Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
My name is Victor Furman. Some call me the Voice.
I've always been fascinated with human nature, spirituality, science and
the crossroads at which they meet. Join me now and
we will explore these topics and so much more with
fascinating guests, authors and experts who will guide us to
(00:28):
Destination unlimited. Is there a way to transform your DNA
through vibration and intention for personal healing and spiritual awakening?
(00:49):
My guest this week on Destination Unlimited. Ruslana Amenikova is
a former research scientist for the Fortune one hundred rank
company ThermoFisher Scientific, where she worked with vaccine Sciences. In
a twenty sixteen leap of faith for a more meaningful life,
she left the world of corporate science to later open
(01:09):
a sound medicine practice while writing her first book. She's
the founder of Songbird Science, a research and education Enrichmond
provider exploring frequency and consciousness. Her website is Ruslana Ramenicova
dot com, and she joins me this week to share
her new book, Activating our twelve Stranded DNA. Please join
(01:32):
me in welcoming to Destination Unlimited. Ruslana Ramenicova. Welcome, Ruslana, Hi.
Speaker 2 (01:39):
Victor it's a pleasure to be on your show. Thank
you for having me, and thank you.
Speaker 1 (01:43):
For joining us and sharing your very important message. So
please share with us your early path and how it
led to your work as a biological research scientist.
Speaker 2 (01:53):
Thank you, Victor. My parents were originally from Kiev, Ukraine,
and I was actually born there in nineteen eighty eight.
When my parents immigrated here to the United States, I
understood that I was going to be on a special path.
I didn't understand at the time that I was going
(02:14):
to be a scientific researcher by any means, but I
understood that I was going to work hard. I am
a curious person and I'm open minded. That was my
path of survival as a young child, and I wanted
to appease my parents, specifically my father's legacy in becoming
rooted in this country. As I was growing up, I,
(02:39):
as I mentioned, was very curious, spent a lot of
time outdoors in nature. Because English is actually my second language.
I spent a lot of time learning how to observe,
be quiet, and listen. These three factors are essential in
how I am able to relate to the world now
(03:01):
and are critical in my ability to be a scientific,
a scientist, and an analytical thinker. I just wanted to
mention that foremost, because those this path, this part of
my history is really important. It's integral to who I
am today. When I graduated from Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, Virginia,
(03:23):
I had a bachelor's in biology and chemistry. I knew
that I was going to pursue a scientific career because
naturally I was a good chemistry student in high school.
Believe it or not, I had a one hundred and
five end of year average. Biology was interesting to me. However,
(03:44):
I was already ahead when I graduated from high school,
and I had over I was already a sophomore. Actually
at the end of my high school. When I graduated,
I was already an incoming fourth semester sophomore as a
college student. So I decided to pursue two paths, biology
and chemistry because I had the time and that was
(04:07):
what I was naturally curious about. So when I graduated
from VCU, I landed an opportunity working for a contract
research organization. At the time, the name of the company
was Pharmaceutical Product Development. I was an entry level bench
chemist started to grow in that career. Six years down
(04:30):
the road, became a senior scientist. And then something very
pivotal happened in twenty sixteen, And that.
Speaker 1 (04:38):
Was my next question. What transpired in twenty sixteen that
changed everything for you?
Speaker 2 (04:44):
Twenty sixteen was a year that turned my entire life
upside down. My father passed away overnight. Suddenly I felt
as if the the most important thing was stolen from me.
At the time, I couldn't process it, but that's how
(05:06):
I felt, and I was very close with my father.
When that happened, I started to reevaluate my entire life,
understanding that when I was a child, I mentioned it
was very important for me to follow my parents' dreams.
I knew it was my parents' dreams that want that
(05:29):
led me to pursue a very rigid career in science.
And at the time I didn't really get to explore
what does what do? What do my dreams actually mean
to me? What do I want? So in twenty sixteen
I didn't quite make a leap yet, but after my
(05:52):
father died, it was seven days after we both completed
an Olympic level triathlon. It was a triath lawn was
a the Olympic level triathlon is twelve hundred About twelve hundred,
I think it's meters of yards, excuse me yards of swimming,
then about twenty twenty seven miles of cycling, and then
(06:16):
six miles of running. He had died of a diagnosed
heart attack. So at the time I decided to test
my physical endurance and transmute the immense grief that I
was experiencing while also going through a complex divorce. But
(06:38):
to stay focused on the grief, I decided to pursue
a full iron Man triathlon in Australia. So for a
full iron Man, what this means is two point four
miles of swimming followed by one hundred and twelve miles
of cycling, followed by a full marathon twenty six point
(07:02):
two miles of running. So during this year of healing
and grieving, this is what I focused on. From twenty
seventeen to the day of my father's death, I pursued
this iron Man. Twelve hours and forty two minutes later,
I became a bronze All World athlete. I finished top
ten percent in my age group.
Speaker 1 (07:24):
Congratulations, thank you.
Speaker 2 (07:28):
And this moment was pivotal for me because it wasn't
just a physical accomplishment, the breaking down, the shattering of
who I was and picking up the pieces, acknowledging acceptance
of the situation, but wanting to continue building and striving
(07:51):
for the bigger plan, even though I still didn't understand
at the time what is the bigger plan. This was
a monumental moment for me. When I came back home
in twenty seventeen, I had an entirely different path that
I was ready to embark on.
Speaker 1 (08:11):
What is the practice of sound medicine and how is
it applied?
Speaker 2 (08:16):
The practice of sound medicine is pretty interpretive in today's world.
I'll share what it means to me. So in twenty
twenty one, I had my first transformative sound experience a
(08:36):
lot in this capacity. I attended a sound healing workshop.
This workshop was five hours long, believe it or not.
As I laid there absorbing the frequencies coming from believes,
the crystal bowls, the yadaki, which is also known as
(09:01):
a didgery do in the Aborigines population, the chimes for
five hours, I believe I had a complete cellular reset
where I experienced my dreams. I was in contact with
(09:21):
my ancestors. I had felt so much peace and joy
and clarity, and when my facilitator at the time awakened
us from the space. Now, when you get into this rhythm,
it's called the theater rhythm. When your brain wave is
(09:43):
from forty eight hertz, everything around you is existing, but
you're in the medium. You're in this dreamy, subconscious state
where there's a lot of healing that can take place.
That environment is positive. You're able to re establish a
(10:04):
positive relationship in a safe way, and it's medicinal. When
I awoke, I heard my facilitator say, and now as
you come back into this space, my body and my
mind felt completely well again, hydrated. My body felt hydrated
(10:28):
on a cellular level just from the frequency. So in
twenty twenty one, I decided to pursue a sound medicine practice.
At the time, it was called sound healing, and I left.
I'm kind of skipping around because from twenty seventeen to
(10:50):
twenty twenty one, I realized there's a lot that happened.
But just to stay relevant to this question, I decided
to open a sound healing or medicine practice at a
local yoga studio in Richmond. While working on this book,
and at the time, I was very fortunate to be
(11:17):
able to have a venue that was so opening and welcoming,
building community through this sound medicine through my so I
started to do different sound healings at different studios as
sort of a an alternating teacher. And one of my
(11:40):
students at the time turned out to be a nurse
that works local in one of the hospitals here in Richmond,
the Medical College of Virginia, and she came up to
me after my sound session and she says, we need you,
We need you in our hospital. She said, I don't
(12:03):
know how to explain this to you, but there's got
to be a way for you to come and demonstrate
this modality to our nurses, to our doctors, because we
know this would help our patients. So at the time,
I felt my body completely light up and I understood
(12:24):
that everything that has brought me to this path, to
this moment, it was all here. This is where I
needed to be. This is where not just me, but
this is the path of the future of sound and
medicine is to apply it in a clinical atmosphere. So
(12:45):
as I as I decided to give it a shot,
I asked her, you know, would you be able to
introduce us, and she did. A couple of months later,
I participated in a nurse week where I demonstrated this
modality to physicians and nurses. The nurses and the doctors
(13:10):
gave remarkable feedback that this practice actually does have a
place in patient care. So they invited me to integrate
my practice in palliative care, which is where I've been
(13:30):
doing my sound medicine practice at VCU Health System at
MCV Medical College in Virginia nearly a year now, with
really phenomenal results from patients, families, and physicians and nurses alike.
Speaker 1 (13:49):
So it was a synchronicity that brought you.
Speaker 2 (13:52):
Into that role, Yes, it was. It was a synchronicity.
And coincidentally, I am very interested in synchronicity and how
sound is a modality in how we are able to
increase synchronicities in our lives. By increase synchronicity, I mean
(14:17):
increase our awareness to the events that are taking place,
being able to recognize patterns because sound is an embedded
archetype of rhythm. I'd like to actually share about a
study that I did that I independently facilitated over the
(14:41):
past nine months where I decided to give sound baths
to let's say they're thirty three people involved their three cohorts.
I wanted to see how sound medicine or sound healing
can in increase or it doesn't have an ability to
(15:03):
impact a person's way of seeing synchronicity. So it was
such a small study. It was considered a single case
study because it was a small group of people, but
it was the first of its kinds that was a
pilot's study, and it would introduce an opportunity for further
(15:27):
curious minded individuals who are looking to build on that.
And currently that study is being reviewed by the Journal
of Scientific Exploration.
Speaker 1 (15:38):
Wonderful. Carl Jung coined the term synchronicity and he called
it meaningful coincidences without causal connection. What does it mean
to you?
Speaker 2 (15:50):
I'm thinking about this because it has so many meanings
to me. First of all, working with doctor Bernard Bidman
on the study, there's no one that I know more
passionate about Carl Jung and his theology and belief systems
(16:12):
more than doctor Bidman. To me, I believe that everything
is interconnected, and I think that Carl Jung gave us
a legacy by introducing meaningful coincidences and establishing this as
a network that we can further explore. To me, the
(16:36):
network is there, everything's interconnected. It might seem as if
there is no causal connections, but if we are all one,
then there is a connection we even though we might
not understand what it is that that is part of
the journey. That is the real journey of getting to
(16:57):
the synaps to understanding what that connection is, maybe not
in that time or in that moment, but in the
time that is appropriate. We have developed the construct of time.
Synchronicity has no time. Synchronicity doesn't doesn't perform or operates
(17:20):
in the time that we've constructed. So therefore I understand
and support what you was saying on a timescale. But
synchronicity has operates naturally on a timeless scale.
Speaker 1 (17:38):
Absolutely. I had Doctor Bidman as a guest on one
of my shows about a year ago. Love his work,
love his message, and I personally shared with him the
fact that I've had synchronicities throughout my life and have
recognized them when they've occurred, and that each time a
synchronosity took place, I had three choices. I could say no,
dismiss it out of hand. I could say perhaps in
(18:00):
the future, or I could say yes with the capital
hy and immediately embrace it. And every time I immediately
embraced one, the next one would come, and the next
one would come. So I totally understand what your excitement
about it is and what you've been sharing about it.
Speaker 2 (18:16):
Yes, exactly. I think that's part of the key, is
to be open and to anticipate connection in life, whether
you want to call it synchronicity, meaningful coincidence, or a
gift from the cosmo. Sometimes it doesn't feel like a gift.
Sometimes it's devastating. But in that thread that I mentioned
(18:41):
that everything is interconnected, Everything has a kind of an event,
a moment in time where it activates to invite the
next event in so in a sense, in that way,
if we, in my opinion, if I look at it this,
then yes, it's very exciting.
Speaker 1 (19:02):
Absolutely I consider it to be a blessing in my life.
So thank you for sharing that. What inspired your new book,
Activating our twelve Stranded DNA.
Speaker 2 (19:13):
This book is a gift and it is beyond me.
It is beyond my time and sometimes even my own
grasp of what even inspired it. I want to say
that foremost, because I have so much respect for this book,
(19:37):
I treat it as its own life force, as its
own message, as its own blueprint that I feel honored
to be a channel of, because that's what every author
or every creator is. We are simply instruments of this
carrying message that we want to be of service to.
(20:00):
What inspired it was a calling, It was a calling.
It was that twenty sixteen moment. It started there where
life changed for me. I didn't understand it at the time,
but everything pointed to this direction where I was a
(20:25):
science a scientist and by trade, and then I transitioned
to become an entrepreneur where I opened a coffee shop
to learn how to be more open minded, more engaged
with learning about people, servicing people, loving people. Where I
(20:46):
transitioned back to corporate science due to the coronavirus and
working back in vaccine sciences at the time. But when
I was working with in vaccine again, I was pulled.
I understood that it was a temporary incubator, but I
(21:07):
started to become interested in writing. I started to write
five minutes a day. While I was working in corporate
I didn't understand that at the time again, but I
trusted it. It was a calling. I started writing five
minutes a day, and I wanted to write about healing,
(21:29):
and it wasn't the type of healing that pharmaceutical, the
corporate pharmaceutical industry would promote. I wanted to write about
the evolution of our healing. So I wrote five minutes
a day for two years. It eventually increased to more
like you know, fifteen twenty thirty minutes and two years
(21:56):
later I trusted the calling where I wanted to leave
that corporate job which I was a pharmaceutical research bioanalytical scientist,
and I wanted to give my all to this book.
So I made a leap, a leap of faith into
(22:17):
the void, into the abyss. Now at the time I
submitted this embryo manuscript, which wasn't activating our twelve strand
of DNA at the time. At the time, it was
called something else. Sent this manuscript to, I want to say,
(22:38):
an endless amount of publishers and agents, And funny enough,
there was one publisher in her traditions, Richard Grossinger, who
is the curator of Sacred Planet Books, that recognized he
recognized that message even though it wasn't as profound and
(23:02):
distinct as it is now, which is called the Activating
Our twelve Strain in DNA. But he understood that there
was a person who was trying to formulate a futuristic
concept that needed to be brought out.
Speaker 1 (23:20):
You know.
Speaker 2 (23:20):
He responded to me within twenty four hours. I was shocked,
and he said, this book won't do. He says, this
book won't do. Are you ready to write your real book?
I'm getting chills right now because that was a pivotal moment.
(23:44):
That was the I felt as if the universe was
shouting to me, now, thank you for accepting the call.
Do you want it? And I said, I want this
so to full circle. I had to give that story
(24:04):
because it's.
Speaker 3 (24:07):
Rich.
Speaker 2 (24:09):
It's hard to answer that question linearly. But what inspired
me to write Activating Our twelve Stranded DNA is I
believe the future. The future inspired me to write this book,
and I dedicated, sacrificed, and wanted to give my all
(24:34):
into this. So I left corporate as I mentioned, gave
two years of endless writing, refining, loving, grieving, metamorphosing, listening
to the message that wanted to be given.
Speaker 1 (24:53):
So it was about passion and purpose.
Speaker 2 (24:57):
Passion and purpose, and I believe a cosmic synchronicity absolutely.
Speaker 1 (25:06):
My guest is Ruslana Ramenicova, her book Activating Our Twelve
Stranded DNA. Ruslana, please share with our listeners whether they
can get this amazing book and find out more about
you and your work.
Speaker 2 (25:19):
Thank you, Victor. My book Activating Our Twelve Stranded DNA
Secrets of Dodecahedral DNA for completing our human evolution is
available everywhere. Books are sold Amazon Bookshop, Barnes and Noble,
Simon and Schuster, Inner Traditions. My website is www dot
(25:46):
Ruslana Ramenicova dot com. My website will also offer information
on my work, my background and future offerings and current barings.
Speaker 1 (25:58):
And we'll be back with more rus Lana after these words.
On the Old Times Radio Network.
Speaker 4 (26:04):
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Speaker 1 (27:37):
Back on Destination Unlimited. My guest this week Russlana Ramnakova
her book Activating Our twelve Stranded DNA Ruslana, can you
explain the concept of twelve stranded DNA and its significance?
Speaker 2 (27:55):
Yes, thank you, Victor. When one person might listen to
this descriptor twelve stranded DNA, it may cause a person
to stop in their tracks and do a double take.
What do you mean twelve strand DNA? We all have
a double stranded DNA. We have the helix. That's what
(28:19):
we've been told, That's what we've been given, right, Well,
the answer is, of course yes, we are beings of
what we understand to be a double stranded DNA. However,
the concept that my book is offering is more of
(28:39):
a thought provoking approach to a molecular paradigm of the future.
We understand from current research that DNA is a complex molecule.
It actually doesn't have a fixed shape or structure. Those
(29:00):
are not just my words. These words are shared by
renowned scientists making groundbreaking results and captured pictures of the
DNA molecule. As a multiple strand DNA, we're talking about
more than a double strand. For example, there was a
(29:23):
biologist in Imperial College that discovered a four stranded DNA
molecule and a healthy human normal cell. What this book
is exploring is a new frontier, and it's building upon
(29:44):
the knowledge that we were given thousands of years ago
from the Pythagoreans such as Plato. Plato gifted us with
the platonic solids, the trahedron, the cube, the octahedron, the ecosahedron,
(30:04):
and the dodecahedron. Now, I know that sounds sort of
jargon and technical, and maybe a lot of people don't
know what those solids mean, and that's okay, that's not
the point. This book is offering more of an archetypal
blueprint of the twelve of what I call the twelve
(30:26):
stranded DNA. This is the bridge between what we understand
as the third dimension into more of a means to
grow into the fourth dimension and higher. And what I
(30:48):
mean by grow is we can apply the dodecahedron shape
into more advanced sort of scientific fields like quantum physics,
which actually the do decahedron is widely used. We also
(31:14):
have seen the do decahedron applied in astronomy where armand spits.
Arm and Spitz in the fifties created a projector away
at like sort of like a telescope of being able
to look at the moon and the stars through a
dodecahedral shaped dop Funny enough, when he was manufacturing this projector,
(31:41):
he asked Albert Einstein for advice. How can he because
he started with a model that wasn't a dodecahedron. I
forgot what was the original shape, but it wasn't a
do decahedron. He asked Albert Einstein. He says, you know,
how how can I improve my current model? And Einstein
(32:04):
gave him the golden nugget, He said, try a doducahedron.
So Spitz changed his model to dodecahedron, and it introduced
the opportunity of how we're able to now see our
solar system. So he ended up selling millions of copies
(32:26):
of these, and they were small, they were miniature. They
were miniature and available for the general public. But the
dodacahedron is an archetype that my book explores. And my
book does not have any research because there is no
evidence that our DNA is actually a twelve strand of DNA,
(32:49):
But there is an opportunity to explore our DNA further
and consider that our DNA can be understood through a
higher dimensional model such as the dodecahedron.
Speaker 1 (33:08):
What does it mean to activate our DNA?
Speaker 2 (33:12):
When I speak of activating our DNA, this is a
first of all, I encourage each person to explore what
that means for themselves, because my interpretation of activating my
DNA will be will vary naturally and organically from what
another person might think activating their DNA is, but activating
(33:35):
their Activating our DNA in general means exploring what it
is to be a human being, but in a higher dimension. So,
for example, noticing synchronicities, becoming more aware and open, and
acknowledging patterns in our lives that promote us to the
(33:58):
next level of being is a type of activating our DNA.
Working with dreams, for example, could be a way of
activating our DNA. There is a very subtle and nuanced
state where we can access our dreams, sort of like
(34:24):
it's a glimpse from our awake state, and that dream
is actually a projection of the next step of our lives,
or the or the where we can find ourselves next.
But it's it's it's being able to capture moments like
that that allows us to to explore the next level
(34:49):
of being alive and and even if a person, let's
say that those are kind of advanced steps and you know,
advancing the psychic field where where people are starting to
communicate through thoughts. You know, we just had an exchange,
Victor where you told me something meaningful and my body
(35:09):
lit up. That's a form of activating and also acknowledging
our DNA. Those moments. We can't just let them go.
We can't just it's good that we can feel them.
But also let's celebrate those moments because those moments are
key in how we are able to build upon them
(35:33):
as a living organism. There's so much that I want
to say here, but I also want to include activating
our DNA also means some of the hard things in
life as well, such as forgiving, such as self accepting.
(35:55):
It can even be as hard as loving sometimes, but
those those key are also instrumental in how we're able
to evolve and grow in the current living conditions that
we find ourselves in.
Speaker 1 (36:12):
Many of us are aware of the power of intention.
What role does intention play in activating our DNA?
Speaker 2 (36:21):
You know, it's such an interesting concept. I want to
before I again, this is sort of nonlinear, but I'll
come back. I'll circle back. In the eighties, there was
a Japanese evolution geneticist who contributed such a profound question
(36:44):
and answer. Well, the answer first was that he explored
a way to transform DNA into music, meaning he was
able to transcribe the nucleotides of DNA and create a
(37:05):
sound from them, a melody. And in that way we
can actually listen to to how our DNA is in general,
and we can we can become more, we can relate
to it. But then he asked a really profound question.
(37:26):
He asked, if we are able to transform our DNA
into music, is there a reciprocal relationship between that sound
has on DNA? Can DNA be impacted by sound? It's
(37:50):
an intriguing thought. I bring this up because I believe
that intention is a type of environmental stimulus. It might
not be as obvious or distinct as let's say, you know,
(38:10):
an external sound from our environment, but we're actually able
to create our own. We're beings that are able to
create our own environmental stimulus. Within we can we can
create love, care, compassion, forgiveness. As I mentioned earlier. So
(38:32):
I believe that if, yes, if sound can impact our DNA,
which it can, then we are also able to explore
what intention means on our DNA, and I might not.
You may ask later about a water and intention and consciousness,
(38:53):
so I'll just save this last part for that.
Speaker 1 (38:56):
And actually my next question is what is the relationship
between DNA and consciousness?
Speaker 2 (39:02):
Beautiful right on time? Okay, So on a physiological level,
we know based off of research from seventy years ago
when Rosalind Franklin, James Watson, Francis Cricken, and Maurice Maurice
Wilkins introduced the shape and the configuration of DNA, we
(39:30):
know that DNA is complimentary to water. So water and
DNA make up this this uniform compound which gives all
abilities to life. It creates functionalities in our life. So
water and DNA exists together, not separately, but together ironically
(39:57):
and coincidentally. The two platon on solids, the ecosahedron, which
symbolizes water and the dodecahedron, which symbolizes the universe, can
interchangeably become a dual pair, meaning that they can transform
(40:17):
and become one or the other within each other. I
know that sounds complex, but they can basically interchange shapes
fluidly and freely. So when I was doing my water
research based and inspired by doctor Imodo Maseru, who is
(40:42):
a Japanese water research scientist who is no longer alive,
Masaru introduced the concept that intention can impact water. He
did some frozen hydroglyphs, meaning he froze water after playing
(41:05):
music with it, after talking with it to look at
the shapes that water would reveal, and he would record
the shapes. For instance, he would play Mozart one of
Mozart's symphonies, and the water would show beautiful, coherent and
(41:28):
organized geometric shapes that were consistent. When he played heavy
metal music, the water would show stressed, multiple lines, kind
of disorganized shapes. Okay, So if we know, and that's
(41:52):
a lot to actually accept to process at the moment,
how water has its own field. Water has its own field.
So if we can just kind of accept this as
its own concept at the moment. And remember from the
(42:15):
research of DNA being one to one of DNA water
and also confirmed by the platonic solids the ecosahedron and
the dodecahedron, we know that sound and intention does play
(42:36):
an impact on water and DNA.
Speaker 1 (42:41):
Interesting that water, based on doctor Emoto's experiments, displays consciousness,
so that everything connected with water has consciousness.
Speaker 2 (42:54):
Absolutely. And I also did my own experiments with water,
which which is what I offer in my book with
Pictures where I talk with water, I play music with water.
I played music for my harp to water, and my
harp was actually calibrated to the frequencies using the geometric
(43:22):
angles of the dodecahedron to see what shapes would water
give with a dodecahedral model. Does that make sense?
Speaker 1 (43:37):
Absolutely, it really does. My guest is Ruslana and Menicova,
her book Activating Our twelve Stranded DNA. We'll be back
with more after these words on the Old Times Radio network.
Speaker 5 (43:49):
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Speaker 3 (44:48):
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Speaker 1 (45:42):
Back on Destination Unlimited, my guests Ruslana or Manikova her book,
Activating our twelve stranded DNA? Ruslana, how can activating our
DNA facilitate emotional and physical healing?
Speaker 2 (46:01):
Thank you, Victor. I think that the process, the calling,
that initial step to accepting that there is a bigger
plan beyond us. It takes It takes a we need
(46:26):
to contribute something in order for our healing to happen.
Things don't necessarily happen on their own when it comes
to our own disciplines. This is a discipline and a practice.
I do believe in letting things happen, but this is
(46:46):
sort of a different kind of nuance in context. When
we are attempting to heal, sometimes that means clearing. Sometimes
that means active recovery. It's like taking a hike in
the mountains with a fifty pound book bag on your shoulder,
(47:10):
going sixteen hours a day to get to your tent overnight,
and then knowing that you have to do it again
the next day. But when you do it the next day,
you need to actively move and massage and really work
your muscles before you get that backpack back on and
(47:32):
continue working. Otherwise it's futile nothing. It's going to be
a very painful process to get through that journey. So
in this analogy, what I'm trying to say is that
we have to contribute something in our own healing, whether
that means letting go, and I'm going to say I
(47:55):
say letting go with a very sensitive and kind of
subjective understanding that letting go is different for everyone, and
everyone has their own understanding naturally of what letting go means.
Letting go is not easy. Letting go is one of
the hardest things in life of the human experience I
(48:18):
have seen, and I believe this, But I also know
that it's possible letting go to be able to move on,
to love, to self accept to believe in the bigger
plan in order to get to the next step of healing.
(48:41):
I believe is one of the most fulfilling aspects of life.
So in order for us to explore what is activating
our DNA mean, it begins on an emotional level, and
to do that, we have to give of ourselves to it.
(49:03):
We have to kind of assist in that resistance training,
that emotional boot camp that we all are going through
on some plane in this realm that we live in.
So you know, whether that means you know, looking at
(49:26):
ancestral healing or grieving truly grieving and finding a way
to compost and transmute what that grief means to each
person evaluating a very stressful or heart situation with love,
with compassion. That's all so significant in how we are
(49:48):
able to explore this this kind of exciting and exotic
lens of activating our twelve stranded DNA.
Speaker 1 (49:58):
You make a very important place because letting go of
something that is conscious in this lifetime, at least we
have something to connect with. But ancestral trauma resolution is
a little more difficult. How does that happen in the
DNA activation process?
Speaker 2 (50:15):
Well, we are carrying ancestral trauma every day. It's so
deeply embedded in each and every one of us. It's
actually part of what some scientists and what I believe
is part of our mitochondrial DNA. Mitochondrial DNA is a
(50:36):
separate kind of DNA that we carry that comes from
our mother, and you know it. I believe that This
is where intention comes into into a significant form in
how we're able to release some of that trauma that
(50:57):
we all carry. Wee whether you or you know, we
all have ancestral trauma. Whether it's tribal or gaia or
cellular or emotional, We're all carrying some kind of ancestral
form of trauma. So when we or if we decide
to explore what that means on a on a DNA level,
(51:19):
I feel that it would be more of an emotional
and intentional form modality of releasing. It's it's it's complex,
but it's it's doable. It's it's possible. Forgiveness is significant
if forgiveness is not a zone that is possible for
(51:41):
a person in that moment. I think finding connection through
the Earth, through the atmosphere, through the vibration and frequency
of the planet is also a miracle. It's God sent.
There's also angelic wisdom and love that's all around that
carried me through a lot of ancestral trauma when I
(52:05):
was going through some very turbulent storms. There's access to
a lot of forms of life on this planet. Animals.
Animals are significant in healing. There's we talked a little
bit about water and knowing that water has its own
consciousness and its own way of loving and giving back. Actually,
(52:31):
loving water is giving back. It is the form of
giving back. That's all that water is is it's selfless. Yes,
there's just so much to notice about the planet and
about all of life, including ourselves. So I think the
(52:52):
first step is stepping out of the ego. I know
that's hard, and we ego is there to protect and
it is what we interface with. But I mean what
I mean by stepping out of ego is to look
at life in the way that there is all types
of opportunities around us, and frequency and vibration is the
(53:14):
modality in how we're able to start making some shifts
within ourselves.
Speaker 1 (53:20):
Absolutely, how may readers apply the knowledge and techniques from
your book in their everyday lives.
Speaker 2 (53:28):
One of the most critical points of this book is
that I'm giving steps and different practices for each reader.
But the most important thing is that these steps are
not ultimate. I encourage each person's way of finding their
(53:50):
own medicine within because each person is a what I
like to call.
Speaker 1 (53:57):
They.
Speaker 2 (53:57):
Each person is a medicinal walking medicine all form of art,
and we all carry the wisdom and the medicine within.
So what I mean to show in the book is
not a it's not a one and everything sort of approach.
It's just an idea. It's just to help a person
(54:20):
understand sort of a creative approach to finding that frequency
and way of activating within. But the applications that my
book gives, there's a number of different keys. There's numbers,
there's water, there's grief, there's dream work, there's DNA practices,
(54:41):
there's angelic communication. Love and hope is the story of
this book, and I believe that the love and the
hope is what transpired the keys to be delivered in
the form of this book.
Speaker 1 (55:01):
Absolutely my guest through Slana Ramenicova her book Activating Our
Twelve Stranded DNA Ruslana, please one more time share with
our listeners where they can get your book and find
out more about you and your amazing work.
Speaker 2 (55:15):
Thank you, Victor. Activating Our Twelve Stranded DNA Secrets of
dodecahedral DNA for completing our Human Evolution is available everywhere
books are sold, including Amazon, Barnes and Noble Bookshop, and
Our Traditions and Simon and Schuster. You can contact me
through my website www dot Ruslana Ramenicova dot com.
Speaker 1 (55:39):
Ruslana Dodecahedron is easy for you to say thank you
so so much for joining us and sharing this amazing
and wonderful and truly needed work.
Speaker 2 (55:53):
Thank you so much, Victor. It is such a joy
to connect with you and thank you for your work
as well.
Speaker 1 (55:59):
Thank you Roslana, and thank you for joining us on
Destination Unlimited. I'm Victor the voice Firman. Have a wonderful week.