that because she's
something goes wrong here. Now we have to have telephone
(01:50:11):
calls to get back on whenever weget knocked off.
She is a Internet guru. She really knows I wouldn't be
able to operate without her. Yeah, but anyways.
True Facebook. I pretty well keep people up on
what's going on. At this point I would say
Instagram and X2 and your show. So we advise people who watch
(01:50:35):
all the back shows too, because we've we've had some really good
ones. Absolutely.
I know our our conversations areinvaluable, that's for sure.
And I'm looking forward to our next conversation, Adam.
So thank you again. Well, think of a subject and
maybe. We I know.
And that brings us to an end of another episode.
(01:50:56):
I want to give a huge thank you to my special guest and friend,
Adam Bergstrom for sharing his deep knowledge and insights with
us today. His research continues to
challenge the way we think abouthealth, energy, and how our
bodies truly function. If you want to dive deep into
his work, be sure to check out solartiming.com.
(01:51:19):
And of course, I want to thank you, my amazing listeners, for
tuning in, sharing, and being part of this growing community.
We just hit 5400 followers and Icouldn't be more grateful for
your support. Now, before you go, please take
a moment to follow, subscribe, and leave a positive review on
(01:51:39):
Apple Podcast or wherever you listen to your podcast.
These reviews and ratings are what help keeps the show going,
bringing on incredible guests and makes sure more people find
these important conversation. It's quick, it's free, and it
truly makes a difference. If you'd like to support the
show directly, check out sensiblehippie.com and visit the
(01:52:03):
store. Or you can always buy me a
coffee. All right, that's all for us
today. Until the next time, stay
curious, stay awake, and stay sensible.
Bye. The.
(01:55:36):
None.