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May 23, 2025 • 31 mins
Being empowered v losing control
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Anleven day, Just Belly eleven.

Speaker 2 (00:10):
Day, just pre j just preaus.

Speaker 1 (00:16):
Paous Coleman Day, Just Benny, just Blemon day.

Speaker 2 (00:45):
Just everyone.

Speaker 3 (00:46):
I'm Dorothy and all, welcome to my beginner series on
Terror Crazy. Today I'm going to talk about you know,
I've talked a lot if you've looked at other episodes
of how important the question is it? And there's two
aspects to that. The first part is the intention. When

(01:07):
you're laying out your cards, you have an intention, even
if you're not quite aware of it. I spoke to
a client the other day about wanting this or no answers,
and a lot I've talked about that. I want to
explain maybe a little bit deeper today, but I also
want to go into questions that are looking for the

(01:28):
cards to make a decision for you, which is an
impossible thing. By the way, if you don't like what
they say, you just will do something else. So we
need to understand our intentions to get really good readings
and if you want to read for yourself, and nearly
twenty years I've been running classes for people to learn
to read. The important aspect is for you to learn

(01:50):
first to understand your cards. If you don't understand your cards,
you will hunt down meanings online. You could get if
you've got the RWs deck. The own book to get
is the Arthur Waits Pictorial Key to the Tarot. It's
his deck, so his explanations, and one thing you'll find
is that there isn't a meaning for cards. He leaves

(02:11):
it all up in the air, with suggestions and ideas
how other people interpret them, and key words he's got.
Reversals are built into his deck. So if you get that,
so if you don't read reversals, you're reducing your deck
to half. That's in the good practices side of things.
If you've got a different deck, whatever their creator suggest,

(02:33):
guess what, that's the only model. There is no terror system.
There are styles maybe, but not a system. There are
certainly not one system. But there are good practices and
bad practices. So we start with that. Yees and no query.
This woman said to me she just wanted yes or

(02:53):
no from her cards, and she was often drawing five
and ten, or she'd draw three, And I was just saying,
you know, yes or no is a flip of the coin.
I'm going to say it again and again and again.
It's a flip of the coin you throw in your interpretation,
and you have an inner drive or preference of bias
towards yes or no.

Speaker 2 (03:12):
The bias is not always about yes.

Speaker 3 (03:14):
If you have a fear, or if you feel like
success is too hard, or if you feel like the
challenge isn't something that you'd really like to chase, then
you might interpret the cards in positive or negative ways.
And what I'm trying to show is you can't effectively
read cards if you have decided that any of them

(03:36):
are positive or negative. And this is exacerbated. That means
this has made a lot worse. When you do a
lot of yes or no type querien, it doesn't matter
how you phrase it. If there's a year or no answer.
When you look at your question, it's a years and
no question. The deeper idea of process, the deeper idea

(03:57):
of insight, has nothing to do with yes or no.
If you understand a situation really well, and you have
gained insights that you maybe couldn't form consciously or logically
in your mind, and you can draw that out of
the cards your decisions and you personally are empowered. I

(04:18):
don't see any other purpose for reading cards by the way.
I've been reading for a really long time, and when
I read from my clients, one of my first thing
that I get computed all the time is so that
I'm honest. I'm not going to pretend something isn't what
it is, and I'm not going to turn it into
something vague so that it doesn't sound as bad as
it is or it doesn't sound as intense as it is.

(04:39):
These things don't serve my clients, and my clients, in
my eyes, if they've got a problem seeking to be
empowered in their life, you can use your terror cards
like that for yourself. And I've spent a lot of
years trying to teach people that one of the aspects
of use or no as it denies process.

Speaker 2 (05:02):
So I want to put this to you. Say you
ask about a relationship.

Speaker 3 (05:05):
I don't know why anybody would do this, but you're
in a relationship, you're quite happy, and you ask if
it's going to last. It's a yes or no query,
and you have a little fear in your gut, and
you've always had that fear before you've met this person.
And you draw the ten of Swords your first thing,
whether you like it or not, whether you want to
believe it or not is you're going to get a

(05:25):
clenching in your stomach. You may resist it by pulling
back and thinking no, no, no, no, no, no, that
can't be right.

Speaker 2 (05:33):
But it's done. Now.

Speaker 3 (05:34):
It's in the back of your mind, playing around in there,
and all of a sudden you're looking for little signs.
Now that might be a little bit for a while,
but it's there. They did a psychology experiment last century.
Most of the good stuff was done back then, where
they found that even a comment from an auntie when
you were ten or twenty or eighteen that was negative

(05:57):
about a goal or a desire that you had, even
if you didn't really know that auntie all that well,
had an impact on how we saw ourselves in the future. Now,
when it came from something we trusted, that's your mind,
or it came from a person we trusted, or a
process we trusted, it can have a serious impact. There

(06:18):
was a case of in this case studies and I've
got a hypnotherapy background. We see people coming with problems
a lot because of sometimes things they just go I
can't believe that had that influence over me. There was
a client who had been singing in choirs at high
school and well from primary school. Enjoyed singing was always

(06:43):
placed and these was never told to go away and
sit down because she couldn't sing. But one day her
brother said to her, you can't sing. I don't know
why you try. And she would have been about thirteen fourteen.
She was in a high school operetta, which you had
to qualify to get into. Anyway, at the end of
the day he did that, She carried on, finished the

(07:05):
operetta and they never did one again. And when I
saw her phypma therapy, she was I always loved singing.
I just don't know. I don't understand why. I just
sort of stopped. And she didn't have a reason to stop.
She just stopped. She was a teenager, started doing other
things and not thinking about why did I stop. That
introspection tends to come a little later in life when

(07:28):
she was hypnotized and the memory of her brother saying
that too, she was gobsmacked because it was just him
being a crappy brother. It wasn't even that important. But
what was important was she idolized him. At that period
of time in her life, they had no father, he
had gone, and her brother was two years older than her,
and she just thought he was the bee's knees. So

(07:50):
understanding this will help you understanding why yes or no
queries are doing you a disservice and can be incredibly disempowering.
Thing is repeated questions. If you take your time, by
the way, this can take a bit of time. While
you're practicing this, I will get individual saying how in students,

(08:13):
that is, how should I ask this question? And my
first response to that would be, what is it you
really want to know? And that was really it. I'd
had a mother doing it, learned taro course. You can
look at Dorothyolde dot com. Taro Bites is free and
there's not much there, but there's a couple of ways

(08:34):
to do layouts, so you can buy any of the books.
But one of the things she had asked was would
her son be successful?

Speaker 2 (08:41):
And the career he had chosen.

Speaker 3 (08:42):
He had chosen to go in the army, and this
distressed her because she was very passive. She was an
energy worker, she spiritual, doing the cards, you name it,
she was into it, and so it distressed her. So
the question would he be successful was couched at and
she did the draw and she said, I just don't

(09:02):
understand the draw really, and so I asked her, is
that really what you want to know?

Speaker 2 (09:07):
Though?

Speaker 3 (09:08):
It doesn't matter if he's successful or not, and she
looked at me. He said, well no, So if you're
going to practice spirituality and you're going to allow autonomy,
whether a person is happy in a job or not
isn't really a big question because most people, when they're
unhappy in a job, change it. And she said yeah.
I said, would you a child? He wasn't a child,
he was in his nineteen I think would he be

(09:32):
willing to change his job when he wants to? And
because he'd gone into the military, there was a period
of time where obviously he couldn't And she said, well, yeah,
he would. He would finish his time and go somewhere else.
And I said said, then it becomes training. So what
do you really want to know? Finally, she said, well,
I think I want to know if he's going to
be happy. And I'm like, that's what most parents want

(09:54):
to know. So those are the questions. Whether he's going
to be happy. His job is secondary to that might
be a part of it, but then it's still a
yes or no question. So then we move to what
would the best way be for him to be happy?
And so she did a draw on that, and she
laughed because she said the cards kind of say give

(10:17):
him independence and freedom to do what he needs to
do and he'll be happy, which actually brought it back
to her. In other words, she didn't need to judge
him for his choices. She didn't need to tell him
what he's You know, by actional means we have attitude.
He understood where she was from, he'd grown up with her.
So the depth of a question, that insight into a

(10:38):
question can give you a completely different response. We are,
when we're drawing for ourselves and our own family, invested.
Like it or lump it, we're invested. So we need
to be doubly careful about the questions. A person can
come to me and ask me to draw cards for
them and give me a question, and I just take
that as a generalization, and it sounds bad, maybe if

(11:01):
you're invested in the years or no thing. But I
can answer yes and no without cards. I don't need
cards for that. I'm a clairvoyant. If somebody wants a
year to no, I see that instantly, even if they
ask how something's going to go.

Speaker 2 (11:14):
I'm going to see where it stops.

Speaker 3 (11:15):
I can often find a timeline where it will just
stop if it's going to do that, or I will say,
you've got some challenges, but you've got choices here.

Speaker 2 (11:26):
And that's the difference. As soon as you say yes
or no.

Speaker 3 (11:29):
To something, definitively, it better be yes or no and
not something that could go badly if you didn't do this,
or didn't say that or responded this way.

Speaker 2 (11:40):
So this is the process of life. We do it
every single day.

Speaker 3 (11:45):
So moving into that zone of insightfulness if there's a problem,
rather than asking is this relationship going to become marriage?
What if you're never getting married? What if you live
together for twenty years? You know, we all know marriages,
What if it becomes that? If you're in New Zealand,
I'm promising you there are more people living together than

(12:05):
married these days, and more and more and more. As
like marriages, we're not that religious. What's the point. It's
a contract. Some people choose to contract, but they're going
to do it. Yeah, I can't. I'm trying to remember
when I last went to a wedding or even heard
of one. It's just a lot less common than it was.
So think about your phraseology because when you go that's

(12:28):
not what I meant, it is what you meant. Because
marriage is a word that specifically means a ritual, but
isn't it legal binding that kind of thing. So cohabiting
or de facto these are other ways to be together.
I've got a friend who is with a guy she's
been with for nearly twenty years. They're really happy, and
they don't live together. They don't want to. They're a

(12:49):
second relationship. They've got their own homes, they've got their
own families that they've got adult children. And I have
to laugh at them because they go on holiday and
that's how I met them. Actually, they go on holiday
and she takes her little minibus and he takes his
little minibus and they park right next to each other and.

Speaker 2 (13:10):
They love it. You know.

Speaker 3 (13:11):
So everybody's an individual, and it might be time to think,
if things aren't going well for you, what can you
do for things to go better? What do you need
to understand for things to go better? Not what do
you need to know? You probably know what you need
to know most of the time. In the framework of
your mind. You aren't open to things beyond that or

(13:32):
outside of that, which is crucial understanding when it comes
to asking questions. So when you think about insight, what
is insight? I want to look at two things. Insight
and intuition. Both start with the word in, not out,
not out, tuition not outside.

Speaker 2 (13:50):
It's intuition and in sight. What does tuition mean? Learning?

Speaker 3 (13:55):
Intuition is what I have learned inside myself. I have that, no,
but it's a subconscious knowledge. It's in lots of little parts,
and those parts are dependent on my parts that are functioning.
In any one moment, I can be supremely confident in
my work and how I relate to people, and then
I might not be able to talk to my partner,

(14:16):
or my children, or my parent or my friend when
we've got a problem. I might be very very good
at discussing things and understand principles of communication, until I'm
emotionally invested and suddenly I lose the plot and yellity everybody.
These are the parts that make up the whole. Which
part of you wants to be satisfied from a reading?

(14:38):
Now here's the bit. When you're reading for yourself, it's
not about if I get a year so I'll feel good. No,
you won't, You'll get an up and down roller coaster.
And if you ask a question that's too loose, too generalized,
and I don't mean a general question is great, it's
probably the best, but to generalized and so far as
you know, am I ever going to fall in love?

(15:01):
Is a non start of one. It's a year, No,
but ever your whole life. Let's have a think about that,
just for a second. If you never fall in love,
this is so valuable. Please take note. If you never
fall in love, you are fine. It's people that want
to fall in love, and if they're not in love,

(15:22):
they're not fine. And they might fall in love twenty
times in a lifetime. We call them crushes. We call
them relationships, boyfriend, girlfriend. How many relationships and I'm not
just talking about marriage, but relationships. How many people do
you know that get into the flush of feeling they
think they're in love, or at least they know they
haven't a wonderful time with this person, only to be

(15:43):
crushed three months later or six months later, or to
walk away themselves and go, hey, that's just not for me.

Speaker 2 (15:48):
How many times do people do that?

Speaker 3 (15:50):
And then maybe in there in New Zealand, you're talking
the late twenties to early mid thirties, settle down with
one person. How many people enjoy an active social life
and casual relationships with one or two people that they
just don't sit down with until a little bit later.
It's an interesting question. When you yearn for love, you

(16:12):
become desperate. When you yearn for a relationship, you become desperate.
And that is how you will read your cards. So
I need a yes or no right now? Is desperate
because you don't need a yosimo. You need to know
how to navigate your life or how to create something
in the best possible way. If you are in a relationship,
there is absolutely no merit in asking if it's going

(16:34):
to last, even if it's struggling, even if you know
in your heart it's probably going to end or it
could end. Asking if it's going to end is not
affirming anything. It's not right and it's not wrong. If
it stops you acting in accordance with what you would prefer,
then it becomes a self fulfilling prophecy.

Speaker 2 (16:54):
So the danger of.

Speaker 3 (16:57):
Predetermining an outcome without picking in on process.

Speaker 2 (17:01):
So the process could be a couple's.

Speaker 3 (17:03):
Having a terrible, terrible time and one of them's drawing
the cards, and it is asking for insight into solutions,
not the problem. You know what the problem is. Mostly
you might not understand how to resolve it. But that's
not necessarily what the problem is. It can be two
different things. It could be communication. You could draw a
couple of cards that show you that you need to

(17:25):
practice communication. Go to a mediator, Go and do a
session and effective communication with your situation of mind. I
run them, loads of people run them. You can do
them online. You can go and say, you know what,
we're just not coming past us and it's deteriorating our relationship.
Only one person has to do it. Two people could.

(17:46):
But it's not relationship therapy. It's assessing the problem and
seeing a solution. Sometimes you need objectivity for that. If
you ask the question in process, it only come from you.
It can't be what's the other person thinking or feeling.
You can't do it. I can promise you can't do it.

(18:07):
You will get cards that suit what your belief is
or your fear.

Speaker 2 (18:12):
You're the one handling the cards. You're the one drawing
the cards. You're the one invested in the answer.

Speaker 3 (18:18):
All you can do is give yourself an idea of
what you hope they're feeling, and the question predetermines something.
And so that leads me to the next part of this.
What is a predetermined answer? That is one where the
question assumes something that may not be going on with
another person. All questions from self. If you're not using

(18:42):
a reader who can read other people beyond the cards
or in the cards. If you're the one drawing and
you're the one drawing for yourself, you can only read
from yourself. So as soon as you ask what another
person is feeling, we're in the predetermined idea before you
even start that they're feeling something. Think about that just

(19:05):
for a second. You want them to feel something, so
you've drawn a card asking what those feelings are. It
doesn't matter if they're positive or negative. They won't be right.
I'm just telling you now. What you are exploring is
your own hopes and fears pretty much nothing else. The
other side of that, of course, is a clear voyant
can read that a person who reads cards and you

(19:27):
see them going, wow, they just read that and it
was bang on and that was amazing. They aren't just
using cards to do that, and when they are looking
at another person, they can draw the cards with that
person in mind, not you. And that's what I would do,
and that's how I do it. If somebody asks me
about their partner, I draw the cards with the partner

(19:49):
in mind, and I use my aura reading and clear
voyance all of that. So while it might look like
I'm just reading the cards very specifically, I'm doing more
than that. That's the norm, that's not unusual. That's what
good readers are. Your best readers will always be employing
clear voyance. They may employ or a reading as well,

(20:11):
but they're definitely going to be employing clearvoyance. Most people
who read cards and like them are highly visual and
often have visions.

Speaker 2 (20:19):
So you know, do they connect to spirit.

Speaker 3 (20:21):
No, I've never met a reader yet that connects to
spirit because I see I don't see it happening when
they're reading the Many will tell you that they do.

Speaker 2 (20:29):
It's a genre.

Speaker 3 (20:30):
Is necessarily what needed to person reading the cards is
the person whose energy and their thought processes and their
beliefs and everything that they're doing is in that. So
you need to really find a way to be real
about that to get the best results. Clearvoyance is a
real thing, just so so clear part of the punt.

(20:51):
Then we go to so presumptive questions which apply something
as a fact that isn't a fact, are going to
be non product for you. And the proof is in
the putting there, because there's just constant and ongoing repetitive
questions of the same thing, because the person that's drawing

(21:11):
the cards doesn't believe the answer, can't see how that
could be, or over a period of time they get
no indicators that what they read was correct. And then
you see the next line of it coming through. I'll
see it so much on social media. The next line
comes through, it's like, well I drew this, I don't
understand it. I need help interpreting it, when really the

(21:32):
question was flawed to start with. It's unreadable and that's
the problem. So then you go to the should questions.
Should I is a yes or no query. So that's
what I mean about it being coached in lots of
different ways, couched in lots of different ways, And you
need to really watch that, take your time to think
about what it is you need to know.

Speaker 2 (21:54):
So what do I need to know?

Speaker 3 (21:55):
I don't mean you ask the cards that you ask
yourself that so you can ask a good quick what
do I need to know in this area of my life?
What would I like to understand better? That's an intention.
It's not a card reading. If you're asking cards about
your subtle self, you need to do that completely differently.

(22:17):
You need to do an archetypal layout or reading. I
haven't seen too many that work very well. I haven't
bothered to try and make one myself because they're full
of problems, and so an archetypal reading. When I created
the Terror of Asterisms available on Decable, which is an
app when I created that deck, every every asterism you

(22:39):
know which you see in the night skies, including the
sun signs, they all have an archetype related this to
the asterism for a reason of mythology or naming or identification.
The point is that a person can be anyone that
there's eighty eight of these, and there's a message on
each card as well. So we've got a message, we've

(23:01):
got a myth where it's where it was there the
first forty four and then we've got an archetype and
some keywords. And the whole point of that is complexity
is an archetype can change. It's not I'm this person,
it changes. It changes over time. It can be different
in one situation to another. You can have a person
who is jealous in lots of ways, but they only

(23:22):
acknowledge they jealous with a boyfriend or a girlfriend.

Speaker 2 (23:26):
Yet they get jealous.

Speaker 3 (23:27):
If another person is gets a promotion or a pay increase.
They won't call it jealousy, though they'll call that it's
unfear or an unfear Mentality can be a reflection of
envy and jealousy. In fact, it often is why did
they get that? What did they do well? They might
have done a lot more than you. By as soon

(23:49):
as you're a bit angry or upset or thinking it's unfair,
you're not going to look at what their attributes are
and try to emulate them or be better. You're going
to do predetermined that you're being picked on in some way,
you're being looked over, or you're being treated unfairly. These
are the intentional parts that change how a reading goes.
So when you ask a question like should I, which

(24:09):
is a use uor no question, you're asking cards to
make a decision for you. Think about that that's a
little bit out there, But you could ask what are
the merits of making this decision? If you have no
intention of making a decision. This is such an important
aspect as well. The cards won't have any meaning what spet.

(24:31):
It's just like how does he or she feel about me?
It's pre determining something. Therefore, the cards, which cannot refuse
to answer and say, well, you're not going to do
it anyway, why should we jump out there for you
and lay down in front of you so you can.

Speaker 2 (24:44):
Look at us.

Speaker 3 (24:46):
When I'm reading somebody, I can see if they're not
going to do something they say they're going to do.
For example, a woman asked me about his son leaving.
She said, he's leaving in about six weeks to a month.
He's got a job overseas. Blah blah blah blah blah.
He was in a mid thirties and I think she
wanted him to go because he hadn't left home yet.
And I said, ah, he's not going, and she's like shocked,

(25:09):
and then she said, well he is, because he's got this.

Speaker 2 (25:11):
He's got that. It's done.

Speaker 3 (25:13):
We paid for the ticket and I went we started
there wrong. He paid for his ticket, said, he's not going.
My vision was I saw a plane hit the tarmac,
go up in the air, turn around and land. It
didn't even leave the airport, which means all the intentions
were there by buying the ticket, but it's not happening.

(25:34):
The cards didn't tell me that the cards were fraught
with problems for her, But it was a vision that
told me. That's very specific piece of information, not just
a years or No. I knew he wasn't going because
he never had an intention of going. But her response
was interesting because she said, yes he is, and so
I leave her to talk about why he was going defensively,

(25:55):
which is why he is like like he was like
he was like yess he was entitled. I just said
to well, you don't know that, and she said, what
do you mean, Well, you asked me as soon as
you're asking about him going, as soon as you say
my son's leaving, and how's that going to go?

Speaker 2 (26:12):
On all the rest. You don't have faith or trust
that it's going to be okay.

Speaker 3 (26:16):
And the chances are pretty good that if you know him, well,
he's done this sort of thing before. And then she
started talking about, yeah, we bought him a business and
he just didn't do it, and then we got him
this to try and get them up and going. It's
all you needed to do was just stop paying.

Speaker 2 (26:31):
For a stuff.

Speaker 3 (26:32):
He would have gone and got himself sorted out. So
one of the things that we need to understand is one,
what's your intention? Look at your question if it can
be answered with use or no, no matter how you
say it, it's a yes or no question. Think about insight.
Inside is looking into something, seeing inside it, seeing the
nuts and bolts. You might see a couple having an

(26:54):
argument and think, oh, I wouldn't want to be there them.
You know, they're not very happy, and yet out of
your sight, they may be apologizing to each other and
forgiving each other and saying, you know, that's our first
fight and we've been together ten years. I can't believe
we were that stressed we had a fight. You know,
you just don't know. They could be losing their house,
they could have any other thing going on that's put

(27:16):
them under intense pressure. So we do a lot of
predetermining about what's going on. Insight allows us to look
inside it and determine, not predetermined, determine the elements of
it and what can be done, what we can think
differently about if we knew differently. Say a shopkeeper wasn't
very nice to you. You can walk away and think what

(27:38):
a prick, or you can sit there and use insight
and think, oh, something must have gone wrong for them today.
Maybe something's not going well in their life, even if
you've never seen it before. It's always a possibility. Because
people are out in public and generally do well doesn't
mean they can always do well. So insight allows you
to allow for that possibility first and then into it second.

(28:01):
When you are using cards for yourself, this would probably
be the most valuable tool, and you'll KIT so for
a reading for yourself KIT I would see insight and
intuition as aligned. So intuition is this is what I've
learned from the minute I was conceived today.

Speaker 2 (28:19):
If you're not got a.

Speaker 3 (28:20):
Lot of life experience, then it might not be as
broad a range as you would like. If you've had
a lot of early life difficulties, you may be focused
on that. You may have that negative spin on things
as opposed to being open and therefore not as worldly
wise as you would like or think you are. And
then you have this whole it's good or bad thing,

(28:45):
And as soon as you apply that to anything, it
can only then be a very roundabout way to get useful.

Speaker 2 (28:51):
Not it's either good or it's bad, it's not life
at all.

Speaker 3 (28:54):
I can start my day with a little problem and
end on a joyful note. Right, I have a wonderful
day in every part of it, except for half an
hour which could be really intensely not good. And then
I can walk away and I can tell everybody what
a bad day I've had because of this customer, and
I can talk about them, or because of that accident
or whatever it was that boss, or I can walk

(29:17):
away and go, well, not too bad. I got twenty
three pretty good hours out of twenty four. Because that's
the ratio, isn't it. Don't you think the ratio isn't
the thing that goes wrong. It's usually our minds that
hold a problem, not the day. So when we are
pulling cards and you're asking questions, it's intuition and insight.

Speaker 2 (29:40):
What do I know? How do I respond to these cards? Now?

Speaker 3 (29:44):
If you're using the reason I did an episode on
why RWs the right away and the sooth deck and
the Marseille are the worst decks ever for beginners, is
because they were created in a time that doesn't have
any of today in it.

Speaker 2 (29:58):
None of it. There were no so cars. The cars
were only jazz.

Speaker 3 (30:02):
Starting in the early nineteen hundreds, they had carriages.

Speaker 2 (30:06):
Women were property. They had no power at all.

Speaker 3 (30:09):
They couldn't even get jobs unless you were really poor,
and your job was to do laundry.

Speaker 2 (30:14):
That's about it. Cleaning something, maybe cooking.

Speaker 3 (30:19):
You could be a maid in a household, but you
couldn't be a lady and work in that household. If
you got divorced, you lost everything. In fact, a woman
who got divorced was looked upon really badly. You couldn't
do a lot of things. You had no power. So
that's not the world we live in. We had no internet,
we had no telephones. They had no telephones. I should

(30:40):
say we've got them. We've moved in my lifetime from
telephones that worked very very well to mobile phones and
the internet, when before we had to write letters. So
that's all they had. A ship was a powerful thing
because it brought people because there were no planes. So
I'm just suggesting that you think around the outside. If

(31:01):
you're using those kinds of decks and you want to
understand what's going on, the best thing you can do
is to ask a great question. I'm Dorothy, this is
crazy beginner series shouting out never

Speaker 1 (31:18):
TESPNY
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