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July 12, 2025 51 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:18):
All right, good morning, good morning. I still love my themes.
Soon it's kind of cool and lead back. I like
that now. But nah, good day to you, and I'm
glad you turned in. I'm grandpa. I'm your host for
the show, and I love everybody. I say that every day.
It makes me feel good. I don't know if I

(00:41):
don't know how that works, but that's what grandmother always
told us, said, they love everybody. You're supposed to love everybody,
you know. So I would go to Sunday school and
come back and I tried it. I try to love everybody.
I may not know everybody, but it's a symbolic thing anyway.
So but I think everybody should use it. Tell yourself,
you love yourself and you love everybody. I guarantee your

(01:04):
life will improve if you continue to do that. I'm
gonna say you can't do it overnight now or to night.
I want to do this and I want to make you.
People are in a hurry a lot of times and
you shouldn't do that. But anyway, I got a great
show for you today. I'm gonna tell you a lot
of good things that will help you. And that's what
I do. I teach wisdom and common sense. And when

(01:25):
I send out my energy, I know that that energy
is coming back to me. It's the same thing of
what we all do. It's just what nature has set
up for us. It has nothing to do with anything else.
It's just nature, the nature thing of life. That's what
we do. Our minds is the strongest thing that we have.
It's the only thing that we have control over it,

(01:46):
and so that's what we have to do. I'm so
thankful for everything that happens to me. I feel with gratitude.
You know. Gratitude sets your altitude. So I do that.
I do what I do, and I do it for
the love of helping other people, no other reason, no
other reasons, because when you help other people, people will
help you if you need it. I believe that we

(02:07):
should help each other. I I really do believe that
because it is reciprocal, it does come back to you.
My grandmother always looked out for our neighbors. Sometime it
used to bother us as kids, especially when she made
a whole lot of fires. My grandmother was a great cook.
She could cook all kinds of things, and she worked

(02:28):
in the hospital. She was a I guess she's cooked
food for hospital people, and then when she came retired,
she cooked food for us as kids. And she was
a great cook, so we had great food all the time.
But today my subject, right now, I'm going to talk

(02:49):
about chronic disease in this part. Usually upfront, I come
with a whole bunch of wisdom and everything, and I
tell you about that. But today I want to talk
about this disease because I reading this article and I
was very, very very concerned about this particular article that
I was reading, and I just got interested. I said,

(03:15):
you know what, this is a great I gotta bring
this set of people's attention because it was something that
it just bothered me. Have you ever had something that
just bother you, Like things that have happened in society.
You figure, I don't like that or whatever, why it
does happened. Well that's where I am today. But here's
the idea. I read this report that we need to

(03:39):
pay attention to because it said this. It said seventy
I'm not talking about twenty fifty. He said seventy percent
of all adults US adults people in our country. It
said they said. The article said that these people, all

(04:05):
adults in the us. We are they have seventy percent
of all US adults has a chronic disease. That got me.
Seventy percent of everybody in this country has a chronic disease.

(04:26):
That's not necessarily what I was expecting to hear when
I started to read this article. But it's I guess
it's true. I don't know how they got their statistic,
but I'm just I'm talking about it from that point
of view that I found the article and I read it.
I can't but they that's what it said, and it

(04:47):
said that's almost everyone in our country, only thirty percent
of the people. That's a small minority of people who
don't have a chronic disease. It's only ten percent in
other countries ten percent. The same thing, chronic diseases in

(05:08):
other nations is only ten percent. That got me. I said,
how can that be? How can we be that far behind?
How could that be happening to us? Why don't we
think about it. I'm healthy, so it's not necessarily me,

(05:30):
But it's other people that I am concerned about. Because
I love my country, I love my citizens, I love
the people in it. We I don't agree with everything
that people say. I have my own ways of greeing thing,
but that's what it is. But I thought that was
not right. And it says that more of our children
are more sick than in any other nations of children.

(05:54):
Our children. I always felt that, hey, we were the
leaders and everything and saying healthy and staying strong. And
I practiced health and strong most of my life. I
don't just sit down like a lot of older people do,
just sit and sit there and can't get up after
they sit there so long. I don't do that. I

(06:16):
get to move, and I move. You have to move
to stay healthy if you as you grow older. But
this article has got me that seventy percent of all
of my people and and all of our people here
now I'm calling them my people, but all of our
people in this country have a chronic disease. Now I'm

(06:37):
gonna run some of these common diseases down to you
that they have that they call chronic diseases. I think
there's more chronic diseases than what I have here. But
they said the number one was Alzheimer's disease. Now, I
don't know how many people have Alzheimer's. I don't think

(06:58):
people A lot of people. I was on the impression
that only three to four percent of them seniors have Alzheimer's.
But that's what they list, Alzheimer's, and I guess they
all of them together will total about seventy percent. And
the next one they meant was depression. Now, I know
sometimes we have a lot of depression in our society.

(07:20):
I think depression is what makes people homeless. A lot
of people out there homeless walking around. You see them
all the time. They're moving and moving around your neighborhood
and everything. Depression, and that's a minimum problem that they have.
Another chronic disease they have is diabetes. More people, more

(07:45):
and more people have diabetes. Where do we get all
this stuff from? Why do we have in all this?
Then they said the next one was kidney disease. My
ex wife, the mother, and my children had kidney disease.
I don't see this. It's not a pretty sight. It's
not something that you want to have or want to get.

(08:08):
Kidney disease. I don't know how we get all these
crazy things. I guess it's something to do with what
we put in our mouth. It's got to be something
similar like that. How do we get it or how
we not get it. I don't have any of those things,
not one of them. I don't have them. Authorritis. People

(08:28):
don't have authortis. Our people go around and just say
my authortis. And I told her one lady, I said,
don't say that. That's not your authortis. Because you're claiming it.
You're going to be sick because you're telling yourself that,
and you can't do that. Don't say my authortis, say arthritis,

(08:50):
Get the hell out of me and go down the
street or up the street or wherever you go. But
you can't park here. That's what you should be saying.
But this lady was calling it my arthritis as if
it's something lovable. All right. Obesity, we are overbese. We're obese.
I mean we're overweight. We are terribly overweight. I mean

(09:15):
we you see kids now, I remember when I went
to school with kids. Maybe there's one or two fat
kids in the whole school. Everybody else was thinning. They
were running and all the time moving. They never stopped.
You know, we're playing all the time. So obesity, Why

(09:38):
are young people obese? That's too quick, too early. You
shouldn't be obese in you eight nine, ten years old.
Some kids are biggeran fat like that, but they were
as they grew older, they were slimmed down and they
wouldn't be fat anyone. High pretension is the next one.
They got ten of them, ten of them chronic diseases.

(10:00):
High pretension is there. That's not a good thing to have.
High pretension. We all know about that heart failure. We
have more people of heart failure here than any of
the other nations in the world. We have heart disease
more than anybody else in the world. That's a lot.

(10:22):
We have high cholesterol more than anybody else in the world.
But yet this, here's what I want to tell you,
How can this be? How can this keep happening to
us when we have the most doctors than any country
in the world. Here what I said, we got the
most doctors, we should not be the ones with the

(10:44):
most chronic diseases. We need to listen. And that's why
I'm so dedicated to doing this show. I want you
to understand. These are simple things that we're doing that
we just don't pay attention to. It's nothing hard about
how to keep yourself healthy and live in the world.
There's nothing hard about you not having a chronic disease.

(11:04):
It's just that we're not paying attention and we do
all the things. We don't care. We go out and
we do. I'll see people doing things that it shouldn't
be doing quite often. We have more nutritions, we have
more gyms. We got gems on every corner, all twenty
four hour fitness gems, all kinds of stuff going on
that's for us to exercise. And if we exercise, we're

(11:26):
going to keep ourselves in good shape. Now, I'm not
saying you going in there and try to pick no weightlifting.
You're not weightlifting, you know, I'll say it exercise. It's
as long as you're doing something, just moving, you're doing
fine when you get older. Now, what happened? What happened
that we are so full of these things. We have

(11:46):
forgotten how to live. That's what we've done. We have
forgotten how to live. We got so busy with fast food,
moving in a hurry. We eat in a hurry. We
don't swallow out, we don't show our food. We swallowed
hold almost. We do a lot of things that we've

(12:06):
forgotten about the things that we should be teaching people
as the basics. When I came up. I was taught
how to set at the table and eat. People ain't
teaching people how to eat anymore. And heating is very
important because if you don't eat right, you can destroy yourself.

(12:28):
That's an easy one to think about. If I don't
eat right, I'm hammering myself. Oh we've forgotten how to
live and we're no longer connected to nature. Nature is
the one we don't see it at all, but we
know we need to stay connected to the basics, to

(12:53):
the basic things. That's why I teach wisdom and I
teach common sense. But we can do that. People ask
me all the time, how do you do it? Well,
I'm telling you right now you have to listen. People
very seldom listen to what anybody else is talking about.
In other nations, people can be eighty ninety and even

(13:15):
one hundred years old in our country. In our country,
our lifespan is seventy eight years, and we are very
happy to get that. We think we're doing really good
when we can get lived to seventy eight because that's
what they say is should be your lifetime span. Lifespan

(13:37):
seventy eight degree. Your lifespan should be one hundred and
some days so many people who are one hundred and
five hundred and ten. A lot of people are living longer.
They have the blue zones, they living longer. But the
one is who don't have a disease have learned to
eat right. They've learned what they should be eating. You

(14:00):
should do it.

Speaker 2 (14:00):
You know.

Speaker 1 (14:01):
The best thing that we that I can think of
us eating it beans lagoons. We started eating beans a
long time ago. As a kid, we used to love them.
Grandma cooked beans. All the neighbor kids want to come
over and eat beans because she made a real big part.
And we'd all set out inside or outside and eat
meat and no red meat. We didn't have meat, and

(14:22):
meat couldn't afford it. Buy it much might have been
a blessing. Money we couldn't have do it. So most
of the people that I came along with healthy like me.
We all live in the city that lived in the holler.
We lived in the holler little city in Ohio. It
was called the holler where you go back in there

(14:43):
was a little place way down like it was a
hidden like a canyon or something hidden in there, and
that's where the people lived. We didn't eat a lot
of meat. You know. I remember one one time, you
know that somebody did buy a hog and they had
it butchered in the neighborhood, and everybody came to watch.
We've were setting around watching it eating meat, but we

(15:04):
didn't get a lot of that meat. That meat went out.
They also move a lot, They keep moving. They keep
strength training. You have to do a little stress training.
Strength training keeps you from falling. You may want to fall.
You have to just practice healthiness. You can't just take
ticket for granted and don't do anything to help yourself.

(15:27):
That is wrong. You are a human being and you
have things that you need to do for yourself. Some
people don't think of anything to do for their self.
A self washed, their patient, breast, they teeth. Well, that's
not the end of it. What you put in here matters,
none of it. Okay, we stop believing in things, we

(15:48):
stop believing in the things that we need to hold
onto it. And I agree we have should have things
should be changed. I'm a progressive person. I believe in that,
but it's not all the best things that we could do.
But to me, I think this should be a wake
up call for all of us to realize that I
don't need to have a chronic disease that ruins my life.

(16:11):
I'm uncomfortable. I see all these articles. I'm eighty years
old and I'm unhappy. What's there for me? I'm seventy
years old? What's there for me? Sixty ninety years old?
What's there for everything? You have to think it right.
You can't where you get the other ideas from where

(16:32):
you get the idea from that you were over life
was no good for you and all of that. That's
just a myth. If you're still living, you have things
to do and things to offer and to enjoy, even
if you just do it for yourself. You don't have
to go out and do all the stuff for anyone else,

(16:52):
but when you do it for yourself. Today, we're going
to talk about wisdom, and I'm hoping that I can
get a point because the wisdom that we think that
I think we know is not the right wisdom. I'm grandpa,
and you know I'm gonna tell you something right. You
can trust me. I will come through with the right

(17:15):
idea to try to help you. And I base my
office stuff. My training is on science. I'm a scientist.
You know. I have a doctor's degree in mental sciences.
So that's what I'll do, and I just want to
give it back to you for free, So make sure
you stay tuned. The next year we're going to have
it and talk about why we are starving for wisdom.

(17:40):
We are starving for wisdom as a nation. Wisdom is
very important as a nation. So I'll be right back.
So make sure you stay tuned because you're gonna want
to hear this. You just heard a lot of good
information about how to stay healthy and not have a
chronic disease. We should have that. Okay, I'll be right back,
So make sure you stay tuned.

Speaker 3 (18:16):
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Speaker 4 (18:46):
Hello listeners, this is Christopher from The Christopher Show. Hey,
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Speaker 1 (22:07):
All right, we're back here again. Today we're going to
talk about how our nation is starving for wisdom. Now,
wisdom is just intelligence in case anybody want to know
what wisdom is. But there's a lot of different opinions
that people come out and they claim that this is wisdom,

(22:31):
this is wisdom, and this is wisdom. Well, wisdom to
me came from the word wise. Being wise, having knowledge
is what wisdom is. But like most things, we'll get
somebody who don't realize good or bad, right or wrong
truth alive. They'll have an extension of what wisdom is

(22:54):
and come up with another's opinion. So now that's why
we are starving for it because we've heard so many
different ideas. We're bombarded with all kinds of thoughts that
we almost don't believe in nothing. It's so much what
do we believe? Nothing? People won't even follow nothing. But anyway,

(23:15):
I found this article where a person's talking about how
we're drowning in words. Words are very important. We're not
drowning in no words, and that's not what I'm doing. Say,
we're growing from words. You know, we got new stuff.
We got new AI that's new. We've got a whole
lot of stuff. We're growing. So that's what Then, Anyway,

(23:37):
twenty years ago, the challenge was for this country, for
us to recognize our obvious, ubiquitous and important realities that
often overlooked and things that are hard for us to
talk about. Well, people may feel that, but wisdom is

(24:00):
not something you should be that should be hard to
talk about. Wisdom should be something you listen to and enjoy.
But this article is planning that wisdom is like water.
Wisdom surrounds us yet remains largely invisible. It's the thought

(24:22):
that's what it does. It is not odorless, colorless, and formless,
like they're trying to say, we recognize its important. It
is often to lose us about truth. The true wisdom
that some people have come to believe manifest not in
what we say, but how we listen, and that's wisdom.

(24:49):
I believe that listening is a culture thing that we
learn to listen, and I think that it's a very
important thing. But I don't see it like that. And
I and according from my background, I have a right
to explain what I've learned because my learning has been

(25:11):
highly extensive, and I've been studying every for twenty thirty
years the same thing. I just I just did it
from a habit for love of it. You know, sometimes
people get that and they learn a lot about something.
But anyway, wisdom is what you know. That's what our claiming.
It's what you learn, is how what you experience in life.

(25:32):
Wisdom is not being univen as human's work. To me,
that's what it is, you know, I'm not sure what
it is to other people, but that's what I see
it as. So okay, there, if something happens, if your
approach to people is very important and I think that

(25:53):
some people think you're approach to people is wisdom, or
that we drowning in the word too many words are
we're causing too much confusion. You know, you turn on
the TV now and you look for something. You could
depend on some of that, but now you turn it on,
you can't depending on nothing. And that's what some people

(26:16):
say is wisdom or was it? It might be? It
might be that we need to realize that what we're
putting into people's home is very important, and we should be.
But because of the Second Amendment, which is the freedom
of speech. Hey, people want to use it for their advantage.

(26:38):
The constitution, people want to use it for their advantage.
Whatever the laws, people want to use it for their advantage.
Whatever it is that isn't to me, is not wisdom.
Wisdom is what you learn to understand about nature and
human life. Nature and human life, that's wisdom. It's not

(27:00):
about anything else. Other forms of life and other forms
of living do not compare with the human life and
the forms of living. Some people say, well, animals can
teach us this, now, they can't. We already know all
of that. We are highly in more intelligent than any animal.
We enjoy seeing an animal show that they have a

(27:23):
certain amount of intelligence in them, but they don't have more.
They it's not comparable with us as human beings. Okay,
people experience all Wisdom isn't what you think it is.
It's what they're saying. It's about dispensing clever sound bite.
Wisdom has never been about no clever sound bites. That

(27:45):
has never been Well, it's about wisdom. It's that it's
more than the way wise people connect to and relate
to others. That's wisdom. That's what they're claiming. They bring
a certain quality of attention to what we do, even
without speaking. Wise people don't tell us what to do. Well,

(28:07):
where do you get your knowledge from? If wise people
are not telling you, who are you listening to? They
start witnessing our story. Wise people don't tell us what
to do. Wise people always advise. They've never been able
telling people what to do. It's all they advise you.

(28:28):
They'll tell you. If you want to know something, you
go ask grandpa or grandpa that's called me. That's what
I think why being wise is. And if I'm smart,
if I'm wise, I'll listen to what somebody else who
have experienced life has said that's what I'm talking about.
Because if they've experienced life, and you have to all

(28:48):
the things that you've experienced, that's what you know. I'm
breaking it down a little simple, huh, but that's what
you know. Wise people don't tell us what to do.
They start by witnessing the story. That's not true. Approach
to people is what he's talking about. If you approach

(29:09):
a person with respect, that's not necessarily wisdom. I guess
it can be wisdom, it can be your intelligence, but
I think it's a little bit more to it than that.
I think wise people are here to go through life
and tell the younger people what they have experienced, what

(29:30):
they have to go through, and they tell them that
so that they don't have to go through that. Now
I've I've taken philosophy, inductive and deductive logic. I think
I know a little bit about it. You know, I
don't know everything that may be wisdom what I'm saying now,
but I know quite a bit now. Face the faith

(29:51):
of wisdom is we have all a mental image of
what we think wisdom is. We all have that idea. Now,
most of that comes from pop culture. They're saying, huh,
this person is bringing pop culture basic wisdom on pop culture.

(30:11):
It said in Hollywood. Uh if Dumbo Dumbo boy, I
guess it's in Harry Potter, Harry Potter movie Yoda, which
is in Star Wars. All of these are supposed to
be like, have something to do with teaching us swizzom,
but not my world. I never, no, I don't. I've
never even watched Harry Potter. I'm not even interested in

(30:35):
watching it. Why would I watch that. I've already will
past that. As as as as as a human being,
I'm not even closer to watching that anymore. So that's
what we do. Once we grow in it more and
more intelligence, you get there a lot of things that
you don't necessarily do because it don't match where your mindset.

(30:55):
That kind of wisdom they're talking about usually comes in snappy,
digestible sound bites that pace the old men with long
white beards do. They don't listen to nothing by no
Hollywood or whatever it is. That's not wisdom. People with

(31:17):
wisdom not following Hollywood's that to me, I don't think.
Maybe maybe they do, I don't know, and they got
their long beers. I disagree with that. Wisdom is an't
got nothing to do by how you look at your
wisdom or whatever you don't have with it. It's what
you know and so. But they're claiming it's like something different.

(31:39):
It's how you approach people. And I understand there is
a great wait way to approach people. You don't just
go in and blatantly did somebody, You don't just blatantly
interrupt people. You don't just blatantly do all kinds of
things like that. That is wisdom. That Maybe that's what
he's talking about, his wisdom, But to me, wisdom is
a little bit more and it has a lot more
to offer than that. It's not about how I approach people.

(32:02):
I know how to approach people, writing and say the
right thing. We all do. We all should know. You know,
we've given you lessons here already about don't send a
text message telling somebody that so and so just die.
You don't do that. That's not necessarily wise. That's its
culture and that's feeling, and it could be wise, I guess,

(32:22):
but that's not what it does. Okay, Silence is golden,
and that's what they claiming wisdom is. Just don't say nothing,
be quiet, most of the time, it says. In nineteen
eighty two they came up with an article We're drowning
and information while starving for wisdom. I'll agree with that statement.

(32:43):
Is we are a big start where we're being del
used with a lot of information from every angle everything,
I mean, everything that you can think of. There's a
story about it, and it'sappointed well anyway, be careful what
you think about it. You know, it's more worse today

(33:07):
than ever before. We got information hitting us from every
angle everything. But but there's no wisdom in that information,
is what they're saying. If you printed all that information
that we created, one day, it will go it would
be impossible almost to read all of it with that's time.

(33:28):
That's what they're saying, is the information. I would agree
we are getting too much information. We're dealing us with
a lot of information, but the information has no real
value that we're really getting and that's what we're from.
That I would agree to, But I don't want to
agree that every everything is nothing anyway. Public discourse today,

(33:50):
whether in politics, media or maybe just sitting around at
the demo dinner table, consists of competitive talking people get
to talk. They talk about everything they talk about, all
kinds of things. When they are to meet, the result
is a world filled with constant scatter by diminishing understanding.

(34:14):
Then that's basically what we're doing. We're talking about a
lot of different things and all all things that don't
make sense has no real true value for the person.
And they're saying that quiet people have the loudest minds
because they don't say nothing. Some people don't say nothing.
Maybe they do. But the point of it idea is

(34:35):
that if you have some wisdoms and knowledge, you need
to say it. Real wisdom is quiet, Well, what good
is it nobody hearing it. It's not about quoting dumbledorey.
Real wisdom is about knowing when they talk, and more importantly,

(34:58):
knowing when they listen. Now, it may have some value there,
knowing when to talk when they listen. We all need
to be it's courtesy. It's a courtesy when you listen
to people talk, or you just know what they have
to say. It's a courtesy. Maybe it could be wisdom.
I don't know, but there's a lot of people that
will give you the courtesy and not really having the

(35:20):
wisdom anything that real wisdom is about connecting others on
a deeper level, that's what the heat claims that. Now
that I can kind of deal of that, to tune
in to what's really being said even if nobody's talking,

(35:41):
that's what they're so wisdom is, that's what he says.
Better to remain silent and be thought a fool than
to speak and remove all doubt. I don't know how
that that doesn't look sound to me like a lack
of wisdom of dumb person that jumps up and say
all kinds of crazy things and have no idea. That's

(36:04):
the person who's trying to be important. That's a person
that wants to say something. That's a person that wants
to be something. He wants to get. He's trying to
find give him some self worth. That's what that's about.
That's what people talk for. They want to be right,
they want to be known for something, and that's what
why they come out and yaggy yacka yacka yacka yack.
They're over talking. I'll talk everybody, And that to me

(36:28):
is more of a culture problem than a wisdom problem.
So if you're listening to to wisdom, they think wisdom
is the uh snippets you know, a quick, a quick
clever singing or something like that. That's not necessarily wisdom
that I mean that I know about. Why aren't we

(36:49):
better listeners? We need to listen better. We are bad listeners.
Most people that you start talking, they're gonna cut all
across her and be very they're very rude. And that's
what I call that. But they're saying that it's had
something to do with wisdom. And I guess if you
apply that, you are applying what you're doing wisdom when

(37:11):
you apply that method by listening and by not interrupting
other people and not saying a thing. But some people
get so bored. They've heard so many things. It hurts
over and over and over again. And when you start
to tell them the things that they've heard over and
over again, it has the value in it and the
real power of it has been diminished. Because that's what

(37:33):
we do. We say the word over and over and
over and over again. If you say be kind to everybody,
love everybody, respect it by they think, oh, hell, I
ain't even thinking about that. I don't even want to.
It's not about that. Wisdom is understanding. What is about
not about your participation? If you're not participating in some fine,

(37:57):
but it's not what it's not about. We have to
be better listeners. Well true, but that's not wisdom necessarily,
I don't know. Then we need to have more impatience.
We need to be uncomfortable with silence. That's that's back

(38:18):
to them again. These freaking interruptions have made us impatient
and uncomfortable. We're not Most people don't like silence no more.
We want to hear something. We have. No, We've got
something going on all the time. It's TV, it's the phone.
The phone ring. My phone rang fourty and fifty times
a day. I don't even know who they're calling. It

(38:40):
just just ringing, it just ring. Somebody want to tell
me something. Somebody want to sell my house? Your property
is worth this? You just got all kinds of things.
That's not wisdom, That's that's that's rude, interrupting me and
interfering in my life. To tell me that you have
something to sell me. You know, put put it on
the commercial thing, not on our telephone. So but that's

(39:05):
what I think it is. But anyway, why does people
understand that part of the magic in creating a connection
with another person, Well, I would imagine a psychologist or
a doctor could do that. But I don't understand lay
people are just regular people who are going to approach
you with a proper way of approach. You know, people say, hey, man,

(39:28):
what's having That's what they say. What you're doing? You know,
that's that's the way they see it. But like you said,
we have been bombarded with so much information. We are
totally we have nothing that we really focus on a lot.
We're live, we're everywhere, We're all over the place. We
don't have no profound ideas certain things in our life.

(39:52):
We don't realize that we should be learning and tearing on.
We don't know a lot. That's why why would we
be ten people? Why does seventy percent in our country
have a chronic disease? I just don't I don't like that.
I want to help everybody be well. You know, well,

(40:14):
that's what wisdom is to me, helping us all the
hell of a good life. That's I think is the
only reason why we were born. We come here for
one reason to help improve and expand the world and
to have everybody else live a wonderful life. And we're
going to where we're going. I don't know where we

(40:35):
go after that, but I think that's what was happening now.
People are simply going through a process in life. We
have no fond, no thrill thing that we hold on
too strongly in belief and in understanding, and that's what
we know when we interrupt, and that's all we do,

(40:57):
because when you start talking about one thing, everybody knows
about everything, and we kill the opportunity to connect and
give them come through with the real knowledge that wisdom
would offer us. Wise people are quick to listen and
slow to judge. I agree that we should never judge another.
We don't have no right to judge nobody else. Judge yourself.

(41:19):
You're gonna judge, but you do that. Now. If you
go to an alcoholic anonymous meeting and he put this
in there, and I guess maybe the person must run one,
and they do not allow you to cross talk in there,
and there's a reason for that. They're trying to get

(41:41):
these people of mind pointed in a different direction so
that they will not be an alcoholic, and to let
them know that they can control that consumption of alcohol.
They can't do that. That's wisdom. Even though they're having
a cross Chuck. The reason why they don't want each

(42:02):
person to interrupt another person. They want that person to
start developing the idea that they finish what they start.
That's what that is. What wisdom is about, they finish
what they start. So about letting people go through a process.
You know, we just need to stop it. You know,

(42:23):
everybody already know most of the things I'm talking about,
but they're so confused and so much stuff is thrown
at them. They don't even see it until you bring
it up, and you don't tell them about it. They
don't even think about it. So that's what I think
about that idea where they're talking about wisdom. Now, I'm
gonna get a little bit more. I got a lot
more to tell you, but I got a call on

(42:44):
the phone, and I want to talk to that person.

Speaker 2 (42:47):
Call you there, Thank Grandpa. How you doing.

Speaker 1 (42:51):
I'm doing real good. How are you?

Speaker 2 (42:54):
I'm good. You've got a lot of stuff. You got
a lot of subjects matter here today, chronic diseases, the
wisdom you got chronic diseases and wisdom. And I got
a lot to say about all of this. Right now,
where I stand, it looks like all these chronic chronic

(43:16):
illnesses might be psychosymptomatic and relate it to people's diets.
People can't eat the way they're used to. You buy
a box of cereal, it says it's got red dye
number two, yellow dye number three, yellow dye number purple.
So it's got all kinds of things in there that

(43:38):
probably you shouldn't be eating anywhere, and you calling it breakfast. Yeah,
And then when you go to the restaurants outdoors, if
you take your food and leave it out there for
about five days, a fly won't even come and touch it.
So what you're eating is reflective of some of the

(44:06):
things that's developing inside of people. Because they're saying it's
nutritious food and there's no nutrition. I mean, number number one,
organic food comes from the same dirt that the food
that comes from the dirt comes from. It's just it's

(44:28):
just dirt. Dirt grows, dirt grows everything. They keep trying
to act like there's a special kind of dirt because
because they're saying they don't use chemicals on this food,
So why are they selling you the chemical food and

(44:49):
then trying to sell you the organic food at the
same time. Why can't you just have organic food so
you won't have to have chemical, chemical drenched food.

Speaker 1 (45:01):
That's a good point. And in terms that's wisdom.

Speaker 2 (45:07):
Yeah, And in terms of wisdom, there's so much misinformation
out there, and Trump is our new president, has done
so much to make it a popular idea that you
don't know what you're listening to anymore, not that it

(45:31):
was right to begin with, because they don't know. Story
is told the same way twice. You know, there was
a thing in the classroom and this was done in
the fifth grade. The teacher would say smoke, and it
would go all the way around the classroom, and by

(45:54):
the end of the time it got to the last person,
the word was funny.

Speaker 1 (46:01):
That's true.

Speaker 2 (46:03):
So that that that shows you how people will translate
one idea over another idea. So the and and and
and and you just have to wait there. Boy, once
I was told I was obese, and the truth of

(46:25):
the issue is as I was caring a little wait,
but I felt real healthy. And I told my doctor
at that time, I said, I'm not obese. I said,
I walked up three flights of stairs. I don't I
wasn't out of breath. I'm exuberant. I feel good. I'm
not feeling any ill, ill will or ill pain. And

(46:47):
so part of what you have to do is listen
to yourself. Do you feel good, then you must be
doing okay right?

Speaker 1 (46:59):
Not that right? All right? I appreciate you, Thank you
brand all right, take care of thanks for calling well.
You have a lot of good points there. That last
one was very good. If you're doing all right and
you're feeling all right. I don't understand why they tell
wisdom is something that we know and apply in our lives.

(47:22):
I don't think it's like it's critical. I don't think
there's nothing critical about it. For me, when wise people speak,
they say, they rush, it's thoughtful and it's considerate. They
talk slow and everything. Wise people listen first, and then
they slowly make their collusion. They exclaiming that that's wisdom.
By listening it, wise people teach others to logically reach

(47:44):
their own conclusions as well. To me, that's something like
not necessarily wisdom, knowledge will. Wisdom has information about how
to live intelligent. That's what it is. Our noisy world
is going on. We go through all kinds of things,
we tell us, all kinds of things we got sports,

(48:06):
we got Our life is filled with all kinds of
stuff to keep us occupied with our thinking and our thoughts,
because other than that, we say, on board, I'm this,
I'm that, or whatever, and let's bring back me back.
Wisdom resembles water, not just in the invisible I don't
think the thing. I don't know why the invisible water

(48:27):
is how it supports and sustains calling attention to itself.
I don't think the attention calls Wisdom calls attention to itself.
I think wisdom tells you, if you do this, son,
that's what's gonna happen to you. If you do this,
that may happen to you. That's why it is teaching
us how to live, teaching us how to be in
harmony with nature. In the world that we're living in.

(48:50):
We don't even think about that. We come in and
think that we're we're the whole enchilada. We come we're thinking,
we ain't nothing else. It's all about me. Well it
is if they're talking about wisdom in that mind, I
understand we it's not about It's all not about me,

(49:11):
it's about us. And I think that this country was
based on that. United we stand divided. We fall if
you are in a family, if you have a family,
your family is not toxic. We should supporting our families
if they're not toxic. If they're toxic, then you have
to go away from it, you know. But other than that,

(49:31):
that's what that should be. And that's wisdom. The wisest
thing among us, often not though speaking the loudest, often
on anything clever. They're the ones who have mastered the increasing,
the rare art of being fully present, listening deeply and
creating space. I don't know if you can look, you

(49:53):
can not speak up, be quiet as much as you
want to, and then you come in and talk. I've
seen been the place the way they've had that, and
the person who was quiet and finally coming had no
more to offer than the people who were. You have
give it to you have it. So everybody in this
country now knows everything and anything. They don't want to listen.

(50:18):
They've been so bombarded they just look. I'm tired of
hearing stuff. I don't want it. But that's not wisdom.
Wisdom is what you need, what you have to have,
common sense, motherwit, call it whatever you want to, but
that's what you need. I'm Grandpa, I've lived long enough
to know that. I know a lot of people are

(50:39):
gonna come up because they're younger, and they come with
little ideas. They haven't lived long enough to understand all
the things that didn't. We learn by living longer if
we're conscious of what we're doing, and that's what we do.
This is Grandpa. I'm here every week and I'll bring
in your great subject is and pay attention and understand
what wisdom is its your but wisdom is being wise.

(51:02):
It's having information to offer. That's what I think it is. Okay,
I'll see you next week and I'll be back here
with another Greek subject for you, one that you haven't heard,
or one that I always try to bring in something
new and different as a subject. And I hope I'm
doing the right thing. That's try to entertain you and
also give you the information for you being entertained. And
it's funny, so I kind of work that angle to you. Okay,

(51:26):
So I'll see you next week to make sure you
tune in
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