Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:13):
If I had to pay to picture sure the world
how true love.
Speaker 2 (00:22):
Will really be, I would use the brides color.
Speaker 1 (00:30):
Too great a vision of harmony, it would be.
Speaker 2 (00:38):
A reality because it's only what suicide of love heart
you would see. I'm all be loved, bride, run the
very starved.
Speaker 1 (00:52):
Tell me what is the color? What does you see?
Is it a.
Speaker 3 (01:17):
True blue?
Speaker 4 (01:18):
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Speaker 5 (01:28):
Blue Cross wants our members to have access to these drugs.
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Speaker 4 (01:51):
Thank you to Americans for Prosperity, the nation's largest grassroots
organization fighting to reignite the American dream and help secure
the border and end inflation to make energy more affordable.
Visit Americansfoprosperity dot org and get involved today. It's Michael
Patrick shields through the AT and T microphones. Doctor Heather Zach,
(02:12):
the psychologist from East Lansing, is on our radio stage
right now, our AT and T line. It's one hundred
and eighteen degrees the hottest day ever in Phoenix, Arizona
today and we are in the dog days of summer.
Welcome to the airwaves.
Speaker 6 (02:28):
Oh, good morning. I hope they have fans or umping
to cool off. I love your starting music. By the way,
you always have the best mesic.
Speaker 1 (02:36):
Thank you.
Speaker 4 (02:37):
I'm not sure Tony Cuppert and the orchestra would agree
with you necessarily, but they are, you know, being exposed
to That's Billy Ocean, the color of love and just
takes me back to I know. Yeah, good stuff, and
thank you for saying that. I'm looking at a post
from a friend of mine. I don't know why I
(02:59):
bother to look at so social media, but I kind
of have to just get news events.
Speaker 1 (03:03):
And all that.
Speaker 4 (03:04):
And it's a picture of Charlie Brown and Snoopy and
Charlie Brown is saying they're kind of looking into the
sunset under a tree, and Charlie Brown is saying, what
do you miss? And Snoopy says, I miss who I
was before last year's election. I find that to be
(03:29):
kind of a preposterous thing to post, because the presumption
is that the election changed this person who posted it
in some fundamental way. Is this an example of the
Trump derangement syndrome that we've talked about in the past.
Speaker 6 (03:47):
Well, as I said before, that kind of concept is
new to me. But is it a symptom of people
focused done something that really has meaning for them. Yes,
it is, and clearly whomever posted that has great heartfelt
(04:08):
meaning for the election and post election dynamics. Yeah, I
don't know that we want to say it's derangement because
I think that disallows people an opportunity, be it about
politics or anything, to have feelings or opinions about things.
I think you want to be careful with that term
because obviously derangement can really generate a negative connotation. But interesting, right,
(04:36):
people do have a lot of feelings about a lot
of things they say.
Speaker 4 (04:41):
But to say that you're not the same person because
that man got elected, where does that come from?
Speaker 1 (04:49):
Well?
Speaker 6 (04:49):
Think about it. Think about how often in today's kind
of generation, people give their power away, People give their
or beings away the circumstances around them. They're living outside
of themselves instead of living within themselves and finding that
continuity and that hoping ostasis right within their own being.
(05:13):
So I think it's a generational dynamic, of a sietal
dynamics for where we live right now, and I see
it a lot. I help people a lot try to
have the awareness of come into yourself. You know, where
is the peace? The calm doesn't exist around us. That's
not a world we live in. It exists within us.
(05:36):
Love exists within us. It doesn't have to exist outside
of us. So again, I think it's a focus and
a direction where I would help someone, be it therapeutically
or through coaching, to understand where are you putting your focus?
Where we put our energy is where things will get
bigger and do we want to get something get bigger
(05:58):
or smaller? Change your phone, this change of perception, and
it just starts with a moment. So interesting as it is,
it's very common if you check in a feel how
are you today? A lot of people will say it
depends on outside circumstances. Not really if they're checking in
with themselves, if they're really inside of themselves. And with
(06:20):
some of the work I do, people really kind of
check in th a're like Oh, I guess I really
am calm. I guess this moment really is good. Oh,
I guess my body really does feel good right here.
We don't see that oftentense because people are outside of
their bodies a lot.
Speaker 4 (06:38):
Is it possible that AI could replace psychologists.
Speaker 6 (06:45):
No, I would say no. Is it possible that AI
can enhance information for people, Yes, but that back and
forth nu ones cannot be replaced at this point. Is
not going to pick up the nuances of working with
someone over time, an eye movement, a history. I am
(07:12):
finding that to be very difficult to imagine. The other
real part is AI doesn't have a heart. The person
that you're working with has a heart. They care. There's
a different dynamic of working with a human and you
know what, you'll see it in AI photos. I have
had some folks and I do little experiments of looking
(07:34):
at pictures that are real pictures versus AI generated pictures,
and your body and intuitive kind of emotionality can feel
the difference. It's a very different of working with humans.
Sometimes place for AI.
Speaker 4 (07:53):
By the way, I don't know. I don't like it.
I'm not engaging with it, but I have friends who
say I should because as it can proofread my copy
and things like that. But I got I get emails
sometimes from people that I know and to say, that
doesn't sound like that person, There's something unusual about what
they've written in that email, and then come to find
out that AI was applied to it. So I take
(08:15):
your point.
Speaker 6 (08:16):
You can tell often, often we can tell in cadence,
in intellect, in just our emotions, like Wow, that doesn't
feel right, that doesn't touch.
Speaker 1 (08:28):
Me the same way, Mmm, it's so weird.
Speaker 4 (08:33):
And to feel better, visit doctor Heather Zach and East Lansing,
or listen to Billy Ocean. Now what is that color
of love to think?
Speaker 3 (08:47):
Or old for passion, green with envy, red with rage striped.
Speaker 7 (08:58):
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(09:20):
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Speaker 8 (09:30):
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(09:53):
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