Episode Transcript
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(00:00):
Today's episode is going to be the most important episode you'll ever hear if you want to live in a state of blissed out granola happiness in this episode we dive into the science behind frequencies for 32 hertz versus for 40 hertz the ancient hermetic wisdom from the caballion that said at first and how music the dreaded day job fluorescent lighting and brain waves can actually change your mind and body.
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Is there a secret healing frequency music that can unlock your true potential to live a better life instead of dwelling in fear with your own personalized hell lock it in here today on bringing social norms.
That was better than the chat gbt listen chat gbt isn't fucking perfect not perfect.
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That's okay it's still a great tool. That's still a lot of now today this is a jocey wise hop inspired episode.
I said what do you want to talk about today you said healing frequencies.
And that's a very difficult subject.
Well that's why I don't know anything about it.
(01:06):
I said you go learn well funny enough in my schooling of electronic engineering we talked a lot about frequencies.
And it's still very confusing to me.
It's just a weird thing like you don't really sign intuitive thing.
So I'm going to explain to you in the audience what frequencies are then we're going to get into the woo woo new age granola territory
(01:36):
and we're going to talk about how the her medics were talking about all this stuff forever ago.
Okay.
We're getting to the new age stuff with the quantum physics.
And then we'll talk about some real world examples of how different frequencies can cause effects for 32 hertz where that comes from.
(01:58):
The idea of if music or frequencies can heal you and I've got some real practical examples here and some thoughts so okay.
It's a lot.
Well it's not a lot.
It's just it's dense.
You know what I just popped into my brain I've been thinking about the Bible because I'm a good person.
(02:22):
And as you do as I do just being great.
I heard is there a part in the Bible where they tell you like where they tell you what kind of like linens you can wear like you should wear.
I've never read it.
I don't know.
Okay.
(02:43):
Well get on that Google really quick.
Oh.
Because I want because I was like that's so weird that they tell you what kind of linens to wear what kind of clothing to wear.
And then I feel like I watched a TikTok which is bullshit but like we're just going to have a fucking before we have a rush to judgment.
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We're just going to be open minded here and talk it talks about how certain materials can constrict or conduct energy flow through your body.
Interesting.
Anyways go ahead.
What is it?
It does say that in Leviticus and Deuteroni which you know Leviticus is full of the weird stuff.
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No shellfish.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's where it was.
Yes.
All that kind of crazy stuff.
Don't play with your partner while she's bleeding.
Don't get your red wings.
God commands the Israelites not to wear garments made of mixed fabrics.
And it says don't mix linen and wool mixed together.
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Okay.
So that's interesting because we have so many mixed fabrics today in plastics in the shirts.
What do you think about plastics?
Yeah.
What's got stance on basically 90% plastic.
We're really into plastics in this country.
We love it.
It's in our brain.
It's in the shirts.
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Look I like a super soft shirt.
I know a silky soft stretchy shirt.
Don't get that's where my granola ends.
I don't give a shit.
It looks good on me.
It feels great.
I know in these young kids they want it 100% cotton and they want it big, weird and boxy.
Yeah.
These are stupid.
And the socks.
I'm giving up.
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I'm not doing it.
The socks look so cute on you.
Not doing it.
Not doing the mid socks.
I'm doing no shows.
Our generation work too hard for the no shows.
To just roll over and be like yeah.
Because there's nothing original.
And I'll argue this for our generation.
Every generation just does the opposite of whatever the one before.
They're like wow look how cool we are.
It's like no you're not.
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You're just doing the opposite.
You're just a contrarian.
Yeah.
You're not cool.
It takes no thought process.
You're a sheep.
You follow her.
Sometimes I see some of the like the fashion things where I watch like the young people talk about the fashion stuff.
And they will have like maxi skirts with maxi skirts with sneakers, which is a cute look.
(05:22):
I love a maxi skirt with a sneaker.
But then they try a long skirt, a longer dress like an ankle length or a calf length dress.
Oh.
And they'll mix it with a fucking sneaker, which again is cute.
But then they'll put a fucking midway sock on there.
And it makes it you look like a school marm.
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It is the weirdest look on the planet, which I am this is where my I'm like you're wrong young kids that it does not look cuter to have a maxi skirt with a dork tall sock.
The only thing that looks good with a maxi skirt and a sneaker is a no show.
That is hot take by Joe's.
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But I do like a sock with everything else. I think socks look cute with everything else, but it's just not the thing for a maxi dress.
It looks weird.
I wish we would have you look special needs.
I'm just going to say it's special needs giving special needs.
I wish we would have done the because I feel like clothing fits into the conversation today.
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Oh, okay.
I feel like you I don't know feel like the more woo woo you get the more you start thinking about those things.
And maybe right because I've heard people say they like the 100% cotton stuff because it's a organic fiber.
Yeah, but it doesn't breathe.
So like I was I.
Cotton doesn't breathe.
No, not as well. It'll hold it'll it'll it doesn't weaken it doesn't breathe.
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So it'll hold on to the moisture for a long time.
And then it'll get mildewy.
So I was watching people talking about how they wanted it was another tick on about how they didn't want.
Oh my gosh, plastic in their athletic wear.
But they had a woman who was a designer like a fashion not a fashion designer, but like a person that works in that industry.
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She was like, listen, I do textiles and you do not want 100% cotton because this kid was like, dude, where's 100% cotton athletic wear?
And so she goes, I'm a textile person and I am you cannot wear 100% cotton in athletic wear because it doesn't breathe well.
And it doesn't absorb it doesn't like dissipate.
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What is that called?
Not a brick.
Wic.
Wic.
Wic.
Well, no, wicking is like when it pulls it away from your body.
But then it.
Where does it go just into the air?
No, it goes into the fabric, but then it has to evaporate like it has to evaporate quickly.
And that's what the moisture wicking does is like it's supposed to help like do a quick evaporation versus like that's why like you don't have Terry cloth swimsuits or you don't have cotton swimsuits.
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Oh, yeah, you don't do.
No, it's because it doesn't it takes a long time to dry.
Okay.
That makes sense.
I've never thought there's a in the styling like this a guy my gym who's like monster shredded.
And he wears the and I don't know if he wears these big baggy shirts because that's easy young guy and that's a style.
Or if he's like I'm kind of almost between a large and an extra large.
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So sometimes I got to go extra large, but then it looks a little too baggy.
And he's like way more built than I am.
So I think oh this guy's for sure buying these massive baggy shirts because he has to.
So I heard that boys do this thing where they'll have on a big baggy shirt and they go to the gym.
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And then they'll do a couple of reps to get like a little blood flow into your muscles.
And then once you've gotten I think it's called a swell shirt or something like that.
There's it's called something a pump cover a pump cover.
I've heard of this.
Okay, that's what it's called a fucking pump cover.
And so they wait until they get a little bit of muscle or get a little bit of blood flow into their muscles.
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And then they'll once they feel like a little sexy.
They'll strip it off so everybody can see them.
Like it's a whole ritual.
And they wait room guys are closeted.
You know they give crossfitters all this shit for being whatever.
Just take your shirt off like a real crossfitter and you know make it happen.
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No, it's a.
You want to get gay? Let's get gay.
Don't push. Don't beat around the bush.
No, they like the theatrics of it.
It's so much.
The whole way you've seen is so much.
Well, I like the thing I do like about all of this though is I've decided to really lean into ritual.
(10:10):
Because like everything that feels like a fucking task sucks.
And everything that feels like a ritual feels fun and magical.
And so now I've decided that everything has to.
For instance, we had in our sweet little neighborhood we had a cute little family that's down the road that had a big party.
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And they had a ton of fucking people there and they were partying from like 11 o'clock or 10 30 until seven o'clock at night.
And they were having a great time.
Their music was super fun.
They had really great vibes.
I wanted to go but I wasn't invited so I just stayed the fuck away.
And I was thinking like Jesus, I can't imagine how much fucking food they had to make for that party.
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That's all I could think about.
Because this was a very specific group of people.
And I know that they made food.
I know that they didn't cater this shit.
They made their fucking food.
And I was like, I couldn't imagine.
Because you're going to have to do at least two meals and some snacks.
You know what I mean?
(11:19):
Like there's going to have to be something in there for people to eat.
That entire fucking time.
That was a very long party.
What were they eating?
What were they?
What were they?
Who fucking cooked that food?
Can you imagine cooking all of that food for all of those people?
Wild.
Wild.
And you know what I thought?
(11:40):
I thought I got a hot look.
Only I'm sure it had to have been.
There's no fucking way.
But the only thing I could think of, but still it would still be a lot of cooking.
You can just show up with a fuck one crop crop.
You're just showing up with one crock pot.
That'd be fucked up.
What I was thinking was other cultures have.
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It's not like they're not worn out for making meals.
Like American culture is, I don't want to fucking make my dinner.
Okay.
Yeah.
And then it's just, let me go grab some fast food.
Yeah.
And then we take into step past that.
I don't even want to go get the fast food.
So it needs to deliver it through.
Yes.
Yes.
Like there's zero ritual in feeding yourself nutrients.
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Like something that is just like basic needs is that you have lost the ritual in it.
And now it becomes a task.
Interesting.
And so to me, I was like, oh man, I got to re fucking, I got to re evaluate the way that I'm
looking at all of the things, like the things that are basic fucking human deals, making my meals,
(12:48):
making sure that I have nutritious, not grocery store bullshit.
So not like aisles.
You know how our nutrition coach was always like stay out of the aisles.
That's kind of something that I don't know if anybody pays attention to food.
But they're like aisles have all of the process food.
Yeah.
And you want to stay to the perimeter of the stores.
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And the perimeter is where the actual food is.
It's like veg, dairy, and meats are never in the aisles.
They're always along the sides of the walls of the structure of the store.
Right?
Mm-hmm.
Anyways, I was just like, it's such a fucking pain in the ass and you're exhausted and they have you pulled
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in so many fucking directions and then it's like, kind of why do I get so bummed out about having to do
a quick little meal.
Like it's not even that big of a deal.
So anyways.
Well, that's the part of the reason we're going to talk about this today because capitalism,
albeit a pretty decent system, it knows how to brainwash us.
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Yes.
And it brainwash us into thinking, we're so busy that we don't want to cook food.
We want to get fast food and get it delivered.
Yeah.
Do you ever, if anybody's interested, look up, there's some guy on TikTok or Instagram and he, he has like a cheat, like a big
(14:21):
Mac from McDonald's and like a, uh, whopper from Burger King and then a cheeseburger from five guys.
And he leaves them in their packaging for months to see how long it takes for them to decompose.
And then he goes, I'm like, what's that?
I'm like, I'm like, what's that?
I'm like, I'm like, what's that?
I'm like, what's that?
I'm like, what's that?
I'm like, what's that?
(14:42):
I'm like, what's that?
I'm like, what's that?
I'm like, what's that?
I'm like, what's that?
I'm like, what's that?
I'm like, what's that?
I'm like, what's that?
I'm like, what's that?
I'm like, what's that?
I'm like, what's that?
I'm like, what's that?
I'm like, what's that?
I'm like, what's that?
I'm like, what's that?
I heard some people say, well, there's protein.
(15:06):
It's not that it's bad.
I think that's another thing that our nutrition coach has really helped me try to wrap my brain
around.
Is that food isn't good or bad?
It's just like, is it nutritious or is it not?
So it's not nutritious.
Like they have stripped out all the nutrients out of all of this shit.
And I started looking at people that mill their own wheat, which is such fucking trad bull
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shit.
It makes me mad that don't make me fucking be a tradwife.
That shit makes me angry.
But just the milling of flour, you lose so much of the nutritional content of it.
Anyhow.
I know.
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But if you could, I don't know.
Maybe one day if I stop at this salon, I'll start milling my own fucking flour.
There you go.
Well, I think capitalism is to blame for a lot of the problems, which we're going to talk about today.
And it's because they sell you on these ideas that plant into your mind and then your thoughts
(16:12):
create the reality they want you to create, right?
And I'm not above any of this because I also, when I have to cook dinner, I think, oh my God, I got to pull this shit out.
And I got to clean it all up.
Like it's a pain in the ass.
And not just that, you have to plan.
Yeah, you got to plan.
You got to have to be thought out.
Yes, the meat's got to get thawed.
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And I do think it's the healthier, more appropriate way to look at life because it's hard.
Capitalism makes you forget about the magic of life.
And it zooms in on problems.
And it's like, here's a problem.
Here's a problem.
Here's a problem.
And look who can fix it.
Monsanto, Cargill.
And what do they say?
I mean, there's a word.
Let's hack it.
Let's hack the problem.
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And it's like, it's not a problem in the first fucking place.
Like making meals are--
It can be meals has been a privilege for thousands of years for humanity since we've invented fire.
Yeah.
And it's, you know, like a look at Anthony Bourdain show.
It was always about food and how it connects cultures and the relevance of it and the importance
(17:16):
of it.
And it's, you know, one of the few things that we all do that we can all agree on.
Well, so anyways, that's where I kind of like started all of this is that I was like thinking
about the materials we sit in, then I was thinking about sitting.
I don't sit.
I stand all day.
I just like to say that the materials we live in and then the energy that we give and the
(17:39):
ideas that we have around, you fuck--
Don't fuck with me when I'm in the middle of a thought.
You know what?
I have to--
I have to--
Your mic is too far from your mouth and I can see the waveforms.
Maybe I need a second monitor so you can see it.
Because the waveforms are too small and the audience can't hear you beautiful voice.
(18:02):
It's too small.
And then I come through and I'm loud as hell.
Okay.
Anyway, so I was thinking about the materials, ritual of life and then fucking-- I'm looking
at all of this on TikTok and then Hertz comes into it.
Like wavelengths and frequencies and stuff like that.
(18:22):
That's what brought me to be like, okay, what the fuck is it?
What's bullshit in all of this?
That's why I came to you.
Nice.
Well, thank you for that privilege.
And also with the food thing, think about-- like I'm thinking about it now that you bring
all this up.
Uh-huh.
A caveman from-- I don't know how many thousands years ago, millions?
I don't even know.
A caveman.
Millions.
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If they time travel to today, they would look at us and say, wait a minute, you're telling
me, I just got to run to this building here and that's where you get all this meat and
food and all this delicious shit.
And then you're bitching that you've got to cook it with a stove.
You know what I mean?
You know what I mean?
Like you go camping for one day.
You learn how fucking awful it is.
(19:04):
And you're like, oh shit, we got it made, you know?
Yeah.
Anyway.
So I think it's just a movement of perspective.
Which is what this is all about today.
Yes.
I've got some really great stuff.
Somebody said something really funny is that they weren't taking their-- they didn't have
to do laundry.
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They were like fucking-- I remember what the tour of them used.
It was so funny.
But it was something like they were taking their clothes to the pool.
Like they were-- they made it magical.
They used a way better term.
I can't even remember what it was called.
But they were-- instead of like, oh god, I got to go do my laundry.
It became this like fantasy thing where they were like, I'm going to go drop my clothes off
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at the pool or something like that.
Yeah.
You know, I saw some pictures.
Just a change your perspective of like making the mundane not feel like such a chore.
Oh, I forgot to tell you.
The craziest shit happened to me today.
What?
Okay, so yesterday, this is fucking bizarre.
I didn't even think about this till just now.
Okay.
Yesterday, I saw a TikTok and it had a guy who-- did you see the one with the guy he's out
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front looking at the spider on his door?
And he's like, you know, I used to be scared of this.
I used to hate this spider.
It would scare me.
I would kill it and get, you know, whatever.
And he was like, but I had a change in my perspective on it.
Now I think, I'm so grateful.
This guy's like a guardian to my house.
He's keeping all the other bugs out.
Yeah.
And like we saved spiders in our house.
(20:31):
Yeah.
Most of them.
And--
Well, we had a brown recluse.
That one did a good fucking save.
But I did let a block widow live in my drain pipe because it was kind of away from stuff
and she was just doing her own thing.
I was gonna fuck with her.
I was like, she's fine.
Anyway, I'm standing desk this morning, reading, researching, so on.
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And I sound like I'm making this up.
I'm just standing there.
And the next thing I know, I see a spider dropping down in my field of vision right in front
of my fucking face.
Oh, that's horrendous, though.
And it was a little baby spider.
Oh, okay.
Thank God.
In fact, my buddy, I used to work with.
He used to take around Halloween.
(21:13):
He would take one of those black plastic pieces of spiders.
And he would tie it to like dental floss.
And he would throw it over the cubicle wall.
And like lower it slowly into someone's like field of vision as they were working.
What a dick.
And they would always jump.
He got me with it a bunch of times.
It's fucking hilarious, though.
That happened to me in real life.
And I was like, oh shit, I jumped.
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And then I was like, oh, fuck.
I was like, all right, fucker.
So I got him in a napkin and I went to take him outside and somewhere between.
Oh, he flew off.
He'd send the house somewhere.
He's somewhere.
Cause I got outside of like, oh shit, where'd he go?
Anyway, my point is it's this change of perspective.
It's aligning your thoughts and your frequencies.
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I feel like you could, I feel like a simple, thin way of understanding this is to think that
thoughts are frequencies.
So even if I'm going to go through all the science of this, I'm going to explain what a frequency
means.
Okay.
But even if you lose sight of all this and I'm like, dude, I don't know what the fuck you're
talking about.
Like your thoughts are energy, your thoughts are frequency.
And you can align it to the positive or the negative.
(22:19):
So like, I would argue most people who aren't as granola woke as we are.
If that spider came down, it would have freaked them the fuck out.
They would have killed it.
Then called the bug term people to come spray and kill every animal bug in their house.
You know?
Well, and just FYI and Utah, they deregulated the bug people.
(22:40):
And a few years ago, I think it was like 15 years ago, these people came, they hired a group,
I don't know, some fucking company to come out and like, just put poison out for like, fucking,
I don't think it was bugs, but I feel like it was like some kind of yards, something or
another, right?
(23:00):
And it ended up killing their children because the people that were mixing the chemicals
weren't trained enough.
And then therefore they had legislation that was put into place that said that you had
to have so much training on these chemicals and blah, blah, blah, blah.
To keep everybody safe.
We haven't had an incident since, but here comes fucking Mike Lee and his infinite fucking
(23:22):
wisdom.
And they got rid of that now.
Really?
Yes.
So I'm waiting to see how long it takes before, and you have a generation like, not to shit
on this younger generation, but they have their confidence level is it a hundred to what
ten?
They are confident and they fucking are stupid.
(23:43):
They don't have any life experience because their jobs were to go to school and play sports
and whatever.
And they didn't have like a whole lot of shit to do at home.
Like we were job, we had jobs the whole time.
You know what I mean?
Most kids I think are when we were kids, they were working.
(24:05):
Like they didn't do after school activities.
They were fucking going to jobs.
And they just don't have that now.
And so like I always, I go to Home Depot and I want to know where a fucking thing is, whatever
the fucking thing.
And I'll ask a kid working there, I'm like, hey, do you know where this is?
And they're like, yeah, I know exactly what that is.
And like, I follow them and you hate when I do this.
(24:26):
And they basically don't know where the fuck it is.
Now I'm just following them while they're looking in the same fucking places that I just looked
for it.
It is irritating.
Once they start doing that, I get pissed.
They're confidence tricks me.
I'm like, oh, you fuck you trick me.
I thought you were smarter than me and you're not.
So the, what was I saying?
(24:50):
What the fuck was that?
This is Josie's 80 HD corner today.
What the fuck am I talking about?
Pop covers, McDonald's cheeseburgies.
On Depot.
What the fuck am I talking about?
The kids, they didn't have enough joy.
They don't work hard enough so they have too much confidence because the bugs spray.
(25:12):
Oh, they're going to have all these stupid fucking confident kids out here spraying your fucking
house.
That's right.
Now, they're going to have these dummies mixed in chemicals to come spray your fucking house
and it can kill your kids or your pets or yourself or poison you.
So just that way, you can spray like if you have like a bunch of bugs, I have done vinegar
(25:34):
in a dish soap and that really, really works.
Vinegar keeps a lot of the bugs kind of at bay.
So just, that was a long way around to get to spray your house with vinegar.
Yeah, we had an ant infestation in a garage and we just sprayed the area down with vinegar.
They got the fuck out.
That one was like, I--
(25:54):
They're exploring, they were gone.
Gone.
And I haven't even seen a back in there.
And that was a year ago.
Like, they just completely fucking left.
They, um, yeah, I was at home, people getting that circuit breaker and I asked the kid, I was
like, is this going to be compatible?
And oh, yeah, that'll work.
I don't fuck that.
I called our electrician friend and he guided me towards a different one.
So anyway, yeah, these confident, confident morons.
(26:17):
I can't stand it.
Too much confidence.
I know.
It's just like, you need a little, it's need a little self-doubt.
Yeah, a little self-doubt isn't bad.
It's not bad.
Why is that a bad thing?
A little self-doubt keeps you honest as a human being.
Be like, I don't know, but let me look.
Being confident, that's a thing that our culture loves in America is is confidence, whatever.
(26:40):
And you know what I fucking blame?
You know who I blame?
Nerds.
I fucking hate nerds.
Nerds made everybody decide that they have to have B experts in every fucking thing.
And nerds, incorporations.
Corporate, cunts, love it when you are out there and you tell everybody exactly the
way it is.
And you say, you don't know, you're just making shit up.
(27:02):
It's that move fast break shit.
Well, you're going to, you're today's show is all about hating nerds.
Oh, I love it.
Okay.
We're going to come back to hating nerds by the end of this.
And the bug spray thing, I want you to know because I've been trying to research like, how
do I get some passive income?
Like, can we start a business?
It's not a $5 million franchise or something, you know what I mean?
And one of the cheapest, most lucrative they claim businesses is to start a bug spray
(27:28):
business.
So in Utah, which is home of the fucking entrepreneur assholes, multi level marketing assholes,
grifters, there's a lot of bugs break companies because that's why it's like a low cost business.
Low entry.
Even lower cost if you don't train your people right, if you don't give a fuck if they kill
kids and shit.
(27:49):
So thanks, Mike Lee, for making that even worse, you fucking bonehead.
That guy's the most embarrassing human being I think I've ever had to associate with him
in cocks.
And basically, I didn't realize how horrendous our fucking legislations is like our state.
And the other dude, the other senator, uh, fucking kid raped some child and then he changed
(28:10):
the laws to let him off the hook.
Like, these people are fucking disgusting here.
I don't know what their damage is.
They got to go.
Okay.
Now here.
And this is why we need to show like this today folks, especially in today's divisive
political climate.
But we got to start out with boring shit.
Okay, let's go.
Frequency.
(28:31):
Frequency.
All right.
Do you think you know what a frequency is?
Not at all.
Ah, oh, sorry.
My hernia popped out.
Oh, that was crazy.
We were doing toes the bars at the gym today.
And my hernia almost popped out when we were doing it.
(28:51):
And I just sat upright.
I did it.
Okay.
So frequency.
What?
You're face when you did that.
It feels crazy when it does that.
(29:13):
It doesn't hurt.
It just feels crazy.
Like, I'm like, oh, no.
I could see your eyes do the craziest.
You could have garfield eyes, you know, like little like they have big, heavy kids.
Uh-huh.
Up or lower, they're very almondy.
Yes.
[laughter]
(29:33):
God.
And when you did that, your eyes went very cartoony.
I'm sorry.
Oh, that she got me.
Are you high right now?
Sorry.
All right.
I made my eyes water.
I'm sorry.
Uh-huh.
Okay.
(29:56):
Frequency.
Frequency.
Let's talk about what that means.
All right.
Geez.
I'm sorry.
I'm not.
I'm pulling it together.
Whew.
It's okay.
Good laugh.
That's a good frequency.
Yeah.
Oh, shit.
That's the frequency we need to be aligned to.
I'm excellent.
You're giving us a great example.
(30:17):
Go.
Frequency.
Frequency in, like, science nerd talk is just how many times a signal repeats in a period
in a given amount of time.
Frequency.
What?
You're in a positive?
No.
Okay.
I've got it together.
I can't.
I'm trying to get it together.
(30:38):
Okay.
I can't even hear you over the way your eyes looked five seconds ago.
Okay.
What's the frequency?
I'm very sorry.
Freakletz.
It's, how many times the signal repeats in a given period of time?
Okay.
Okay.
Feel like you're high.
(31:01):
Okay.
How many times a signal repeats in a frequent, what?
In a given period of time.
In a given period of time.
Okay.
So the way they standardize this in electronics or electricity, I should say, is measured in
hertz.
Okay.
(31:21):
So one hertz is one cycle in a second.
What's a signal then?
So you've got, this is where I have a hard time explaining it because I have a hard time
understanding of myself.
Okay.
Look through like an oscilloscope, which is like a tool with a little screen and you measure.
(31:45):
Man, how do you even, how do you even say this?
It's, there's like a sine wave or a cosine wave.
You know what I mean?
You see that?
Are you talking about just like a wave of energy?
Yeah, like a wave form.
Yes.
Okay.
And if that thing goes up to a peak and then goes down to a bottom peak and then back
up to the baseline in one second, that's one hertz.
(32:08):
Okay.
And that's a signal.
That is, yes.
That is one signal.
That is, yes.
One hertz, yes.
One hertz is one signal, same thing.
Is it?
Yeah.
Frequency, that's your frequency is, how many times does it happen in a second?
Okay.
And when you're, how many times a signal happens in a second is a frequency, which is also
(32:31):
called a hertz?
Yes.
And the amount of time it does it is a hertz.
Yes.
I'm with you.
And you're, maybe I am high.
Maybe I am high.
And what you're measuring is electromagnetic waves.
Okay.
Which means, electromagnetic waves.
(32:56):
Well, there's four forces of nature.
We've got nuclear strong, nuclear weak, gravity and electromagnetism.
Okay.
And it's a force of nature.
Got it.
Okay.
Is electromagnetism.
Got it.
So like a magnet, like the force between the magnets, that's electromagnetism?
Yeah.
The two are related.
(33:18):
So like, when you have an electrical wire where you got a current running through a conductor
of copper or whatever.
Okay.
I think there's a thing called the right hand rule of how you measure it.
Okay.
And you, you put your, I guess it's pointless, no one can see me, but like you put your hand
(33:38):
and your thumb in line with the wire, the conductor and your fingers that make the, you
know, your four fingers that make sort of like a, you know, the fist.
That is where your gravitational lines come from.
Your, your flux.
Your lines of flux will come.
So basically, if you have electricity moving.
It's wrapping around the current.
Yes.
(33:59):
Right.
Anytime you have a moving current gravitational fields will emanate from that.
Okay.
Like the tour intrinsically related, like you can't have one without the other.
Got it.
Um, it's how, so meaning energy being pushed through a, a wire, right?
Like electricity being pushed through a wire.
(34:20):
Uh huh.
Will create a force of magnetism around the wire.
Yes.
Got it.
I'm fucking, I fucking am high.
You are.
I'm on a wavelength man.
There we go.
It's kind of how an alternator in a car works because you've got spools of, you've got
loops of copper, like just tons of copper.
(34:41):
And you don't get that too loud.
Some people, that's still people.
There's a ton of copper at an alternator and it basically works on the same principle,
right?
It's, uh, they usually still, what are they still?
Um, um, the fuck you call it?
Not the, not the muffler, the catalytic converters, yeah, the converters, a lot of copper
and I'm too.
(35:02):
So, okay.
So electromagnetic waves are measured in frequencies.
That's what you're looking at as a sign or a cosine wave is just electromagnetic.
Meaning the energy going around, the magnetism going around the energy as it courses through
the conductor.
I think so.
(35:23):
I think that's fair.
Okay.
Like, I'm not a scientist.
You're kind of art.
You literally have a degree in it.
What are you talking about?
Well, okay.
So, but it's to learn and regurgitate is easier than to teach.
Gotcha.
You know what I mean?
To 100%.
Give me a multiple choice on all this shit.
I'll nail it.
Dead.
(35:43):
You want me to teach it?
Okay.
Go.
Okay.
So all your electromagnetic waves are measured in frequency.
So the electromagnetic scale is massive.
We can only detect a little tiny sliver of it.
That's like visible light and then a little bit on using tools and instruments, little bits
(36:07):
outside of the visible light.
Got it.
Yes.
And then there's this massive amount of electromagnetic range that we don't even, we can't
even detect.
And it's some animals can.
Yeah.
I think so.
Yeah.
So in the electromagnetic wave frequencies that we can experience or sense, you've got light
(36:29):
waves, you know, that's your visible light spectrum.
You've got radio waves.
You got, you know, sound waves.
And from so that's kind of like the overarching idea of what a frequent frequency is just
a attribute of electromagnetic.
And frequency is a what?
(36:51):
It's just an attribute, it's just like an attribute of electromagnetic.
Frequencies are an attribute, which is what does that word mean?
Like a, it's just a spec, you know what I mean?
Like it's just a, like a specification.
It's just like a, I'm trying to think of an example here.
A specification of electromagnetic.
(37:12):
Yeah.
That's what we're really talking about.
So there's waves of all kinds of stuff like brain waves.
What was that word you used?
Specification.
Specification.
Okay.
Specification.
It's kind of like when you're looking at a car and, you know, you're looking at a car
(37:32):
and it's fast.
And one of the specs is it's got 400 horsepower.
The app, okay, specification, the act of describing or identifying something precisely
for the study, for stating a precise requirements.
Well said.
Okay.
Sometimes I don't know what words truly mean.
Yeah, I don't know either.
(37:53):
I just know.
And I, like I have a general idea, but it's like, it's hard when you're trying to learn something.
Like, okay, what the fuck does that actually mean?
Yeah, it's like I said, it's like, it's almost like you've got two cars and one's really
fast.
You know, like, why is this one really fast?
Well, it's got a lot of horsepower.
It's a different spec.
The horsepower is the spec you would look at for that.
Gotcha.
Okay, I'm with you.
I'm with you.
(38:14):
And there's a thing like in our brains, there's a thing called brain waves, you know, you've heard
(38:41):
this is like the Delta waves are deep sleep theta waves are sort of like a meditative state.
And then beta waves are high alert, focused thoughts.
Oh, okay.
And I bet it's not bad.
Huh?
That's weird.
Said betas aren't bad.
No, not in this example.
(39:02):
They're real weak.
At the gym they are.
They don't wear palm covers.
So then you've got light waves of electromagnetic radiation.
And obviously we can see these with our naked eye.
This is in the visible light spectrum that little tiny sliver.
And you ever hear the term roigee bib?
(39:24):
No.
No?
Okay.
It's like a rainbow, right?
You see a rainbow.
Okay.
And that's all the colors in the visible light spectrum.
It's roigee bib.
It's red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo violet.
Okay.
In that order.
Okay.
Why is it in that order?
Yes.
Because of their frequency.
Okay.
(39:45):
You know?
Is that why they give color coordination to chakras?
I'm sure.
I don't know that though.
I'm sure.
I'm sure if you look at chakras as they go up and down the spine to the head, I guarantee
it's roigee bib.
I know the throat chakra is blue.
(40:06):
So yeah, I think the crown chakra is probably violet.
I would assume.
And the base chakra.
I'm going to look.
I'm going to look while you talk.
Where the Kundalini resides is down is probably red.
Let's see here.
I'm going to get the shockers.
What did you call that?
The shockers?
Yeah, I guarantee it goes like that.
Because red is the lowest frequency.
(40:28):
Violet is the highest frequency.
Meaning if you analyze them on an oscill--
Oh my god, it is.
It is, right?
Damn, okay.
So what was the crown chakra?
Violet probably, right?
It is.
Yeah, it goes.
Root chakra, red, sacral, stuff, which is your lower stomach, orange, solar, yellow, green,
(40:57):
blue.
Well, what is that?
Indigo.
Indigo, and then like a violet color.
Yeah.
That's fucking dope.
Okay, cool.
So the--
And they probably ascribed that because of like the frequency, like that they're pushing
at?
Yeah.
And--
Interesting.
Okay.
Right, right, right.
(41:18):
Go.
So when you get-- when you go to like the higher frequencies, you'll get to-- which is past
above violet, I think?
Is that how that goes?
How'd I have to look it up?
Oh boy, sorry here, folks.
(41:38):
Turned out you're not that fucking smart.
[LAUGHS]
Okay, violet is the shortest wavelength, which would mean it's the highest frequency.
So-- okay, so violet's the highest frequency.
Red is the lowest frequency.
It's like the slowest one of the colors.
Okay.
And if--
(41:59):
When they're saying the highest and the slowest, they're talking about the vibration that gets
admitted through it?
Yes.
Okay.
Perfect.
Exactly.
And when you get to the higher frequencies above violet is-- I got to make sure I'm looking
(42:22):
at this right.
Because I don't want to confuse people.
Yeah, when you go above violet, meaning a higher frequency, is when you get into ultraviolet.
Oh, okay.
UV, which you can't see with your naked eye.
But you can--
Well, is there UV lights?
Or maybe you can't see that with a naked eye, actually.
(42:44):
Well, aren't there UV lights?
Like UV lights?
Yeah, you're right.
I see.
Well, wait a minute.
No, because like UV is like an energy with the sun.
Because you have like UV protection.
Okay, yeah.
Ultraviolet.
Jesus Christ.
Yeah, can you see ultraviolet light?
I guess so.
Because if you're in a tanning bed, you see the light.
That's UV light, right?
(43:05):
I'm looking at it up.
So you go to the higher frequencies, you go ultraviolet, then x-ray, and then gamma-ray.
Like x-rays, you can't--
No, you cannot.
You can't see UV.
No.
Okay.
Perfect.
I was right.
Okay.
That's what I like to hear.
You can't experience UV x-ray or gamma rays.
(43:25):
Okay.
We just have to assume they're there.
But we know that because of science.
Got it.
Because they have tools and instruments to detect these things.
Got it.
Unless you're a flat-earther, then go for it, I guess.
Then nothing exists.
Then nothing's real.
Go drink your raw milk, you fucking idiots.
And the x-rays, obviously, are used at like the hospital, right?
(43:46):
So we know they-- there's something there, right?
Gamma rays around space.
And would have burned up all the Apollo astronauts with their tin can.
They flew up to the moon on.
Okay.
But they said their exposure was such a short amount of time that it wouldn't have done
nothing.
Okay.
Got it.
Okay.
And if you go lower to below red, you get infrared.
(44:11):
And then microwave and then radio waves.
Which again, you can't see a radio wave.
You know what I mean?
Yes.
Because it's past the visible lights back.
Got it.
We're going into it with a tuner in a radio.
Okay.
Also, fun fact, the Pink Floyd Dark Side of the Moon album has that the triangle where the
visible light goes into it.
(44:33):
And then you see the Roy G. Biv, the rainbow colors come out of it.
Yeah.
You know that iconic image?
That's kind of an iconic image.
Yeah.
Uh-huh.
You know, that's because the light, all the colors in the light spectrum hit that point.
Yeah.
And then they bend around.
And because they bend around some faster and some slower on that triangle, it can create
the different distinct colors based on how much it alters the wavelengths and the frequency.
(44:57):
Okay.
Okay.
You know, and that comes from Isaac Newton, a major occultist, alchemist, Rosa Krushan,
you know, all the works.
Okay.
So all these occult, there's a lot of occult shit in what we're going to talk about today.
And I am not dismissing it.
I'm saying like, this is the elements of occultism that I find interesting and intriguing
and even applicable to making your life better.
(45:18):
Okay.
Not illuminate confirmed.
And that takes us more into like we're going to talk about later sound waves, which is what
your original question was, is like, are there healing frequencies with sound waves?
And you experience low frequencies with a subwoofer, right?
(45:41):
Yeah.
Like the vibration.
And you notice how like a subwoofer is massive, right?
It's a much bigger speaker and it has to do with like wavelengths and reproducing those
lower frequencies, which a lower frequency is a longer wavelength.
Okay.
Anyway, so we'll come back to all that.
(46:02):
We're going to come back to all the applicable stuff in the end.
Okay.
Right now let's talk a little occult stuff because we're going to have to get a little
woo-woo to understand to answer this question of, can frequencies heal you?
Okay.
And it goes back to Hermes, Trismagistus, which is this alien that ancient Egyptians swore
(46:24):
they talked to.
Okay.
They said this alien came down, gave them these emerald tablets and scribed with the laws
of the universe from God himself.
And then this emerald tablet was, you know, revered and protected and supposedly was at
the library of Alexandria.
But then when all the, I guess the Romans come through and bust it shit up, they stole it
(46:48):
or hid it.
And it's like the arc of the covenant.
Like, we don't know where it is exactly.
Seems to be a real thing.
Okay.
You know, in like the ancient Egyptian, like, what is that called?
What are those called?
Heliglif--what the fuck are those called?
Hyroglips.
(47:09):
Hyroglips.
Say it again.
You are high.
They put some shit in that burrito.
I know.
I just had a Lin Wilson burrito.
Lin Wilson.
And I'm feeling it.
I'm feeling pretty good.
Anyways.
There is one that depicts, I don't know what the fuck it is, but they all have like watches
(47:30):
and little purses.
Mm.
Do you know what I'm talking about?
Little purses?
They do.
I'm going to take a, I'm going to find it.
I'm going to give it to you.
Okay.
Keep going.
So--
Heliglifes.
Jesus.
So, yeah, there's ones of like helicopters at the ancient aliens.
People always talk about it.
Yeah.
And all kinds of shit.
(47:52):
So, Hermes and the Emerald Tablets gave us the laws of the universe.
And one of them was the law of correspondence, which is the, as above so be lo, saying.
And what that means is everything is connected.
Everything is happening down on our personal level internally in our bodies are actually connected
(48:16):
to the universe.
And through, and this is where the idea is a ritual magic come into belief that you can
actually change the world like internally and it would cause actual changes externally.
Okay.
And that's where that all comes from.
This is like the secret bullshit.
Yeah.
And then there was a book called The Caballion, which is again based on the ideas of Hermes
(48:41):
and Hermetic Principles that I think is probably, I'm not an expert in the Caballion, but I kind
of think it's like the closest--
Yeah, see here, look at this.
Look at all these gods that have watches and purses.
They do have a purses.
And they're, and what do they have something else?
They're carrying like a pine cone.
They carry a pine cone too.
Maybe that purses are Hermes, Hermes, Trismogistus maybe?
(49:04):
I mean, there's a lot of them.
Look at-- I'm going to send it to you so you can take a look.
And they all look identical.
And these are in different-- like, this one's like, Mayan, and then here's like Egyptian.
Well, yeah, that is interesting.
Okay.
Sorry.
I just wanted-- I don't know why I was thinking about that.
(49:27):
That's okay.
Everything's cool.
So the Caballion is a famous book.
And I think this one has like mystery origins.
Maybe it's the Emerald Tablets rewritten.
But anyway, it doesn't really matter.
It has these hermetic principles that all these occultists follow.
(49:49):
Oh, that's why I was asking you about this.
Is that-- is this Hermes?
You know, I don't know.
You have to look it up.
Is Hermes in Egyptian or Soath in Greek, I believe?
Okay, sorry.
That's what-- I was like, why the fuck did I say that?
Hermes had-- I believe a Falcon head.
(50:10):
Yeah, this one has a fucking town-- a Falcon head.
Really?
Yeah, look it.
Goddamn it.
I hate myself.
Hermes Egypt carving.
Let's see if there's a carving of Hermes in Egypt.
A fucking-- look it.
Oh, Hermes is the Greek version.
The Soath is the-- oh, that's-- no, that's the different bird head.
(50:32):
Oh, that's not a Falcon.
Let's see.
Soath in Egyptian mythology, the god of wisdom, writing,
and magic depicted with the head of an ebus or a baboon.
I was wrong.
It's an ebus.
Has a long, pointy sort of snout.
Like a-- no, I don't see any of these.
So there's a carving of Hermes, but it doesn't
(50:54):
have the handbag.
It doesn't have the watch in the handbag.
In the pine cone.
They don't have the drip.
OK, well, anyway, so the Kabaleon--
It's a very interesting side theory there.
Sure.
I just thought I had a thread.
(51:15):
The Kabaleon-- I'm going to read you from the Kabaleon.
It basically says, everything vibrates at a frequency,
and this is an old ancient book.
OK.
Well, before we say that, let's see what the old week or pedia
has to say about the Kabaleon, because I actually don't know.
It's originally published in 1908.
(51:37):
Often, yeah, reports to convey the teachings of her Hermes
Trismagistus.
Yeah, so I don't know if this is--
This is bullshit.
In fact-- oh, yeah, it says right here-- Nicholas Chappell
notes that several aspects, such as philosophical mentalism,
the concept of azabossobilo, as derived
(51:58):
from the Emerald Tablet, and the idea
that everything exists as pairs of gendered polar opposites,
do have a background in ancient and medieval hermetic texts.
Other aspects, such as the principle of vibration,
are not related to hermeticism.
So apparently what I'm about to read isn't hermeticism,
but it was written in this book in 1908.
(52:19):
OK.
It's a very popular book in a cult New Age circles.
OK.
It says--
And hermese is a god in Egypt.
Yes.
That was--
It's actually thoth, but the Greeks called him hermese.
OK.
And he's an alien.
That's my interpretation.
Oh, OK.
That's your interesting--
(52:40):
I mean, I don't know what god or alien--
I feel like it's the same thing.
What?
--an otherworldly entity.
Oh, OK.
It says-- there's a section called Principle of Vibration.
It says, "Nothing rests, everything moves, everything vibrates."
This is 1908.
OK.
There's a long time ago.
This is before Einstein was bust and loose
(53:03):
with quantum physics stuff.
OK.
It says, "This principle embodies the truth
that everything is in motion, everything vibrates.
Nothing is at rest.
Facts which modern science endorses."
Well, then-- wait a minute.
Maybe the version I have--
because I downloaded some version on Kindle that was free.
It was like a dollar.
OK.
(53:24):
So I wonder if that's a rewriting?
All right.
Well, I'm not going to get wrapped around the axles on it.
But now I'm wondering-- OK.
Anyway.
Facts which modern science endorses,
in which each new scientific discovery
tends to verify.
And yet, this hermetic principle was
enunciated thousands of years ago by the masters
(53:44):
of ancient Egypt.
This principle explains the differences
between different manifestations of matter, energy,
mind, and spirit result largely from varying rates
of vibration from the all, which is pure spirit, down
to the grossest form of matter, all is in vibration.
The higher the vibration, the higher the position in the scale.
(54:07):
The vibration of spirit is at such an infinite rate of intensity
and rapidity that it is practically at rest.
That's what my buddy in the military used to joke about having
sex so fast.
It looks like I'm in slow motion.
Yeah, I remember him.
(54:28):
That's what reminds me of.
The vibration of spirit-- OK.
Yeah.
Wow.
And at the other end of the scale, there
are gross forms of matter whose vibrations are so low
as this seem at rest.
Between these poles, there are millions upon millions
of varying degrees of vibration from corpuscle and electron,
(54:50):
atom, and molecule to worlds and universes.
Everything is in vibratory motion.
This is also true on the planes of energy and force, which
are varying degrees of vibration.
And also on the mental planes, whose state
depend upon vibrations.
It's an important point there.
OK.
Slow down and tell me what that just said then.
(55:11):
The state of mind.
The state of mind.
I interpret this.
OK.
Say that to me like I'm dumb.
The state of your mental state also has a vibration.
Oh, OK.
Even on the spiritual planes, an understanding
of this principle with the appropriate formulas
enables hermetic students to control their own mental
(55:33):
vibrations as well as those of others.
The masters also apply this principle
to the conquering of natural phenomenon in various ways.
So do you think that's like Tibetan monks,
Tibetan monks practice meditation at such an extreme level
that they are messing with their own brain waves,
(55:57):
are there energy force?
Yeah.
Their brains are in the theta wave state.
And from the mind follows the body, I guess.
Because don't they have a thing where they think
that they can meditate their way into like turning their bodies
into stone or like the rainbow body.
Yeah, a rainbow body.
(56:17):
Yeah.
It's like this weird slow death process.
OK.
It's so bizarre.
It's way bizarre.
OK.
But it says that mind, body, spirit, and matter
are all just different vibrations
with matter being the slowest frequency.
And that's--
Matter being the slowest frequency.
Which is exactly how quantum physics
understands reality.
(56:39):
OK.
And so you have this new age stuff.
And then you mix it or support it with quantum physics.
And it's basically everything's energy, right?
OK.
Well, and that's why everything's made up of atoms, right?
That's what you're saying.
And atom is basically just a point of energy.
(57:01):
Kind of.
Yeah.
So Einstein through--
I think it was special relativity--
he said that's where he came up with the formula E equals
MC squared.
OK.
And what that means is energy equals mass times the speed
of light squared.
And the reason that this foresee--
(57:23):
it's like a constant--
the reason for that is because the speed of light squared
is a massive number.
It's 186,000 miles per second.
And that's what gives it a texture.
Is that what he's saying?
He's saying that if you--
he's saying that mass--
(57:46):
So mass and energy are--
Mass is meaning something solid.
Yes.
A solid thing.
Energy is a field.
You can't see it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's kind of like what we're talking about with frequencies.
Energy is measured in frequencies.
Got it.
OK.
Yeah.
So basically, every material object is just energy.
(58:09):
OK.
So if you're seeing something as a solid,
a material solid, this is an insanely massive amount
of energy focused and concentrated in a one area.
OK.
That's why that constant of the speed of light squared--
(58:30):
that's what that means in the formula.
There's a massive amount of energy used
to create a material item.
OK.
And in quantum world, what they found
is when you drill down to this subatomic level,
you get down low enough, they found that the entire universe
(58:53):
is just energy fields.
Because they used to think it was like atomic particles,
like defined concrete spheres, you know?
OK.
That's how you would picture it.
But when you get down in there--
Is it the particle smaller than an atom?
Or is it atom the smallest point of measurement?
Is it an atom the smallest amount of matter?
Oh, geez.
(59:14):
No, because the atomic structure is a neutron and a proton
surrounded by field of electrons.
So particle is less than an atom.
But an atom is matter.
A particle is matter.
Yes.
Because everything's comprised of atoms.
OK.
And all atoms are comprised of particles.
(59:35):
OK.
So particles like the smallest point?
So in quantum, they found that when you got down low enough,
what they thought were particles and atoms,
little spheres as how they depict them.
Well, they found it was just vibrations of energy.
(59:55):
OK.
It's all fuzzy.
Turtles all the way down.
What?
That phrase-- you hear the phrase turtles all the way down?
No.
It's like a--
has something to do with a thought experiment.
I don't-- I think--
I don't remember.
(01:00:15):
Has something to do with someone who said that the whole universe
was just painted on the back of a turtle?
And then they were like, well, where's the turtle come from?
And the person says, well, it's turtles all the way down,
meaning that you can't find the root reality.
Do you remember what Pesalca said about the turtles?
(01:00:40):
Yeah.
That's the only reason I know about that
is because of American cosmic where--
I don't even remember the story anymore.
OK.
That guy had that UFO piece in his backpack
and he had a dream about that piece
and had something to do with turtles all the way down,
which I asked her about because it's in Stephen King's It
as well.
(01:01:00):
Oh, OK.
Which I found interesting.
OK, go ahead.
But the point is, nothing is solid, as crazy as that is.
Everything, every piece of material object--
this isn't solid.
It's hard to believe.
Yeah.
It's all just energy, like even my hand isn't solid.
(01:01:23):
It's just energy vibrating at a certain frequency.
The smallest point of matter currently understood
in the standard model of particles-- physics
is fundamental particles, which can be either--
oh, geez, a quark or a lepton?
Quarks.
Quarks?
Quark.
And then, while atoms were once considered
(01:01:45):
to be the smallest unit, are now
known that they are composed of protons, neurons,
and electrons.
OK, yeah.
And that goes even further.
It's OK.
So protons are--
or anyway.
OK.
It doesn't matter.
Everything is energy.
You got to talk to--
Everything is computer.
Everything is computer.
(01:02:06):
You have to get it with Neil deGrasse Tyson
for better explanations on all this shit.
OK.
So the hermetics--
When you say hermetics, are you saying,
is this like an occult group that follows--
People that follow the laws that Hermes Trismadjust
has bestowed upon us to the Emerald tablets and the caballion
(01:02:27):
and shit like that.
OK.
They say that this whole reality that we're existing in
is from the mind of God.
Interesting.
We're all living in the mind of God.
All we're experiencing is a dream of God.
We're living in the dream of the dreamer, they say, in Hindu--
(01:02:49):
the Hindus in the Toltex.
They call it the illusory world of Maya.
Like we're living in a dream state.
OK.
And Elon Musk says this is a simulation.
Yeah.
OK.
Yep.
Yeah, exactly.
It's all kind of--
What flavor do you want to say the same-- it's the same thing?
Yeah.
And it's very twin peaks.
(01:03:10):
I don't think you didn't watch season three with me.
But it's all about--
I'm not going to spoil anything I want to.
But--
We're fine.
There's a line that says the dream--
I'm going to fuck them up.
David Lynch's character says, we're
like the dreamer who dreams, who lives inside the dream,
but who's the dreamer?
And it's just like, where did this all come from?
(01:03:30):
Where are we?
And my theory of twin peaks is that you're
living inside of the dream of Laura Palmer.
Is she in a comatose state?
We don't know.
Or is it just a nightmare that she's in?
Yeah, she locked into a nightmare?
What is this?
OK.
Is this everyone?
Are we all gods?
(01:03:53):
And our world is our dream.
And we can create our own heaven and hell.
Like, it gets really out there.
Yeah.
And so anyway, so we all agree that we, us, everything in our world,
in material world is just energies, frequencies, maybe even
(01:04:14):
illusions.
So you can see that when we talk about frequencies,
it seems pretty important.
Seems like it's the foundation of all things.
OK.
You know what I mean?
So to poo poo and just be like, oh, this is just new age
psycho-babel bullshit.
I don't know, man.
OK.
I think science points to--
(01:04:38):
there's a lot more mysteries to this realm than we think.
OK.
And to go into more practical examples--
What's my fucking mad?
Well, you're mad.
Yes, because I missed the fucking moon.
And I was going to make moon water.
And now I've missed the moon water.
There'll be another one.
[SIGHS]
[LAUGHS]
(01:04:58):
That's the limit.
What I don't understand about all that,
like the moon is always out there.
So can you just make moon water whenever?
No, because it gives you the most energy at the fullest.
It's reflecting the energy of the sun the most
at a full moon.
Yeah, but the moon is the female energy.
So it's like-- anyways.
Oh, I see.
OK.
All right.
Is there a--
(01:05:19):
Where's the water out in the sun?
No, that's the male energy.
No, it's the male energy.
It's not the same.
But I think it's good for--
I mean, I guess you could.
Well, my T levels go up if I get all solar energy.
Because you know I had an--
It's a little high as--
You'll go grab your swole shirt and you'll go--
Is that what it's called?
(01:05:40):
Oh, you know, a pump cover.
A pump cover.
No, I'm just taking it all off, baby.
We don't do that in CrossFit.
We just pop the top.
OK, go.
No time for this little--
Hey, fellas.
What do you think?
What do you think I got under here?
Except for the guy that you fucking worked out with,
literally had a pump cover on.
(01:06:02):
Who?
The fucking guy with the big key shirt.
He did.
He did it.
The guy's so humble, I'm like, he's a competitor.
He goes to the CrossFit Games.
OK.
And I'm looking at him.
I'm like, bro, why are you wearing his big bag?
You're like so is your shit, bro.
You know what I mean?
Let me see.
A pump top.
Almost so much you're working with, bro.
(01:06:23):
Like, I know a homeboy is shredded.
And he's super humble and being nice about it.
But I'm like, whatever, dude.
I like to see that because it inspires me.
Because I'm like, I'm trying to look like this motherfucker.
And then maybe I want to come home and eat so many marshmallow
crispy cookies from Costco.
You know what I mean?
So I'm like, take your shirt off so I don't have to eat
like a slob.
[LAUGHS]
(01:06:44):
Help me stay motivated.
You're fucking baby.
You know?
OK.
Anyways, frequencies.
The way room guys are funny.
Like tees in each other a little bit.
Like, what do you think I got under here?
[LAUGHS]
It's all a big show.
Everyone's looking at them.
(01:07:04):
No one's looking at you, dude.
Everyone's looking at themselves and the mirrors.
Now, let's talk about sound.
OK.
Low frequencies, bass, right?
You notice how if someone's got a subwoofer,
you can hear them.
You can hear the pounding of the bass more
(01:07:25):
than you hear the word, right?
Yes.
Uh-huh.
From the distance.
Yes, yeah.
And their car.
So do they travel further?
They do, because it's a lower frequency and a lower frequency.
Has--
Slower, but travels further.
Yeah, exactly.
You got it.
Man, they're good.
So, I'm high.
Yeah.
And strangely enough, and for reasons I can't explain,
(01:07:46):
light waves are kind of the opposite.
OK.
And you see this with, like, an ultraviolet X-ray gamma
rays.
Those can penetrate your whole body.
That's why when you go to the dentist to do your X-rays,
(01:08:08):
they are-- well, if they're good dentist,
they will offer you a lead apron,
because that will block the waves from penetrating your body.
Got it.
Now, they tell you all this bullshit.
They're like, oh, it's safe.
It's no different than the X-rays you get when you're
up in the atmosphere in a plane, which--
maybe, I don't fucking know.
OK.
Well, they just keep any fucking lead aprons shut the fuck up.
(01:08:29):
Trust me.
Don't make me fucking beg.
Why do I have to ask for it?
Just do it.
Who cares?
Go outside, nerd.
Whereas, a lower frequency, like red or infrared,
will be absorbed by the body.
It won't pass all the way through.
It'll sort of be absorbed in your body.
(01:08:50):
OK.
And that's where you get the red light therapy,
because you have red--
They're red light special.
The red light special.
OK.
Because the waves will penetrate into your skin and muscle
and stimulate mitochondria, stimulates healing.
Oh, that's what I was going to get.
I have a red light therapy mask.
And it's supposed to be good for--
(01:09:11):
Yeah, that Iron Man mask.
My Iron Man mask.
And you can do red light therapies for tissue rebuild.
Like they have stuff if your tissues are fucked.
Yeah, it's supposed to promote healing, reduce inflammation.
Yeah, and they have one stimulating--
OK.
Sorry.
No, go please.
Is it stimulating your skin cells?
OK.
Because it penetrates, but not passed through altogether.
(01:09:34):
If you're having hair loss, try red light therapy.
Really?
Yeah.
What does that do?
They have a band.
They have one that's like a baseball cap that you can put on.
Or they have one that's like a band.
That's the same thing.
They're talking about hair loss in connection with--
is it just like-- it's not just your body.
(01:09:56):
They're also saying like, you have a microbiome
when you're scalp.
And it feeds your follicles and blah, blah, blah, blah,
blah.
Like you want to have a whole--
like it's just keeping your scalp in a really healthy place.
Oh, interesting.
OK.
So I believe it.
Now, another thing you hear about is blue light waves.
(01:10:20):
Because they are the most disruptive light
to the human body.
Oh, and they say that with computers and cell phones,
you get blue light.
That's right.
OK.
It's because of the blue light.
And it messes with stuff in your eyeballs
(01:10:42):
that makes your brain think--
Just stay awake.
Stay awake.
Like daytime light or something?
OK.
But yeah, make sure brain think that it's daytime.
And which is ironic, because you'll notice a lot of the electronic
devices have bright blue LEDs on them.
And I'm like, aren't you the science?
People, the nerds making this shit?
(01:11:03):
Like quit with the disruptive blue shit.
Yeah.
I guess.
But I looked up the history of blue LEDs.
Like, why?
Why do we so much blue?
And it's because back when they first invented LEDs,
they couldn't figure out how to make a blue LED.
It started with red.
(01:11:24):
And then when they decided-- when they figured out how to make blue,
they're like, oh, this is really cool, man.
Because they're nerds.
And it was the new tech.
You know who loves a fucking white light?
Nerds.
Fucking nerds.
They do.
They're the only people that enjoy LED white light.
The coolest light.
I hate it.
OK.
(01:11:44):
It's because--
I do hate a nerd.
I know.
I'm telling you, the root cause of all of our misery
is these nerds.
Because the blue LEDs were the path with which they
could make white lights.
Because a white light-- a white LED light-- is actually just
a blue LED that they call doping in the LED world.
(01:12:09):
You dope it.
The LED with a phosphor coating.
So what you're actually seeing is blue light mixed with yellow light.
And it appears as white light.
Which made me think of you when you
talk about how Christmas lights--
one of the colors you always say that looks like--
remember, you always ask this.
(01:12:29):
You're like purple.
My purple's always look like red and blues together.
Like, I never see purple LED.
You are seeing-- I'm going to look it up.
I got to look it up.
But when I was looking at that, I was like,
I bet you're seeing the two distinct colors.
I bet a purple LED doesn't exist.
I bet it's a blue and a red LED.
I literally cannot see a violet light.
(01:12:52):
Whenever I'm looking, Utah's known for having
a ton of Christmas lights.
You can go to little Christmas villages and shit.
And they'll-- they wrapped all these trees in the LED lights,
which are really vibrant.
They are very vibrant.
But the violet-- they almost look pink.
Like the pinky ones, the purple ones.
(01:13:15):
Always.
Always, always, always.
Look like red and blue to me.
I never see purple.
Oh, we hacked it, because I just looked it up.
So many purple LED bulbs, particularly those
using grow lights, are created by combining red and blue LEDs.
So I think my vision is literally
singling them out and separating it.
(01:13:36):
Because I'll see two lights simultaneously together.
That's crazy.
So do you see purple?
I think I see purple.
I wonder if it's because my vision is such shit.
And I have glasses.
Maybe.
Yeah.
Yeah, because you're cornea, the lens and your eye--
like if that's off just a fraction of a, I don't know,
(01:13:58):
micro meter, that's going to warp the wavelength coming in.
Well, and literally, I have two different prescriptions.
One of my eyes is worse than the other eye.
So I wonder if I'm not like looking separately
and then joining it or something.
Oh, that's crazy.
I don't know.
I just perfectly--
That's a fun little game we play every December.
(01:14:18):
You say, do you see red and blue or purple?
And I'm not sure.
I feel like it's purple.
No, they're literally stacked.
Every light, instead of seeing--
I'm not shitting you.
Every light, I see that every purple one LED light
is literally stacked red and blue.
(01:14:39):
I don't see one singular violet light.
Do you remember in the '80s, they had
these books at the mall that you would stare at an image--
Yes.
--and after a while--
A 3D image.
A 3D image pop out of it.
One of those?
Yes, I loved it.
Whatever happened to those.
I don't know.
They were great.
Simpleer times.
Yeah.
(01:14:59):
It was like the wildest shit.
That should blew my fucking mind.
Do you remember when they came out?
Yeah.
And you remember you had to stare at them
and you have to cross your eyes and straighten them
across them and straighten them.
I couldn't do it for the longest time.
My dad could always do it.
I was like, fuck, I want to see it.
And then finally, I got it.
Once you get it once, it's like you remember it.
You remember it.
Yeah.
(01:15:20):
Like you know how to relax your eyes to do it or something.
Yes.
The human body is so bizarre.
I know.
It's very fun.
It's so weird.
But now, one last thing on LEDs, so do you know what an LED is?
No.
We're going to geek out on electronics for a second,
because I paid 80 grand to do this.
(01:15:40):
OK.
It's a light emitting diode.
And what a diode is is basically a semiconductor.
A semiconductor is basically a switch in electronics.
That's how you control the flow of electricity
and you activate and deactivate parts of a circuit
(01:16:00):
is with a semiconductor.
OK.
It's called a semiconductor, because it's
a conductor, but kind of.
Meaning it lets electricity through,
but you've got to have a sort of condition, which
that condition is a voltage drop across the base to the collector.
OK.
It doesn't really matter.
So you're going to say you're losing me a bit.
(01:16:21):
You apply a voltage across this thing.
OK.
And it'll-- it's sitting there.
It's like a wire, but it's a little broken.
OK.
And when you apply a voltage to the inputs
of the semiconductor, it facilitates a connection.
It's like a train track kind of--
OK.
You apply a voltage across it and boom.
(01:16:42):
And now it can connect boom.
Now you get a flow of electricity.
And it can close a circuit to make something happen.
OK.
So a light emitting diode is basically kind of just like that.
And what you do is when you're creating different LEDs
for different lights--
(01:17:02):
blue light or red light, whatever color light--
how they determine what color it is
is the gap across that distance.
How?
That you have to jump.
OK.
So like a blue LED will have--
it's a physical change that creates it.
So a blue LED will have a larger gap than a red LED.
(01:17:24):
OK.
Meaning a blue LED needs a higher voltage
in order for the current-- the electricity
to cross that gap, that junction.
It's called an NP junction.
And I thought-- and it just made me think,
I'm like, why with the blue lighting all the time
you nerds, it costs--
(01:17:44):
isn't this more electricity?
Uh-huh.
But it's actually not because apparently,
when it comes to creating other lights,
like white light or purple light, it's actually
more efficient to use the blue light,
because the way they used to recreate it
was to take mixtures of red, green, and blue lights,
(01:18:05):
I guess, to create white light.
You know color theory better than I do.
OK.
I guess you can make a white from red, green, and blue.
What I always think of is, do you remember back in the '80s
when they'd have those big projecting screens,
the big giant projectors?
Yeah.
They would have a red light, a fucking blue light,
and a yellow light in those projectors.
Oh, interesting.
(01:18:26):
To project the TVs.
Back in school, when the teacher was bringing it out?
No, in the '70s, when you'd go to your friend's house,
and they'd have one of those giant fucking screens.
Oh, I never seen that.
No.
Y'all, you have it?
You tell 'em how like a Christmas vacation?
When he's in the attic, when he's looking at old videos.
No, I'm not a projector like that.
(01:18:46):
I'm talking about a projection TV screen
that looks like a goddamn box.
Do you remember how heavy the big screen TVs were?
Yeah.
They used to have--
I saw one at an old folks home that had a big giant--
it was a projecting television, but not a projector
like on a TV.
It was literally one giant box.
(01:19:07):
You tell me I like the one we had to haul out of our basement
of this house when we bought it because the dickhead
didn't take the TV with them.
Older than that.
I'm talking about the big fucking square.
Man, maybe I don't know.
What you would think I would.
My grandpa owned a TV repair shop.
OK, I'm gonna think.
It had 100 TVs and stereosbeakers all in his basement
with the copperhead snakes.
(01:19:27):
Did copperheads in there?
I don't know if there were copperheads.
Remember my mom's talking about how there were snakes all
up in that bitch?
Yeah.
I loved it, though.
Me and my cousins used to run around high behind shit.
Almost got-- I bet I almost got bit by a snake
and didn't even know it.
My mom would be like, see?
Told you.
Yeah, look.
(01:19:52):
I've never seen that in my whole fucking life.
Really?
Never.
I feel like I just got Mandela affected.
OK, so there you go.
I guess you can recreate all the colors of the spectrum,
which is red, green, and blue.
Yeah.
OK, well, there you go.
Interesting.
Should we care I'm gonna send this?
This one wasn't like the one I saw?
(01:20:14):
I think it was like this one.
I'm gonna send it to you.
OK.
Well, anyway--
But you don't see this.
I've never seen that.
That's weird.
OK.
OK, well, so I got one more little bit to talk about,
and then we're gonna wrap it up with a long-in conclusion.
OK.
This 432 Hertz thing.
(01:20:35):
It's a conspiracy theory.
Been going around for a long time.
And the theory I've heard was that we used to have music tuned
to 432 Hertz, and then the Nazis came along,
and they changed it to 440 Hertz because they're evil,
and now all the music we consume is evil.
OK.
(01:20:56):
That's like the general consensus of it.
I don't really understand it.
I never really dug into it.
OK.
But this gets into, for some reason, music class
was my least favorite class.
That's shocking.
Oh, because you were singing, right?
Yeah, and I didn't like doing that.
I didn't like pretending to be on music instruments.
(01:21:16):
I didn't like singing, and like, no, that shit.
OK.
I rejected it immediately.
OK.
You probably loved singing.
Did you love singing?
Yeah, I fucking love it.
I was in a kids' choir.
I'm a performer.
[LAUGHTER]
Of course you are.
I'm not good at anything.
I like it.
I don't know what it is.
(01:21:37):
But when I was a kid, I was in a kids' choir.
I love fucking karaoke.
Me and my sisters would always get together,
and we would do little--
we'd make programs for our mom, which I'm sure it was the worst.
But we would listen to either children's choir music,
(01:21:57):
which-- what a bunch of fucking dorks.
Number one.
Mom, sit there and listen to the whole thing.
I can't imagine how much I was crying.
No, my mom had to tend to deficit on the next bucket level
at zero chance as she did that.
No, I'm sure I wanted to.
I think one time we had an old piece of shit.
I could see it now.
OK, wrap it up.
Yeah.
OK.
(01:22:18):
I saw-- or we had like an old piece of shit swing set.
And we were doing a choreographed performance of Grease 2.
Oh, I've never seen Grease 2.
What?
Is it good?
I like Grease 1.
Fuck, we're watching it.
It's great.
Is it got a job in Travolta?
(01:22:39):
No.
No, no.
I have special fiverr.
It doesn't matter.
I like it with special fiverr.
It's not close.
I don't know.
I guess it's-- people hated it or they love it.
I'm a love it.
I'm a love it type of person.
You should also--
Great music.
I will volley that back with you should watch
the sequel to Saturday Night Fever.
(01:23:00):
Absolutely not.
That one looks fucking awful.
It's not-- I mean, I guess if your expectations are through the floor,
you'd be like, I don't know.
Travolta was slaying on that motherfucker.
What's he?
Oh, fuck, Grease stuff.
And all that.
He looked great.
He was crushing it on the dance moves.
I mean, I get it.
It's not a good movie, a good story.
But--
(01:23:20):
But you're not watching for that.
It's just good.
I don't know.
I don't think it's better than Saturday Night Fever by any means.
OK.
I think if you separate--
that's how I feel about Grease 2.
It's not--
You're not going to get Grease 1.
No, you're there for something else.
Same with the sequel to Rocky Horror Picture Show.
OK.
(01:23:41):
It's-- and it's painful when you watch--
what's the sequel called Shock Treatment?
The first time you watch it, you're like, oh, hell no.
I'm turning this bullshit all the way off.
Oh, but you liked it.
But after the second viewing, I was like,
I don't know.
Like, the songs are pretty good.
It's not bad.
OK.
OK.
It's just a hard one first--
It's all about perspective.
I know.
I think you go in with a high level of excitement.
(01:24:05):
And this is like always the thing with the sequels
is that they never live up to the first one.
The first one.
So for back to the future two, Terminator 2, which are great.
Yeah, but name another.
Like, there's not a whole--
Not typical, no.
Anyways.
And then we're in El Street 2 atrocious compared
to the original.
Really?
But then three brought it all the way back.
(01:24:26):
And you're like, maybe three is better than the first one.
Really?
Yeah.
The second one is--
But you have to have that.
I think sometimes you have to have that loss to get that--
Oh, no, you're not killing it with that.
And then you've got to come back strong.
Yeah.
Sometimes failures aren't always failures.
(01:24:47):
Yeah.
Yeah, because look at Nightmare.
It went on to crush it.
I mean--
When you like three or more, then you liked one.
Yeah.
All of them.
You have to have a failure to see what doesn't work.
Yeah.
It's like it's almost like it's OK to fail.
It's a way of learning--
OK, well, that didn't work.
Let me do something else.
The seek-- it was so weird because Nightmare,
(01:25:09):
Notary 2 was--
I mean, it's notoriously homosexual.
It's like all the charts with the homosexual references,
which is fine, whatever.
Home-orotic.
But it's just wild.
You're like-- and then they deny it.
They're like, no, there's no homosexual.
What do you got?
Implications or whatever.
(01:25:29):
And you're like, bitch, just say you did.
[LAUGHS]
Was anybody gay?
Who's gay on the set?
The main character-- oh, the main character, I think,
turned out to be gay in real life, I think.
There was a documentary about the making of Nightmare
and No-Strick 2, because the guy got harassed.
Poor guy got harassed his whole life.
But I think he actually did turn out to be homosexual.
(01:25:51):
Yeah, but he didn't write the fucking movie.
No.
So who wrote the movie?
Who wrote the script?
You should-- it's interesting.
Anyway, it's kind of like Top Gun
with the homosexual references.
Yeah.
When you look back on it, you're like, huh.
There really was gay.
Top Gun is one of the best, man.
(01:26:12):
OK, 432 Hertz.
OK, what I was talking about was my struggle with music class.
Homosexuality.
[LAUGHS]
[LAUGHS]
You know, it's that cross that's really bringing it out in me.
I can't help it.
OK, you hate music class.
Oh, that's right.
(01:26:32):
When we-- I got Sing Star, your first introduction
to me loving to perform in karaoke was I got Sing Star,
which is a really fun--
No, the first one was when you actually did karaoke,
and you did a version.
And I rolled around on the stage.
And you performed for the whole bar?
Yes.
I am good at it.
I don't sound good, but I am fun.
(01:26:52):
Um.
Anyway, so what we had, it's a game for playstation
where you sing, and it holds the pitch on it.
So you have to sing well.
And it's really great because the music comes with the videos.
So you get to see the old videos of these really fun songs,
and then you get to play against each other,
and then there's-- and one of you is better than the other.
(01:27:14):
It's so fucking fun.
And me and you were playing it, and you got bent.
You were so pitched, you threw the mic on the ground,
and you stormed off in your undies.
And I kept singing.
I couldn't believe it.
You stormed off, and I started laughing.
I was like, you fucking baby.
(01:27:34):
And I kept singing, and I was crushing it,
because that's what I do.
And then you stormed back in after two minutes,
grabbed up the mic and started singing it.
Now, fun fact.
That's my favorite-- one of my favorite memories of you.
Fun fact, that same microphone I slammed
would later record the first--
(01:27:56):
I don't know, 50 episodes of my podcast,
it's very serious, and I'm popular culture--
with a literal sing star, USB mic, pieces shit mic,
omnidirectional picked up every noise from everywhere.
I think this is my fourth mic here.
Finally, it was like, OK, I'll spend more than $100, I guess.
(01:28:18):
So 432 hurts.
What the hell does that even mean?
Well, when music is created, you tune the instruments
to a frequency.
And it used to be you would tune it to 432 hurts.
This is what all classical music was tuned to.
I thought there were notes.
I thought you would--
This is where you got to talk to someone smarter than me.
(01:28:40):
I don't even know what the fuck that means.
OK.
To tune-- I know excited guitar that I tried to learn.
Yeah.
And you would have a little tuner.
Yeah.
Kick out the 440 hurts sound.
And you would tune your strings so that when you plucked a string,
it would hum and vibrate at that same note.
(01:29:00):
Toe?
I don't fucking know.
Nope.
They used to do it with tuning forks.
That's right.
OK.
And that's where they said, back in the day,
they used to do it to 432 hurts with tuning forks,
or just with their fucking ear.
And that's where there's different thoughts about this.
Like a lot of people debunk this and say, look, back on all that shit
(01:29:23):
you're listening to from classical music
and further back with the ancient cultures,
they didn't fucking tune shit.
They just kind of guessed.
So we don't even know if they were using 432 hurts.
OK.
The only reason you have this theory is because in 1955,
the international organization for standardization, ISO,
they adopted and said, look, 440 hurts
(01:29:46):
will be the official tuning frequency.
OK.
To tune all your instruments to.
OK.
Prior to that, the claim is that was 432.
Nerds will say, yeah, they said that,
but they don't even know if all that shit was 432.
I guess.
I don't know.
Like to me, my brain, I think, well, I mean,
(01:30:07):
I can listen to--
I can go to Amazon right now and play Beethoven and Bach.
But it's not them playing it.
But yeah, like--
They don't even know the speed of which
they were playing these things.
Yeah, like who recreated this shit?
They don't write the speed of it.
So I was watching--
I mean, don't they just read the sheet of music?
(01:30:29):
No, it doesn't say how fast you're supposed to play it.
I would send it.
You remember that?
I don't remember.
I sent it to you to send to Jimmy the Jackhammer.
Yeah, that's right.
Oh, Jimmy the Jackhammer.
Just birthday.
Today, happy birthday, Jimmy.
Jackhammer, if you made it this far, shoot me a text.
Anyways.
Yeah, that's right.
(01:30:49):
I remember that.
And then I was even confused back then.
And I sent to him and I said, I don't know what the fuck
this is saying.
Can you dumb this down for me?
OK.
So anyway, from this, the conspiracy theory
came about that-- because Nazi's and Hitler
was in round in the '40s.
They're like, oh, the Nazis made everyone
(01:31:09):
shift to 440.
And because Nazis are evil, therefore, music is now evil.
That's where the theory comes from.
OK.
But it was just a standardization of a tuning.
Yeah.
And it wasn't even a Nazi organization.
It was the ISO International Organization for Standardization.
And it was 90 to the five.
Hitler allegedly blew his brains out 10 years prior.
(01:31:31):
Got it.
Well, really, he was probably in Argentina.
And they were infiltrating the American government
to fucking turn this shit hole into a fascist piece
of shit police state, which is what they're doing today.
Yes.
OK.
Because it turns out the Nazis are running the government.
Now--
[LAUGHTER]
So what it means is that instruments--
(01:31:54):
In conjunction with APAC.
Somehow, in some strange way.
But as you said in that one episode,
the Nazis and the Israel lobbyists were--
They worked together.
They literally worked together.
So it was the Illuminati for real.
Nazis and Israel, I guess.
Who knows?
(01:32:15):
So what it means is that the instrument, the string,
would vibrate at 440 times a second or 432 times a second.
And the theory is that 432, obviously,
a lower frequency less times per second of movement than 440.
(01:32:37):
440 is a higher frequency, a higher, I don't know, pitch,
whatever.
And if you wanted to definitively say, well,
is 440 Hertz better or worse than 432 Hertz,
when I think of a higher frequency,
I think of a more excited state, more agitated state.
(01:33:01):
OK.
And they say that 432 Hertz is more consistent
with natural frequencies, like the Schumann resonance, which
is the-- I don't know, the heartbeat of the Earth.
Like, if you get to like a heart math institute stuff.
Very avatar shit.
OK.
Right?
And that's a slower rhythm.
(01:33:23):
I guess.
OK.
So that's a--
That feels like corny.
Like a corny or--
432.
The slower one.
I think it's a romantic.
Well, funny.
You should say that.
When I was researching all this, I asked chat.
I said, hey, let me find it here.
(01:33:47):
It's going to be real good.
It's going to be worth it once I--
You're going to make your herniac pop out again.
[LAUGHS]
I'm leaning back and then reaching over like that.
I asked it a question.
And it's a really good one.
Once I get to it, it will be--
(01:34:09):
I said, is there a horny frequency?
What the fuck?
And it said, ha, ha, interesting question.
There isn't a scientifically recognized horny frequency,
per se.
But certain sounds, rhythms, or music
can definitely boost a rousal mood and sensuality
by affecting your brain and body.
[CLEARS THROAT]
And then it just goes on and talk about shit.
(01:34:30):
I'm sorry.
There is a horny frequency.
I-- I listened to horny--
And I refined it.
I-- [LAUGHS]
I listened to horny music all of the time.
Well, that takes us to the conclusion.
OK.
And the conclusion can music heal you.
And we can all agree, music can change your energy
(01:34:53):
and your mood.
Immediately.
Everyone knows it.
Everyone feels it.
Everyone senses it unless you're a fucking robot.
Yeah.
Regardless of whatever the fuck frequency, 440, 432,
I've got certain-- you can play me some goddamn journey
at 440.
And I still feel love, baby.
(01:35:13):
OK.
You know?
Yes.
It has an effect.
It has an effect in your mind, your body.
I feel like it's the thing--
I think between music and smell, for me,
are the two things that can put me in a nostalgic state.
Yeah.
(01:35:35):
It's because your sense of smell, your olfactory sense,
is, are tied to your memory.
Did you know that?
No, I didn't.
Yeah.
They're tied in the same circuitry of your brain
that holds on to memories.
Interesting.
So yeah, you could listen to sexy R&B music and get horny.
You can listen to EDM music and get hype.
(01:35:56):
You can listen to gangster rap music and go fucking murder
somebody or sell drugs or whatever.
Or for me, I'll listen to gangster rap
for the hustler side of it.
OK.
Of really embracing that sort of masculine energy
of going out and making shit happen.
(01:36:18):
You know what I mean?
OK.
That's all I look at.
I'm not like, yeah, I want to sell drugs and murder people.
I look at it as like, I'm going to thought to go
fucking go get it, baby.
Got to get up and got to hustle.
Get some shit done.
And I take their energy because they're in pursuit of--
(01:36:40):
fucking bettlies and fur coats and big ass watches.
And I'll be-- I'm not into that shit.
But I want to pursue the wealth that would provide--
-Persu-- -Daw.
If I wanted to.
-Stalks, yeah.
-Stalks, the retirement.
-Yeah, like I channel that into that.
It's like, get up and fucking do some shit.
(01:37:01):
And if I want to buy a Bentley someday, maybe I'll do that.
I don't fucking know.
I don't want to.
-Yeah, I was going to say, you're--
-I don't give a fuck.
-That's not your style.
But yeah, all this--
the idea that music can influence your energy,
we all experience that.
-Yeah.
-Similar argument can be had for how people meditate
(01:37:22):
and they own, right?
You know what I mean?
They go, "Oh, it's about balancing things out.
It's about the energy in the body, the cheat,
the natural energy in the body, and aligning chakras."
-They'll even-- they'll hit a tuning fork and press it
into your chakras.
-Oh, really?
-Yeah, so they'll get tuning forks,
(01:37:42):
or they have like tuning bowls.
-Yeah, the sound baths, right?
-Yeah, and do sound baths in them.
-Yes.
-You can put tuning forks on your different, like chakras,
to help get your cheat or your energy moving right.
-And I have experience-- I know for fact this works
based on-- because you know, a crossfit
I'm constantly getting injured, constantly stressing my body out,
(01:38:07):
tendon issues of constant, right?
Constant injuries you're dealing with.
And there's a clinic I go to that they do cheat
work, energy line work.
-Really?
-Yeah, this is one of them.
And like you'll check you out, and then he presses on
like two different pressure points, where your cheat energy
(01:38:30):
is like out of balance or some bullshit.
And he'll just press it for like five minutes.
-Not even hard.
-No, not even hard.
I'm just like, this is such nonsense.
-I know.
-And he's fixed me many times.
-I know.
When I pulled my pelvis out of alignment,
I was like, fuck, that-- that shit was so painful.
And it was out for a long time, and it kept popping in and out
(01:38:52):
of alignment.
And I had to go into them.
And there, that was the only--
I did a couple different therapies,
and that was the only thing that fucking worked.
And it feels so dumb.
When they're doing it, I'm like, this is fucking waste.
It makes me angry.
-One time I was having-- I don't remember
what it was-- hip flexor issues or something.
(01:39:13):
And he had to-- I had to sit up on the bed,
and he had to get behind me and sit with his legs
straddled around me so that he could reach the two points.
And I was in a big bear hug with him.
This is so much.
-Did you feel safe?
-No, I was like, they ate this.
[LAUGHTER]
-I don't know why, but I feel safe in your arms.
(01:39:34):
-So all that shit-- for-fact works.
All of this.
I am 100% behind all of that.
And that makes me think about how your body--
if we're all energy, and we're all frequencies of energy,
because we're part of the material world.
We're matter condensed.
(01:39:56):
And our spirit, according to the hermetics,
is the highest form of frequency that's inside
experiencing this material world through this body.
So aligning it or tuning it to certain frequencies,
they believe can reduce issues with your nervous system.
(01:40:18):
It could lower your heart rate, lower your blood pressure,
your breathing, all this shit, which
is why meditation works so great, right?
-Yeah.
-Because meditation can get you into that theta wave state.
And you know what else can really help your body?
It's mushroom infused coffee.
That's right.
We're selling the Mushroom and Adi Watcher coffee
(01:40:40):
at occultsimilism.com.
My new store, the place you can get going down a grifter alley,
you can go get your coffee.
-It actually is delicious.
-infused with mushrooms.
It's a blend of mushrooms that includes a variety of mushrooms
that will change your life.
It'll change your day and your life, including the lion's main
(01:41:03):
mushroom, which I read through Christopher
Haus medicinal medicine book.
And it's got a variety of benefits for anti-anxiety,
depression through clinical trials, right?
Cognitive benefits.
They did four human clinical trials, double-lime placebo,
controlled studies.
And it has a significant increase in cognitive functioning
(01:41:25):
and memory.
And I know it works because I drink it every morning.
And when I'm drinking my Mushroom and Adi Watcher
branded coffee, I will be an active brain state,
active flow state.
What was that state?
Alpha.
Is that alpha?
Is that what it was or beta?
-Beta.
-Beta.
I'm in that beta state.
I'm like, I'm turning out books.
(01:41:46):
Shit.
I'm working hard, baby.
So yeah, that was a quick plug.
-And no bullshit.
It really tastes super good.
-It's easily the best mushroom and fused coffee
you'll ever try.
I tried multiple coffees.
And they taste like dirt.
-They taste like shit.
-I know who drinks this shit.
Because I was trying to get mushroom supplementation done.
(01:42:09):
I had a bunch of pills.
But I take so many fucking supplement pills every day.
I hate it.
And I think that my man Jordan, who is the roaster I get this
through, are limited edition branded coffee.
I think it's the best way to get it in, to be honest.
So I'll put a link in the shown.
(01:42:30):
If anyone's interested, go to occultsimilism.com.
You hate this.
-I was just not my thing.
It's fine though.
Not the mushroom coffee.
The mushroom coffee is my thing.
-Me grifting on your audience.
You hate it.
-No, I don't hate it.
It's just--
-I prepared you for this.
I said, sometimes during the show today,
I'm going to take them down Grifter Alley.
(01:42:51):
-And I said do it.
-I got mushroom infused coffee to sell them.
-It's not my vibe, man.
-I was trying to find my angle in and I found out I was
going to be doing it.
-He slid right in.
It's perfect.
-Okay, back to the hurts.
-Okay, now I'm going to switch gears a little bit.
(01:43:13):
-Okay.
-And I'm going to talk to you about a book that a good friend
of mine, good friends of mine, gave me.
And it's called Don't Believe Everything You Think by Joseph
Win.
And I know how to pronounce the name Win.
It's N-G-U-Y-E-N.
-No.
-You know that's how you pronounce that?
(01:43:33):
-No.
-Because I grew up and one of my close friends,
his name was Pondit Win.
And he died in a car accident when we were teenagers.
It's fucking terrible.
He's in a Volkswagen Shorako that wrecked and called on fire
and he died in the back seat.
-Oey.
-It's fucking terrible.
-Oh, that's awful.
-I hate it.
Anyway, so in this book, given to me
(01:43:55):
by, we have a code name for her, Hermione McGonagall.
-Never.
[laughter]
-I don't even remember all these nicknames.
-I don't know.
-Because that's the PA in you.
-It is.
-Pencilvania people love to fucking have nicknames.
-Well, you're a nickname.
-And I don't have one for Hermann's.
(01:44:16):
Ken, because he reminds me of Ken, like Ken and Barbie.
-And Barbie.
-He's so damn good looking this guy.
What the fuck, man?
Anyway, this book is absolutely fucking perfect for a person like me
and a person like you, to be honest.
-Oh, okay.
-I feel like you should read this shit next.
Because it's about--
-Two to fish once on my lap so hard.
(01:44:38):
And every time I go to touch her, she jumps back like a little butthole.
-That's what she does.
-She didn't come on.
-Shah, I thought you guys were done.
-Come on.
-I heard in conclusion and now I come running.
-Come on.
-So in this book, it talks about thinking.
All right?
My takeaway so far, I'm halfway through the book already, is that you create your own
(01:44:59):
heaven or hell.
Choices yours.
And it says interesting things.
It talks about how your thoughts are energy that manifests from your mind.
Okay?
Energy, meaning it's a frequency, I think.
All right?
Your thoughts are different frequencies.
(01:45:19):
And so you have a thought and you have thinking.
Those are two different things.
A thought is like a noun.
It's like a thing.
Thinking is a verb.
That's an action.
-Okay.
Doctor-- or I don't know if he's the doctor.
At Cartoli, the way he-- I read his book.
What was that book called?
At Cartoli's book.
(01:45:40):
New World or something like that?
-I don't remember.
-I don't remember.
Anyways.
Dude, he said something that was like, "So it stopped me in my track.
It took me a fucking month."
I couldn't get past this part.
He said, "You are not your thoughts and you are the listener of your thoughts."
And that idea of like--
-Similar thoughts.
-Not being your thoughts.
-Because I always identified so much with the thoughts in my head are me.
(01:46:04):
That is me.
And so having something challenge that and say, "No, no, no, you are the listener of that
thought.
Fucked me up for a minute."
Because this was like probably like 20 years ago.
Like listening to that and hearing it for the first time.
And I was like, "Wow, that is weird to think about."
(01:46:26):
-Yeah.
And I think you would like this book because it basically is a similar idea.
-Okay.
-Presenting it in a variety of ways.
-Okay.
-And it's like, "Okay, you can have a thought.
Like that's going to happen.
You're not going to not have a thought.
If you don't have a thought, you're dead."
-Yeah.
-It's the thinking, it's the judgment, it's the holding on to of those thoughts that
(01:46:47):
is the source of suffering.
That's where you spend all this energy and you ruminate on it, which is, "I'm guilty
of this story."
-And not so.
-Yes, I do it too.
-So.
-I think when you're a worrier, and that's who, our anxiety is, "This is our thing," right?
We loop and we ruminate.
-Yeah.
Like, "I'll have a thought.
I'll, you know, I'll have a thought like today I saw the National Guard is going to go
(01:47:16):
to DC and now they want to put the National Guard in all these major cities and Philly and
Baltimore and all these places."
And my thought is, "Oh my God, like this is a fascist, police state fucking thing.
This is like what you see in every third world country, fucking history is the military being
sort of unleashed into the streets of American cities.
(01:47:37):
That's not what we do here."
And my thought is, "Oh my God, like this is going to slide into fascist dictatorship."
-Mm-hmm.
They're trying.
And I hold on to that thought.
It's my thinking about it.
It's my ruminating on it and it's my judgment behind it.
-Yeah.
-You know.
Anyway, the, the, the Buddhists have this sort of example where they talk about how an
(01:48:01):
event will have two arrows that fly towards us, like a negative event.
The first arrow will hit you.
That's the event and it causes pain.
That's, and that's inevitable.
Like you always have pain in your life.
There's always loss.
There's always bad things that will happen.
It's just inevitable.
The second arrow is the emotional reaction to the first arrow and it can be more painful
(01:48:29):
than the first arrow.
-Yeah.
-And the second one is where suffering comes from, not the first one.
The reaction is the only thing you can control in that situation.
And the Buddha says, you know, we can't control the first arrow, but the second arrow, the
reaction is optional.
(01:48:52):
Which is kind of crazy.
You know, something horrible happens to somebody and it seems like a real jerk off move to be
like, well, don't let it get you down.
You know, like, fuck, I just, I just lost my legs in this accident.
What the fuck you mean?
Never walk again or whatever and it's the reaction to the accident that causes the suffering.
(01:49:16):
Which is like a fucked up thing.
But I feel like the culture now, like these young people now, they are, they almost identify
in that suffering.
-Yeah, you're right.
They totally do.
-Yes.
Like, they build a, they build a personality around the suffering.
They give it names.
Like, it's a total identity of the bad things that happen to them.
(01:49:41):
Now are who they are.
-That's a good point.
-It's horrendous.
-And I think, I think the, I think that all of society is built to fuck with us.
-No, I think it's an overreaction and a misunderstanding of therapeutic teachings.
(01:50:01):
It's, it's a lot, we have a lot of like, we have a lot of information.
Add our fingertips.
We don't have a lot of like, new wants to it.
-No.
-Like, I think it's, we, so people can learn about like, what's something that everybody fucking
says.
What do people call like shitty boyfriends or whatever, they're narcissistic?
(01:50:26):
Everybody's a narcissist.
-Okay.
-That, well, that's not really the truth.
Not everybody's a fucking narcissist.
Some people just don't know how to be in a relationship and show people love the way that
they want to be loved.
It doesn't mean that they're a fucking narcissist.
It means that you two weren't compatible.
You don't need to like, fucking shit on them.
You know what I mean?
-Yeah.
-But like, it's that, or they use like gas lighting or they'll use, they do a lot of like,
(01:50:50):
therapy terms.
-Yes, exactly.
They use therapy terms to then victimize themselves with it.
And not that those are wrong.
Like, I, I don't think that therapy is wrong.
I'm a huge advocate for people being in therapy and challenge.
But the point of going to therapy isn't to validate your thinking and behavior.
(01:51:15):
It's actually to challenge it.
-Yeah, I think people who shit on therapy have no idea they've never been in therapy.
-I've never fucking been.
-That's what bugs me about.
And that's like such a fucking capitalist fucking thing.
And that's why like, Joe Rogan had that lady on who was shit on capitalism or therapy.
-Okay.
-Because like, that's, because Joe Rogan is, you know, funded.
(01:51:35):
-Yeah.
-Clearly.
And a capitalist society can really take advantage of people who don't question thinking
or thoughts or have any other perspective besides what's drilled into their fucking brain.
Through podcast and social media and commercials and UFC and all of the society.
(01:51:57):
-Yes.
-Culture.
-All of them red pill, alpha, bros, they don't want you going to therapy.
They say it's for pussies because they don't want you to, they don't want anyone to get inside
your head except for them.
So they can take your money.
Everything's a fucking grip.
-Yes.
-And it's like, that's, my experience with therapy is nothing like all the shit that all
(01:52:17):
these people that shit on it.
It's like, no, you guys are weak because you don't have the balls to sit in a place and spill
your darkest secrets to somebody.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
(01:52:38):
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
(01:52:59):
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
(01:53:20):
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
(01:53:43):
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
(01:54:04):
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-And then have somebody challenge and play your own thing.
-What we're talking about, the reaction to an event is what causes the suffering.
-Yeah, yeah, yeah.
-We're talking about this book still.
And it has this interesting, accrued, pneumonic, I should say,
(01:54:26):
about how to let go of this suffering.
-Oh, that's great.
Because I do feel like when you go into therapy,
there is a lot of like, we need to let go of stuff
and start looking at it in a new way.
But my therapist, I think what I stopped going to her was
because she didn't give me enough tools to learn how to do that.
(01:54:48):
Because it's like, she's like, you're looking at that the wrong way
and you're like, this isn't great for you.
And I'm like, yeah, well, fucking, how do I not do this thing?
How do I stop this thing that I'm doing?
And I was like, I don't know.
And maybe she did. Maybe I couldn't hear her.
Because she was like, you know, write your journal
(01:55:11):
or whatever.
Yeah, shut the fuck up.
-You didn't like what she had to say?
-Maybe I was getting a little bit fucking,
because I was doing a lot of like stuff on my own.
So I was like reading books and watching Ted Talks.
And I was, you know, I had space for her.
But then sometimes I was like having like real problems
(01:55:33):
and I don't think I had enough direction in the journal link.
If you just say start journal link to me, it was too vague.
-Yeah.
-And it felt dismissive.
-And it sounds like some shit some everyday person would tell you to do.
-Yeah. And it felt like I didn't just say.
-I don't know, go meditate.
Cool. I never thought of that.
(01:55:54):
-Yeah, exactly.
-Okay.
-And I got to deal with some real shit here.
-Yeah.
-So I think that I was like, "Hmm, I think maybe this is like not as beneficial with her."
And I think you outgrow sometimes like you get all of the juice from the squeeze
from that one therapist.
(01:56:18):
And sometimes you got to like switch to a new fruit to squeeze a little bit more.
-A little different perspective maybe.
-Yeah.
-Well, here's a different perspective for you.
-Next time you're feeling negative frequency.
Remember this pneumonic, pause, PAUSC.
It's like Gary Busy.
(01:56:39):
-Gary Busy always have some fucking pneumonic.
-Oh, he did.
-That was the golden age of reality TV.
-He did.
-What was his show on VH1?
He had a show, didn't he?
Of each one.
-I don't remember.
-My life with Gary Busy or some shit.
-Something.
-It wasn't just like Busy or something.
No, that was the best.
(01:57:00):
P is for pause, appropriate, right?
-Mm-hmm.
-Pause and breathe to calm yourself.
A is ask.
And you ask yourself, "Is this thinking I'm doing making me feel how I want?
Do I want to suffer?"
Because that's what I'm doing when I'm thinking about this like this.
(01:57:23):
I'm suffering.
Then you is understand, which means understand you have a choice.
Do you want to suffer?
Do you want to feel this way?
And surely you don't.
So S.
-That's not surely you don't.
Some people do.
-Some people do.
-Some people do.
-That's true.
-So that's not a surely.
(01:57:46):
-Well.
-Go ahead.
Because again, sometimes that suffering has now become an identity.
Or sometimes that suffering is connected to a loss of, let's say, a person.
-Okay.
-And let's say if you hold on to that suffering because that's the last connection to that person.
(01:58:07):
-Oh.
-Rudal.
-I know it's fucking it's upsetting.
So it's like sometimes the suffering is, "Do I want to suffer?"
The answer could be yes.
Because it's my last connection to this person.
Well, then S is probably different for them.
-Okay.
-S for them is suck a bag of dicks them.
(01:58:28):
You're done.
But on the healthy path, S is say the mantra.
The mantra is thinking is the root cause of suffering.
So my thought is like when you're triggered, you have to pause.
You ask, "Is this what I want?
Do I want to suffer right now?"
Then you understand, "I have a choice of how I respond to this second arrow."
(01:58:54):
And then you say to yourself, "Thinking is the root cause of suffering."
And then E, you experience your emotions without judgment.
You don't think about them.
You just feel them.
The book says very clearly.
It's like, "You don't have to discount your emotions.
If you're feeling sad or upset or scared or anxious or fearful,
you can experience those.
(01:59:15):
Those are emotions.
You are supposed to feel those.
You just aren't supposed to think.
-Attached thoughts to them.
-Yeah, start spiraling with the thinking about all this.
Anyway, it seemed relevant to this conversation
because it's about aligning frequencies, I think.
And people think that, like, that's 432 hertz stuff, right?
(01:59:38):
That you can create a sort of resonance to this.
Like, your body can align to frequencies.
And you can align your shocker points.
And allow your energy and your body to flow more harmoniously, your Qi.
And it's funny because that's actually a concept in electronics engineering as well.
(02:00:01):
It's got a frequency following response.
And it's the idea that you sort of like throw a certain frequency at this circuit.
And the other circuit will sort of follow that frequency as a guide.
Like, it'll sort of resonate.
It'll create a resonance to sort of connect in together.
Do you know that they have a thing where you have to dis...
(02:00:24):
Because I always had a hard time like understanding what resonance was.
So this is such a weird word.
-It is.
-They have a way of like...
If you have a tuning fork and you put it in a hollow box
and then you tap the tuning fork
and a vibration will shoot down the stem and out the box.
(02:00:46):
And if you move the...
You could have another tuning fork in another box.
And if you align them just right,
the vibration will come from the one that you hit with the action.
And it'll actually vibrate in the other tuning fork.
(02:01:08):
-Yeah.
-That's resonance.
-Yeah.
-So that's fucking wild.
-Yeah.
So you want your body to align to the good stuff.
-Yeah.
You have to open yourself up for the resonance,
meaning that you have to be open enough in the right alignment
with the...
Whatever's hitting that fucking fork
so that it can resonate through you.
(02:01:29):
-So you don't block it.
-Yeah.
-If you're just off...
If you're off just a millimeter, it won't...
You won't get it.
It won't vibrate.
-I've got a book over here that I read.
"Doctorie Moto did the Water Crystals Experiment."
Remember that?
It was in that documentary, "What the believe do we know?"
I think.
And it's the same idea that they would have water
(02:01:50):
and they would...
I don't know.
Subjected to different frequencies
by writing the word "love"
and attaching it to the bottle of water.
Attacking the word "hate"
and attaching it to the bottle.
And it would...
The water crystals would...
become resonant with whatever the frequency is of the messaging,
the song, whatever...
(02:02:11):
However they did it in these experiments.
-Did they freeze the water?
Is that what you're talking about?
-Yeah, I guess.
I don't remember.
I think they froze it.
-And then the freezing of the water is what showed...
You know what else they've had?
-And the happy positive shit was like these beautiful,
symmetrical crystals
and the negative stuff was like these fucked up.
-What are those called like the...
(02:02:32):
in geometry when they would have like...
you know, like a seashell...
-Like the...
-Fibonacci sequence?
-Yes. Or what's the one that's...
Is that the same one that's in a pine cone?
-Yeah, I think so.
I think the seashell and the pine cone...
-And that's what they kind of say with the snowflakes
is that like you'll get into this geometric...
(02:02:53):
like visually appealing...
-Yeah.
-Christle formation.
But you know what else water does?
You can show it a fucking photo and then freeze it
and it will put the crystals in the way of the...
where the photo was so it can be of...
-Like an imprint of it.
-An imprint of the fucking photo.
-That's weird.
(02:03:14):
-Isn't that crazy?
-Yeah.
-So when people think that like water is like...
not...
I don't know what is that like conscious or...
or has a presence or has some kind of like way of...
See, this is why I love Avatar.
Because it...
That resonates to me where I'm like...
This feels all connected.
We all feel connected.
(02:03:35):
These are the things here.
Just like...
It's a gift to be able to make dinner.
Having fresh clean water feels like that same gift.
-Yeah, you need those positive...
I feel like you need those positive messages
to quick get wrapped around the axles of the sort of mundane shit.
We typically do, you know?
-Right.
-Guilty is charged, right?
-Same.
Yeah, it's not like...
(02:03:56):
-So it's a daily struggle.
-Right.
-In fact, there's Avatar 3 coming out.
This Christmas, did you know that?
-No, I'm very excited.
-Are you?
[laughs]
I get mad when I see those TikToks
that people are like...
How is Avatar the highest grossing film?
Nobody I know literally watches this movie.
-I love it.
I watch it.
I think maybe I've made it the most grossed...
(02:04:18):
Because I've made it the most money
because I've watched it a bazillion fucking times.
I love it.
So I just like that idea of like being...
one with the...
with your nature.
You know what I mean?
Like when you look into mushrooms and micro...
the microbiome of like this...
the uh...
-The mycelium?
(02:04:39):
-Yeah, the mycelium.
-Yeah.
-The myceliums...
It's crazy.
It's fucking wild.
I know mushrooms are absolutely fascinating.
-They are fascinating.
-That's why I never start my morning without
mushroom and naughty water cup.
Oh sorry.
Sorry.
My bad.
I already got it.
I already hit them with it.
My bad.
Do you know that there are...
four million species of fungus on earth?
(02:05:02):
-No.
-And there's only four percent of those that have been documented.
-I heard that we have like the closest DNA to fungus.
And that's why it's so hard to cure fungus inside of ourselves
because anything that's toxic to the fungus is also very toxic to us.
-Oh fascinating.
(02:05:23):
Yeah, they said fungus has been on earth for a billion years.
A billion with a fucking bee.
-I think that number gets thrown around so much
that we don't understand the concept of it to be honest.
-It's pretty crazy.
-Because I don't really...
I don't know.
At this point, I'm like...
I don't know.
-Somebody has a hundred billion dollars.
-Yeah.
-It's an obscenely large number.
(02:05:47):
-Yes.
-So with the music...
I noticed this.
I had my chief engineer when I was in a porto's office.
He used to play...
He had dim lighting.
And he used to play fucking Navajo flute music all day.
And I was in my like 20s, I guess, maybe early 30s.
(02:06:12):
And I was like, "This guy's such a fucking weirdo. What a pus."
He was just weird.
-This is in the military?
-No. When I worked for that engineering company.
-Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
-Oh my God, that's such a nerd thing.
-It's such a nerd thing.
And I was like, "What a weirdo."
But as I get older...
-You got your flutes.
-I love the Navajo flutes.
(02:06:34):
I get it now.
-Yeah.
-Like when I need to meditate...
Like I don't meditate every day, but when I do meditate,
I choose Navajo Flutes.
I play the Navajo flute music because it really is...
There's something about it.
-You played that when you did ketamine too.
-Yep.
When the ketamine...
Filred trip happened.
It was the...
It was the flutes that...
(02:06:55):
-Grounded you.
-That guy did me on my journey.
I mean, there's something fucking to it.
I don't know.
You can't convince me otherwise.
You could give me fucking science bullshit or whatever you want to say.
There's something to it.
-Yeah.
-And you ever heard of Bynoral Beats?
-No.
-Bynoral Beats were beats used in the CIA Gateway project.
(02:07:18):
-Oh, okay.
-And what it was was you would introduce a frequency into...
Two different frequencies into two different ears.
So for instance, you would put 200 hertz into one ear, 210 hertz in another ear.
And your brain, the computer that it is, will fill in the gaps.
-Oh, interesting.
-Okay.
(02:07:39):
It'll see that there's a difference and it'll create a third tone.
So you put 201, 210 and the other, it creates a 10 hertz signal, a third tone.
10 hertz is the alpha waves.
Alpha waves are the way you reduce stress and anxiety.
(02:08:00):
-Oh, interesting.
-Isn't that crazy?
-That is crazy.
-And they were studying this at the Mynoral Institute.
And the idea they were trying to look at was expanding consciousness
or doing remote viewing back to the CIA.
-Yeah.
-It was doing it.
-Uh-huh.
-Like they would do 200 and one ear, 204 and the other to create a four hertz wave
as the third tone, which is theta waves, which is where you're in your deep meditative dreaming states.
(02:08:24):
And that's where you get into the realm of, they call it hypnagogic state,
which is like somewhere between awake and asleep.
And they think that's where your maximum extra, what do you call it, ESP, happens?
-Okay.
-Like stranger things should.
-Interesting.
-And then there's also the sulfesio tones.
(02:08:50):
Have you ever heard of that?
-No.
-Sulfesio tones is linked to like sacred music and Gregorian chants,
which makes me think of fucking pure moods.
-Oh.
-Anigma.
-I fucking love anigma.
-It's good music.
Why does it feel the way it feels?
(02:09:13):
-I don't know.
It does feel, and it also feels nostalgic to me.
-Yeah, that too.
-I love pure moods.
-Then I tried to fit this in, but I can't, so I'm just going to bring it up.
Dr. Dre was trying to create an album called "Planets."
-Oh, that's right.
With the vibrations of Saturn, right?
-Yeah, and he had like every planet had its own sound and vibrations.
(02:09:35):
-Yeah.
-And he never did it, but I feel like there's something to that too.
I feel like he was trying to sort of tap into that as well.
-Was he close with P. Diddy?
Or was that ESP, West Coast?
-I don't think so.
I think I was refuting probably.
Which is a good segue to today's music, right?
(02:09:56):
Today, growing up in the 90s, we had our wide variety of music.
-Yeah.
-Much wider than we have now.
-Yeah, and today, its pop music is rap music, which is, you know, it's a trociously violent
and negative.
I won't defend that.
I think it's true.
I listen to it.
(02:10:16):
I consume it.
I mean, you'd be a fool to not think that that doesn't have some kind of negative effect
on you to listen to this shit all day every day.
But you know, for me, I don't give a fuck.
I like it.
-Well, not everything has to be for healing.
-Right.
Yes, exactly.
And if I'm in a real weird negative state, like I won't consume these things.
(02:10:37):
I won't watch the horror movies.
Like, there's...
-Yeah, it depends on where you are as a person.
-Yeah, that's a good point.
-Like, we don't always eat your vegetables.
Sometimes you want the tea junk.
Junk is okay.
It's fine.
-Yeah.
-It's fine.
-It's fine.
It's fine.
Like, I don't think that we have to be perfect beings.
(02:11:00):
-Now, in conclusion, in conclusion, to wrap this all up, some scientists say all of this
is nonsense.
-Okay.
-Um...
So, you'll see that opinion out there.
Now, when it comes to the 432, 440 Hertz, they claim, like, music nerds...
(02:11:21):
I can't tell if I can tell if I can tell if I can tell if I can.
Music nerds will say they can tell a difference.
432 is a lower frequency, which is...
They believe it's like a warmer sound.
-Okay.
-I have no reason to just disbelieve that.
I have an experience that I don't have the tuned-in ear for that shit either.
I don't know how to tune in instrument.
(02:11:43):
I don't know.
-Yeah.
-But what I do know is lighting.
I do know lighting.
-Yeah.
-And look at the state of the world today.
These nerds are putting blue lighting in everything to keep you engaged because we live
in an attention economy.
Everybody wants you locked in on their shit.
(02:12:05):
There's no middle ground thing.
You have to be obsessed with the thing that they want you to be obsessed with.
It's like a battle over...
-Attention.
-Attention, right?
So you've got this disruptive blue light technology, the most disruptive color in our phones
and all our shit, bucking with our heads.
(02:12:26):
And then you go into the dread of day job and what do you got?
You've got fluorescent lighting all over the place.
Fluorescent lighting is terrible.
It's flashing at 120 times a second.
That's the frequency.
It's literally flickering 120 times a second.
If you're I could perceive and slow down time, you'd be like in a strobe light and be like,
(02:12:48):
what the hell?
It gives people migraines and headaches, eye strain.
It's a nightmare.
-Interesting.
-Right.
Now you may think LED balls would be like, well, what about LED balls?
Well, they're different.
They actually use...
-Yeah, because they flicker then.
That would...
-No, not really.
Because they run off of DC, not AC.
(02:13:10):
The reason that the fluorescence flickers because of alternating current from the wall,
you'd plug into.
-Okay.
-Where as a LED ball, it actually has a tiny micro-circuit in it that takes the AC signal
and converts it to DC.
Because a diode only works with DC.
It won't work with AC.
So, you could actually replace...
(02:13:33):
The reason I bring this up is because nerds will have very bright, white daytime,
LED balls in their house.
-Yes.
-And it's disgusting.
-It is disgusting.
-We would never stand for that at our house.
-No.
-You got to have that yellow RNG glow, which...
-I like the bromance.
(02:13:54):
-Right.
-Dim, warm.
-Very warm lighting is where it's at.
And I don't know if...
-Lots of lamps, lots of...
-Low lighting.
-Onbion lighting.
And I think that...
I don't know if it is the same...
When you get into this shit of...
What frequencies is the best to have around you?
(02:14:16):
I don't know if a warm LED is going to be as "healthy" as an incandescent old-school ball.
Because an incandescent old-school ball is...
You're looking at literally a fire.
It's just heating up a filament until it's red hot.
-Okay.
-It's basically...
You're looking at a fire, which is as natural as it gets.
(02:14:37):
-Right.
So my thought is like, I think you want to go ultra-general awoke.
You get incandescent bulbs around.
-Yeah, it's a suck.
-They don't even burn out.
-So fast.
They fucking suck.
And...
But...
Do you remember the different glow that you would get off of an incandescent multi-colored
lights?
(02:14:57):
-Yeah.
-It's different.
-A Christmas light.
-On Christmas lights.
-Yes.
-It is not the same light that you get from a LED Christmas light.
-Really not.
Our generation is the last one that knows this difference.
And that will die with us.
-That's sad.
-It is sad.
These younger folks have no idea.
(02:15:17):
And that's an incandescent conclusion.
These nerves are going to kill us.
-Yeah.
-They're going to kill us with technology that strips away humanity.
-For convenience.
Because those lights last longer.
-Yeah.
-Anyone throw around and do shit.
-And it's kind of cool.
-Yes.
I like that.
-I don't know what the answer is.
-I don't know what the answer is.
-I'm not here to judge, but--
(02:15:39):
-Oh, we're judging.
-We've been judging.
-We've been judging.
-We're judging.
-But there is like, it's like that warm light that you get from an incandescent is not
the same that you trade that in for convenience of a LED Christmas bulb or strand.
Because every time you get a goddamn set of lights, it seems like they lasted one year.
(02:16:02):
And then if you got them to plug them in, then half of the damn lights would go out again.
They were annoying.
-Yeah.
-But they did.
They just had a better glow.
-You know, and it's always this--
-It was kind of orangy.
It wasn't the same--
-It's kind of like the music.
-It just feels warmer for some reason.
(02:16:23):
-It does feel warmer.
-And I think it is because you're looking at little fires.
-Oh, interesting.
-And I think that's more soothing to our caveman brains on some level.
But these nerves are going to drown us out with-- that's why they wanted you in the office.
They want you remote working.
They want you in the office with your flickering fluorescent nightmare.
(02:16:45):
Looking at screens, blue light screens, the fuck with your brain and make you feel anxious.
-What about-- what is that-- what is that, uh, EMF?
What do you know about EMF?
-It's where we started this journey today.
-EMF.
-Electric magnetic frequencies.
Everything is EMF.
-And it gets you sick.
-I mean, it can.
(02:17:06):
I guess if you're flooded with the wrong kind.
-I heard somebody talk about how electric cars can fuck with your-- the EMF can make you sick
in the electric cars.
-I believe it.
-You do.
-Yeah, because what you've got is you've got these batteries turning co-- fueling up these
coils.
(02:17:26):
And like we talked about earlier, you've got electricity running through a conductor and
it's emitting massive amounts of magnetic radiation off of it.
So imagine the power takes to-- yes, and you're sitting your dumb balls right on it.
You're cooking your balls with magnetic frequency, with magnetic galsy in lines of flux.
(02:17:48):
-Okay.
-I guess.
You know, I've talked to a science nerd.
In my brain, I think that's how it works.
-Yeah.
And I hate Elon Musk anyway.
So like, he's not the only one coming up with electronic cars now.
Now they've got every brand has an electronic car.
(02:18:08):
-It's nerds using technology to chip away at all these-- it's death by a thousand cuts.
Just constant stressors.
Because it's all mind control shit.
Because they want you at work flickering lights in your brain and your folds got blue light
and you're sitting on your galsy in flux lines on your balls all day, driving around.
(02:18:32):
And you're--
-Now slam your hands on the desk and make your face from feet right while you're saying this.
-It doesn't take much.
And what's the thing?
What do they do with that?
They manipulate you with that.
And they say, "Oh my God.
You know what would make you feel better buying the thing?"
Buy this thing and--
-Hey, not out and come get on TikTok for eight hours.
(02:18:53):
-Actually, sounds pretty good.
-I know.
I love it.
I do love it.
-We're not above it.
-No, I don't want to.
-But the point is, this is all Bernasian mind control bullshit.
And they are saturating our world with unnatural things.
I mean, in conclusion, you know, Bob R. was right.
(02:19:16):
-What did he say?
He was anti-technology.
-Oh.
-I kind of feel like--
-I kind of feel like--
-I kind of feel like--
-I think they're creating massive power plants.
Zuckerberg's creating a power plant in the size of Manhattan to fuel AI.
Do we want this?
Is this what we really need?
Do we need this?
(02:19:36):
It's taking a ball the water.
-I don't know how many--
Well, given what they're doing in China, they're building these power plants under the
fucking ocean so that the ocean will keep them cool.
Which I'm like, yes, do that.
What are you doing?
-They're going to make Godzilla.
-How do you do that?
-I don't know.
Godzilla comes from the ocean.
(02:19:58):
-I don't know.
So anyway.
-No, it works either.
Nuclear radiation, Fukushima.
-Well, the same words.
-You're just saying shut up.
-Amie, why not just put the fucking power plants in the ocean so that they can--
-The water's right there.
-Yeah, you're using the temperature of the water.
-What do they do with the emissions?
(02:20:19):
-Emissions of what?
-What kind of emissions?
-You've got to have these massive generators to run this shit.
-I don't know how shit works.
-Well, I don't know either.
But Elon Musk, remember the big stink was for GROC.
He built an illegal amount of generators, turbine generators that are loudest--
I used to build generators too, by the way.
And turbine generators are loudest fuck.
(02:20:40):
He built them in Memphis where all these poor folks live.
And it's fucking up their water, it's fucking up their air, and it's loudest shit.
And he's illegally running these things.
He's not even supposed to legal it.
And they've got footage of thermal cameras showing that him running them past the legal
limits of what he should be running.
But nobody gives a fuck because we've decided to hand over this country to a bunch of technocrat
(02:21:02):
billionaire nerds.
-Yeah.
How many AI fucking things do we need?
Like you've got like seven different--
-One of them, the internet, I mean--
-You got to burn it all to the ground.
I don't know.
I don't know what the answer is.
This is like some real skydnitch shit we're walking into.
I don't know what the answer is.
I mean, okay, so let's say we all get on board and say--
(02:21:23):
-So that he can be a Nazi.
Like GROC's out there saying really wild shit.
-I know, that's a bug's me.
It's like not to be like that, but it's like, does everybody need to use AI?
Does everybody need this?
-I mean, to be fair though, the AI like that, chat GPT, it's-- people are plugging in like
(02:21:49):
their symptoms and it's giving them really like better care than doctors.
So then they go-- they take their chat GPT diagnosis into their doctor and then have their
doctor kind of like--
-Dark check it.
Yeah, like fact check it and then they get the medication that chat GPT says to talk
(02:22:10):
about it.
-I get it.
I use AI, so I can't.
-It's like partially.
It's like, yeah, kind of, you know?
-It's helpful.
It's a helpful tool for sure.
I don't know what the problem is.
We're so uneducated and ignorant and I don't trust anyone.
I don't know.
What are the side effects of this thing?
How much pollution-- this is like the straw argument.
(02:22:33):
You show me enough photos of turtles with plastic straws jammed in their fucking brain.
I'm gonna be like, I don't want to touch a plastic straw again.
I don't need that in my life.
I can drink out of a cup like a big boy.
Is that what we're talking about with AI?
What's the-- how many turtles is this going to kill?
I don't know the answer to that because I can't trust anyone to give me the right answer
(02:22:54):
because I want to fucking liars and they own all the media now and we're fucking done.
-I know.
I hate it for Charles Manson's vision.
The Aertree's Waters and Animals.
That was his thing and he was fucking on the money with that.
That's the things we should care about.
-Wait, what did Charles Manson say?
(02:23:14):
-He started a group called Attaw, ATWA, Aertree's Waters and Animals, like taking care of being
a good steward of all those things.
-What the fuck?
-Yeah.
That's why the CIA mind controlled him and framed him a bit of a present.
-I don't think they framed him.
-I don't think they had to frame him.
I think he did it.
-Interesting.
-And a little too much LSD, man.
(02:23:36):
-Okay.
Good job.
That was wonderful.
-In conclusion, conclusion, conclusion.
What do you think?
What do we do with this information?
Are we going to start listening to Navajo Flutes on repeat or what?
-I think I'm going to see if I can find that CIA.
I'm sure they have something on YouTube where they're running different and you can
(02:23:57):
just put your earbuds in.
-Yeah.
-What was it?
-210 and 200 or whatever to get that third frequency in your brain?
-Yeah.
-I think I'm going to try that.
I think that seems really interesting.
-I think old Dr. Annie, or did the Bunarle beads for a while?
-Oh, really?
-Yeah.
-I'll have to send him a text.
(02:24:20):
-See what he thinks.
-See what he's doing.
-See where he gets it.
-I'm sure it's on YouTube.
-Mm-hmm.
-I think I like the idea of hitting tuning.
-But can you trust that it's the right frequency?
I don't know.
-I'm just to listen.
I can't go that deep into shit otherwise it's like, that's like this was hard about life
(02:24:41):
right now.
Every time you see something it's like, "Well, is that fucking deep, deep faith?"
-Yeah.
-It will, is that even the truth?
Like, you can't even watch the fucking news.
-Everything's stressful now, huh?
-Yeah.
And even if you watch the news to get your information, you have to question the
question, who pays for that fucking news for that perspective?
-Right.
-Everything is so complicated and so obnoxious that I'm just gonna fucking put my hair buds in.
(02:25:06):
I'm gonna listen to my fucking horny books and every once in a while I'm gonna toss on
that, what do you call it?
-Binaral Beats.
-Binaral Beats.
And I'm gonna fucking destress a little bit.
-There you go.
-That's it.
I don't know, that's all I fucking got.
-Perfect.
-And I'm gonna eat my shitty big Macs and then I'm also gonna eat my fucking piece of
shit veggies that I hate chewing.
I hate, I hate eating vegetables.
(02:25:30):
You chew so much when you eat a fucking vegetable.
So I'm gonna eat my pieces of shit vegetables and all my clean stuff and then every once in
a while I'm gonna go get my fucking garbage.
That's what I have to live.
-Maybe the Nostics were right and an evil creator created this world because I don't know why
God would make the healthiest food taste so terrible.
Why?
Please.
(02:25:51):
-Kip.
-Kip.
-Yeah, no shit.
-Oh god.
-Okay, that's all I got.
-I loved it.
-All right, let me give the show notes if you want to try out the world's great, literally
the world's greatest mushroom and fused coffee.
My god.
I call it symbolism.com.
Get yourself a side-paper-reck and a super-suffer shirt from my podcast on there.
(02:26:12):
We're gonna get one for Joseph.
-Philip Plastic.
-Philip Plastic.
You got to counteract the plastic from the shirt with the mushroom and fused coffee.
We're gonna get a break-and-sauce norm shirt one day.
So picture ideas to Josie on where Patreon.
-I'm mostly on Patreon.
I hardly get on.
I get a fucking Instagram and I get bombarded with what a piece of shit I am.
(02:26:34):
-Yeah, it's trollbox.
Can't trust him.
No one's real on the internet anymore.
-Do I even do anything?
I don't know.
Instagram's bumping me out.
-So patreon.com/Break-and-sauce norms tell Josie what you want on the back of the shirt.
Maybe we'll put a little pull up of the most greatest ideas there.
We'll print off some shirts someday here.
-Yeah, I love that idea.
-Okay.
(02:26:54):
All right.
Thanks for listening everybody till next time.
-We love you.
[Music]