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August 14, 2025 • 60 mins
KCAA: Get Balanced with Dr. Marissa on Thu, 14 Aug, 2025
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
Come off at exhausting amster Wheel and into balanced living.

Speaker 2 (00:07):
With Doctor Marissa from a huge.

Speaker 1 (00:12):
Doctor Marisa, also known as the Asian Oprah. Her mission
to be a beneficial presence on the planet, her purpose
to be your personal advocate, to live, lap love, learn
her life motto, don't die wondering. Take Back your life
with Doctor MAURSA pay welcome.

Speaker 3 (00:34):
You are tuned into my weekly talk radio show called
take My Advice, I'm not using it.

Speaker 4 (00:40):
Get Balanced with Doctor Marissa every.

Speaker 3 (00:42):
Tuesday at naturally high noon out of the Sunset Gower
Studios in Hollywood, California, on Universal Broadcasting Network, and then
every Thursdays at seven and Saturdays at one on my
syndicated CNBC News radio channel kse AA AM ten fifty
FM one oh six point five and now everywhere and

(01:02):
all the time on iHeartRadio. And this is a show
about hope and happiness and how you can be happy
eighty eight percent of the time. So there's no gossip,
no scandal, and no kwords, no Kardashian talk at all,
and no CNN, no constantly negative news because I want

(01:23):
you to focus on your own reality show and how
you can be the best that you can be. And
so we have lots of different guests and topics to
that end, and if you've missed any of them, I've
had guests like Maryann Williamson Mary Ann from Gilligan's Island,
Keiko Matsui, jazz keyboardist on Billboard, to Lisa Nichols a

(01:44):
couple of weeks ago, to Tony Taneil from Captain and Danil.
I've got it for you, So please do go to
YouTube if you've missed any of those shows and keep
it tuned here. And today I am continuing my Fabulous
Wisdom series with more wisdom teachers. And if you remember,
I celebrated my two hundredth show with a fabulous powerful

(02:07):
panel of Neil Donald Walsh, doctor Michael Bernard Beckwith and
Bishop Carlton, and I thought I would follow that up.
It's more than two hundred shows now with two fantastic
teachers who you will want to hear if you've not
already heard. The first is Bob Proctor, the Dean of

(02:27):
Prosperity and Abundance Teachings, shows people how to understand their
hidden abilities to do more, be more, and have more
in every area of life. His teachings are primarily based
on Napoleon Hills, Think and Grow Rich, and his delivery
is second to none. For more than fifty five years,
Bob Proctor has focused his entire agenda around helping people

(02:49):
create lush lives of prosperity, rewarding relationships, and spiritual awareness.
As one of the world's most highly regarded speakers on prosperity,
he is internationally known for his inspirational and motivational style.
He's been interviewed on CNN by Larry King and on
The Ellen DeGeneres Show, and will be on CNN Espanol

(03:09):
later this month and the second Doctor Michael Barton. Bernard
Beckwith No stranger to My Show since he is my
big brother, is the founder and spiritual director of the
Agape International Spiritual Center in Los Angeles, which is celebrating
his thirtieth year. Three of his most recent books, Live Visioning,
Spiritual Liberation, and Transcendence Expanded, are recipients of the prestigious

(03:33):
Nautilus Award. Beckwith has appeared on Super Soul Sunday, just
recently Doctor Oz Again, the opera show, Larry King, Live
Tavis Smile in his own PBS special, The Answer is
You He's part of Oprah Winfrey's inaugural Super Soul one hundred.
A sought after speaker and meditation teacher, Michael's been the
recipient of numerous humanitarian awards. Every Friday at one PST,

(03:58):
thousands tune to his radio show on hap FK, Wake
Up the Sound of Transformation. Please welcome too, brilliant fabulous
men in my life, doctor Michael, Bernard beck With and
Bob Proctor.

Speaker 5 (04:13):
Good way to us for having.

Speaker 2 (04:15):
Absolutely good to be here with you and.

Speaker 3 (04:19):
Michael, absolutely and congratulations to you.

Speaker 4 (04:22):
Bob.

Speaker 3 (04:23):
One of the reasons I brought you on is because
you are getting a fabulous tribute at Carnegie Hall in
New York next month for your many years of work.

Speaker 4 (04:34):
And I was just corrected.

Speaker 3 (04:35):
I thought you were eighty one, but you are eighty two,
so you're a very good look in eighty two.

Speaker 4 (04:40):
You must use oil of a la.

Speaker 2 (04:43):
I don't hang around with old people.

Speaker 4 (04:46):
Well it's shows.

Speaker 5 (04:47):
That's good advice.

Speaker 4 (04:50):
Don't hang around with old people. Well I love that saying.
You know, you don't stop laughing because you grow old.
You grow old because you stop laughing. So we do
a lot of laughing here.

Speaker 3 (05:00):
So welcome to and congratulations on your tribute, and both
of us will be there in November, and we'll have
a little more information about that later on in the
show as well.

Speaker 4 (05:10):
We're giving away two tickets to that.

Speaker 3 (05:13):
PJ was kind enough to offer those to my listeners,
so that will be part of the Asian Oprah giveaway
later on the show. So you want to stay tuned
so you can know how to win that. But first
of all, I would like to I know, I usually
don't talk about politics, but we're so close to the election,
we're so close to deciding, and Bob, you're actually Canadian,

(05:34):
but I did want a couple of minutes to just
talk about you know, we as people who are.

Speaker 4 (05:44):
Trying to.

Speaker 3 (05:47):
Encourage people to be the best that they can be.
We're in America. We're also about you know, non violence.
We're also about raising the awareness and consciousness of spirituality
and new thought.

Speaker 4 (06:01):
And ancient wisdom. What do you say to Americans.

Speaker 3 (06:05):
Right now who are either disgusted with both candidates, who
are not knowing how to vote or wanting to be
good Americans, not understanding what's going on, What would you
say to them?

Speaker 6 (06:20):
Well, first of all, I think America is the greatest
country in the world.

Speaker 2 (06:24):
I am Canadian, but I love America.

Speaker 6 (06:28):
I think America has taught the world something about opportunity.
It's the most generous country in the history of the world.

Speaker 2 (06:38):
And there's such great opportunity.

Speaker 6 (06:42):
You can focus on what's wrong with the election, or
you can focus on the fact that they have an
electoral system where anybody can run. And I think there's
too much negativity in it. That's about all it is
right now. But it's still It's a free election. People

(07:04):
can choose who they want. And I think America is
a great country. I've always felt that.

Speaker 2 (07:10):
I felt it for years.

Speaker 6 (07:12):
I remember one time, many years ago, I got a
green card and I was driving across the border at
Windsor Detroit. My kids were all small. They were very small,
and I think the oldest one was maybe seven, and
then they run five to four or something like that,

(07:35):
and we crossed the border.

Speaker 2 (07:38):
We had all the papers and they gave me the
green card.

Speaker 6 (07:43):
They took and laminated and gave it to me, and
I was driving away from customs, driving into Michigan, and
I had the most overwhelming feeling of gratitude.

Speaker 2 (07:57):
It was.

Speaker 6 (08:00):
It was very special. I can still remember it very
clear in my mind, and I'm going way back to
the late sixties, and I felt so fortunate that I could.

Speaker 2 (08:11):
Go anywhere in America.

Speaker 6 (08:12):
I could go from state to state, I could stay
there for the rest of my life if I wanted.
I could work there, I could start a business there, and.

Speaker 2 (08:24):
I couldn't help but.

Speaker 6 (08:25):
Think of the millions of people that probably take it
for granted. See, I was just given this card. I
was an adult, I was married with children, and it
was just an overwhelming feeling of freedom and gratitude.

Speaker 2 (08:42):
And I never forgot that.

Speaker 6 (08:46):
So when I think of America, that's one thing that
comes to my mind.

Speaker 4 (08:50):
Michael.

Speaker 7 (08:53):
I think that America stands for a tremendous amount of
hope and possibility. Written within the Constitute and all the
founding papers this possibility and vision, and it's up to
the people who actually live in America to actually make
that vision come true. There's obviously a tremendous amount of
work to be done in the justice system, the legal system,

(09:15):
educational system, the medical system to come up to the
highest vision of possible that that's possible. So it takes
a tremendous amount amount of work. I stand with Bob
in terms of the awareness that this tremendous opportunity and
possibility here for people who can think outside of the box,
can begin to see themselves with a greater identity, an

(09:36):
identity of the light, the identity of a spiritual being
that has no limits and no limitations. And so there's
tremendous opportunity. So America is a place of tremendous hope.
And as someone who lives here and who has grown
up in America, you know, I've always been one who

(09:58):
was always on the edge of trying to make it better,
trying to transform it, trying to bring it into.

Speaker 5 (10:05):
The ideal that it holds.

Speaker 7 (10:07):
It was a doctor King who said that he loved
America so much that he I'm paraphrasing, of course, that
his America allowed him the possibility to criticize it more
than others because of where he stood and what he
was experiencing it at that particular time in his life.
So in that same vein, I have tremendous critique, primarily

(10:30):
around the fact that when we talk about the elections,
and when we're talking about choosing two candidates, we have
to be there's a couple of level. I know you
don't want to get into a political talk here without.

Speaker 3 (10:42):
Oh well I do what I kind of do, and
I kind of don't. But it's just I watched did
you watch the debates last.

Speaker 7 (10:50):
That debate was nothing but his interrupted, because the same
first one it was nothing there, nobody answered any questions.

Speaker 5 (10:56):
But I will say that you're dealing with.

Speaker 7 (10:59):
Parentaradigms, and within the present paradigm, you choose a particular
president that you believe can best serve all of America. However,
there's another paradigm that's emerging that has nothing to do
with those two candidates or the candidates of the third
and fourth party, and that's the paradigm I think where

(11:20):
Bob and I hang out about the possibility of a
world that works for everyone, where there's enough energy, enough food. Now,
all that stuff exists right now on the planet. There's
an answer to every issue on the planet now in
real time, except where's being suppressed by interests that are
residing in the old paradigm. And so we have to

(11:42):
be reminded that when you're dealing with the political scene,
those individuals are in an old paradigm that's dying. We
are in a paradigm that's emerging, and so if we
can always separate that and the old paradigm, choose the
best candidate possible, but at the same time work for
the emerging paradigm that speaks to more of a global

(12:02):
awareness of everyone's needs being met.

Speaker 4 (12:06):
Thank you for stuff, thank you for no no.

Speaker 5 (12:08):
No.

Speaker 3 (12:08):
It's important because I get asked that question, you know
where it's like, who lost the debate, and the answer
is America if you watched If you watched it, So
then you're like, well, then do we vote? We don't vote?

Speaker 4 (12:22):
What do we do?

Speaker 3 (12:23):
So I love the answer, Yes, you do the best
possible vote that you can in the old paradigm, and
then look beyond that old construct, the old bs, the
old belief system, and do what we can on the
other end. So let's talk about the other end being
the best that we can be seeing prosperity not as.

Speaker 4 (12:42):
Money is the root of all evil, which is what
I understand.

Speaker 3 (12:45):
Your message has been around, Bob for fifty some years,
that it is okay to be prosperous, rich, abundant, and
that kind of flies against some of the the belief
systems or the bs around spirituality or you know we
shouldn't talk so much about money, so let's hit that one.

Speaker 2 (13:11):
Well.

Speaker 6 (13:12):
I think the problem with money is a problem the
same with a lot of things.

Speaker 2 (13:16):
The real problem is ignorance. Money is not a problem.
The lack of it's a problem with some people. Too
much of it's a problem. But money's merely an instrument,
and it's only used for two things.

Speaker 6 (13:31):
One is to make you comfortable, and the more comfortable
you are, the more creative you can become. And the
second is to extend the good to do far beyond
your own presence.

Speaker 2 (13:41):
I have found that money will just make it more
of what you already are.

Speaker 6 (13:46):
If you're not a nice person, you'll probably become despicable
if you get enough of it. And if you are
a nice person, you're going to become a nicer person
because you're going to be able to do more good.
So I see money as an instrument, and I think
people don't understand money. Money is a reward received for
service rendered, and it's an instrument that will enable you

(14:07):
to extend the service you render far beyond your own presence.
I'm all for earning all the money you can and
then put it to work. I've been living in the
same house for over thirty years, I have no desire
to get a bigger, a better house.

Speaker 2 (14:24):
I like it here.

Speaker 6 (14:25):
I'm comfortable here, and I'm into supporting Cynthia Curzy and
her endeavors of building schools in Africa, and we now
build a school every week and a half. I want
to get to the point we can build one every day,
and without money, we wouldn't be able to do that.
So I see money as a great instrument, and that's

(14:46):
all it is. It enables you to extend the good
you do beyond your own presence. It doesn't make you
a better person, it makes you more of what you
already are.

Speaker 4 (14:55):
Beautiful Michael and Michael.

Speaker 7 (14:58):
Well absolutely, you know, Bob and I have been in
this conversation for years. It's articulation of the prosperity principles
are second to none on the planet. And I would
agree with him that money is a promissory. Node is
a promise that energy is going to be circulated. So
whenever it's an exchange of money, you're exchanging energy. You're

(15:19):
saying in substance, if I go buy a loaf of bread,
that means I'm giving energy to the individual. That's selling
me the bread that he can take the energy and
send these kids to school, they can go.

Speaker 5 (15:31):
On to college.

Speaker 7 (15:31):
I mean, money is to be circulated, and we have
to stop and understand that there's no lack of prosperity
or abundance or opulence anywhere in the universe.

Speaker 5 (15:42):
That's a myth, it's a lie. It's a lie of scarcity.

Speaker 7 (15:46):
And so when one begins to understand that they're standing
in the middle of a sea of abundance and infinite opportunities,
infinite possibilities, and begin to think creatively, then money follows,
or energy follows, opportunity follows.

Speaker 5 (16:00):
So money isn't the root of all evil.

Speaker 7 (16:01):
When years ago, when religious folks began to take vowel poverty,
it wasn't about being poor. It was about not allowing
money to be your god, so that service would be
your god. I mean, mother Mother Teresa, as an example,
took a vowel.

Speaker 5 (16:16):
Poverty, but he raised. She raised millions of dollars to
do the work she needed to do to feed the poor,
and to feed though and to take care of those
who were sick and impoverished. She needed money to do so.

Speaker 7 (16:29):
So though money wasn't her God in terms of as
Bob was saying, buy her bigger, buy our bigger, bigger mansions,
and twenty cars, and and and and. Being materialistic, she
still had the consciousness of raising a lot of money
to do the work she needed to do. I'm the
founder of a GOPA International. I had ministries, many programs,
many projects. I have global philanthropy. I do work with

(16:51):
safety a curcy who emerged out of agape. And uh
we we raised money, we attract money, and we uh
bring money in to a GAPE so that we can
extend the work that we do for others.

Speaker 5 (17:04):
I like Bob.

Speaker 2 (17:05):
I've lived in the.

Speaker 5 (17:05):
Same house for many years, and I'm not materialistic. I
have a car that's paid for.

Speaker 7 (17:12):
I haven't don't I haven't bought a new car of
a year, cars ten years old.

Speaker 5 (17:15):
It runs pretty good.

Speaker 4 (17:17):
Testless coming, testless coming.

Speaker 5 (17:19):
Okay, somebody wants to donate the tests.

Speaker 7 (17:21):
To me, I will receive that problem being receptive to
my goodness.

Speaker 5 (17:25):
But there's nothing wrong inherently with money.

Speaker 7 (17:28):
It's uh materialist consumerism can become evil, and individuals who
are greedy and stingy, who hoard money, who don't let
it circulate into good works that can become evil. There
are individuals that I know that are very very unhappy people,
and very wealthy according to human standards, but very unhappy.

(17:51):
They're afraid to circulate one nickel towards anyone that will
help anyone, and they're very unhappy people. So, as Bob
was saying, if you're if you're on the curve of
becoming a better person, you're growing, developing, and unfolding.

Speaker 5 (18:04):
Money is going to assist that. It's going to assist
you and helping the others.

Speaker 7 (18:07):
And if you're own the curb curve of not knowing yourself,
being ignorant of your real identity and you and you're
you're in a.

Speaker 5 (18:15):
Consciousness of lack.

Speaker 7 (18:16):
Even if you get a lot of money, you'll be
a poor person with a lot of money, and you'll
end up.

Speaker 5 (18:22):
Despising your life. And so I have no problems with money.
Bring it on. I'm receptive, right.

Speaker 8 (18:29):
You know, we had a I was having a conversation
one day with Mikey Steller, who's in our marketing director
of our company, and a couple come up in conversation
and she said, you know, they're the poorest people.

Speaker 2 (18:44):
I know all they have is money.

Speaker 5 (18:47):
They yeah, it is.

Speaker 2 (18:50):
The problem with.

Speaker 6 (18:51):
Money is we don't teach people how to earn money.
You can go all the way through our educational system
and learn absolutely nothing about earning money.

Speaker 2 (19:00):
That's we're taught how to save it, we're taught how
to invest it, but we're not hot, hot, or earn it.

Speaker 6 (19:05):
And so you have brilliant people going around and they
don't know how to earn money.

Speaker 2 (19:12):
Yeah, money is a reward for service rendered.

Speaker 6 (19:15):
The amount of money you earn is always in direct
ratio to the need for what you do, your ability.

Speaker 2 (19:19):
To do it, and the difficulty there is replacing you.
But you take nothing with you leave.

Speaker 6 (19:26):
You leave much the same way you come. I always
say you leave with no hair, no teeth, no money.

Speaker 2 (19:32):
That's how you're right.

Speaker 7 (19:35):
And I would go a step further, Bob, I would
even say, within our school system, they don't even teach
you how to save and invest money, or how to
open a bank account or any of that. People graduate
from high school and know nothing about the law circulation.
They do nothing about the law of receptivity, They know
nothing about the law correspondence, they know nothing about the

(19:56):
law of saving and investing. They get it if they
go to college. Oftentimes they know nothing after they graduate
from college. It's not a part of our educational system.
And so, you know, there's so many people operate with
limited supplying.

Speaker 6 (20:10):
I love the way Troward put it in his essay
on spirit of opulence is when you're dealing with infinite
you can never take more than your share.

Speaker 5 (20:19):
Right, there's everyone's inexhaustible. It's inexhaustible.

Speaker 4 (20:25):
But then why are there so many people?

Speaker 3 (20:27):
And maybe this is a perception, but I meet so
many spiritually minded people who are broke or they they
continue to affirm their brokeness or I can't afford that,
or I can't do that, or or I don't.

Speaker 4 (20:40):
Have enough money.

Speaker 3 (20:43):
And then you have the other end, people like Donald Trump,
who has the appearance of so much money, and and
you that that whole perception around corporate greed, and you know,
the the nasty people or the mean people have all
the money, have all the wealth, that disparity of the
have and the have nots, or good people who who

(21:06):
deserve to have or work hard, and then they get
their pensions all taken away or you.

Speaker 4 (21:12):
Know, what is that? What is all of that stuff?

Speaker 5 (21:16):
Well, you know, you do a lot of things in
one question vers thank you, generally.

Speaker 7 (21:23):
Speaking, whether you're spiritual or whatever. So many people do
not understand the laws of the universe. That understand their conversation.
They understand the power of their word, They understand the
power of their thinking, so they may love God and.

Speaker 5 (21:37):
Whatever concept of God that they have.

Speaker 7 (21:39):
They have very little understanding about the magnitude of the
abundance that surrounds us and how and they've made an
agreement with mediocrity that money is a lot of money
makes you evil and nasty. So they have to break
that particular agreement with that mediocre thinking, understand the laws

(22:01):
of the universe, and begin to manifest the money that
they need in order to do the will of God,
in order to do a greater expression of life. Everyone
doesn't need to be a multi multi multi millionaire. Everybody
has a different vision, different gift, different talents, different capacities
for service. But they can demonstrate what it is that

(22:22):
they need to be their authentic self. Now, of course,
if you're talking about individuals that you just mentioned, the
media always gravitates towards the lowest common denominator of the
human experience, and the grossest experience that we can find,
so naturally we would be saddled with all of these
individuals who are nasty and mean and have a lot

(22:43):
of money because.

Speaker 5 (22:46):
It brings people to the television sets. But there are
many people who.

Speaker 7 (22:50):
Are very Phelan tropic, many people who have millions of dollars.

Speaker 5 (22:54):
Who live to give, who.

Speaker 7 (22:58):
Generate a lot of money, support spiritual communities, support school systems,
support all manner of efforts. But you don't really hear
about these people because many times they're not run by their.

Speaker 5 (23:08):
Ego, but they're doing good work.

Speaker 7 (23:11):
But you would hear about individuals who are in politics
because you have to have a big ego to even
be at that level of running to run a country.

Speaker 4 (23:22):
That's great, that's great.

Speaker 3 (23:23):
That thank you, that actually answered all of mine, all
of my multi myriad of questions. And if you've just
tuned in and you're wondering who the two fabulous men
on my camera are in my studio today, it is
Bob Proctor and he is a master coach, he's a

(23:43):
prosperity teacher.

Speaker 4 (23:45):
He's been doing this forever.

Speaker 3 (23:47):
And doctor Michael Bernard back with founder of got A
International Spiritual Center, also known as my big brother, and
they are here sharing their wisdom to add to my
Wisdom series. You'll remember the show with Neil Donald Walsh
and with Don Miguel Ruiz, and we're talking about money,
We're talking a little bit about politics. And now I'm
going to highlight you, Bob, just for a second and

(24:10):
talk about who would you say your two most important
influential mentors were in getting you to where you are today.

Speaker 4 (24:20):
And Michael'll come to you as well in the next question.

Speaker 6 (24:24):
I say there's more than two. There's three or four, Okay.
Ray Stanford is the first one. He is a man
that I came across in nineteen sixty one and he
gave me this book.

Speaker 2 (24:45):
A book has fallen apart now, but I've been reading
this book every day now for in another ten days,
it'll be fifty five years.

Speaker 6 (24:56):
From October the twenty first, nineteen sixty one, thinking grow rich.

Speaker 2 (25:00):
And then I got into you just pack this up
to take with me on the road. This is a
recording that here all night.

Speaker 9 (25:11):
Get that's a record. On one side that's the strangest secret.
On the other side, it says to pay the price.
And I started to listen to this record.

Speaker 6 (25:23):
I should show you this because this is a bit
of an antique as well.

Speaker 4 (25:27):
See aren't you glad I made you do skype? So
we had Joe and Dell.

Speaker 3 (25:33):
Yeah here, and I'm glad these kids know what Minel
is now too. Oh wow, is the portable player a
record player? Oh that's so cool.

Speaker 2 (25:49):
I'm about to go.

Speaker 6 (25:50):
Albert Schweitzer, the Great Doctor and Nobel Prize winner, was
being interviewed in London and.

Speaker 2 (25:54):
A reporter asked him, doctor, what's wrong with men today?

Speaker 6 (25:58):
The Great Doctor was silent, then he said, men simply
don't think.

Speaker 2 (26:04):
That is a problem. I got into.

Speaker 6 (26:12):
Think and Grow Rich, and then I got her all
night and condensed narration of Think and Grow Rich, which
led me to that recording, The Stranger's Secret. So those
two men had a phenomenal impact on my life, and
my life changed like.

Speaker 2 (26:27):
Night and day. And I couldn't figure out what I
had done I had been.

Speaker 6 (26:32):
I was living in England. I started cleaning offices during
some extra money, and within a year of reading this
and sitting down with Ray, my income had gone from
four thousand, one hundred and seventy five thousand.

Speaker 2 (26:49):
I remember when he gave me this book. He said,
if you'll do exactly what I tell you, you can have
anything you seriously want.

Speaker 6 (26:56):
Well.

Speaker 2 (26:56):
I didn't believe that. I was broke.

Speaker 6 (26:58):
I was unhappy, no formal education, and I just didn't
believe it. But I believed he believed it, and I
think that did something to me, and so I started
to do exactly what he said.

Speaker 2 (27:12):
I was living in England.

Speaker 6 (27:13):
I had open offices about seven different cities in Canada
and the United States, and I was.

Speaker 2 (27:18):
Living over in England, and I had earned over a
million dollars and I couldn't figure out what happened.

Speaker 6 (27:24):
I didn't think I was lucky. I didn't believe in luck.
I had been raised to believe if you're going to
do really well, you've got to be really smart. I
knew I wasn't that smart. I'd also been raised to
beeve if you don't go to school, you'll never get
a good job.

Speaker 2 (27:41):
I didn't have a good job.

Speaker 6 (27:42):
I owned the company, and I had only gone to
school for two months high school, and so I wanted
to know what happened, and I started to study. I
ended up going to work with her ol ninyeng like Conan,
and I met Leland, Valvandewell and doctor Harry Rhoder. So
there's four or five of them that really shaped me,

(28:05):
and it took me nine and a half years. But
when I got the dots to connect, all I wanted
to do was teach it, and.

Speaker 2 (28:14):
I let it on the wrong path.

Speaker 6 (28:17):
I think we have to understand the essence of who
we are, and that's what these people start to teach me.

Speaker 2 (28:24):
We are spiritual beings, we are a soul.

Speaker 6 (28:26):
We don't have one, and the soul is forever seeking
it's awareness of it's oneness with God.

Speaker 2 (28:32):
So we're always attempting to expand our level of awareness.

Speaker 6 (28:37):
And I've never stopped studying and I never will stop studying.

Speaker 2 (28:40):
I absolutely love to study this.

Speaker 6 (28:42):
I love to study who we are and all I
want to do is share It's that is my great
motivation when I wake up in the morning, That's what
I want to do, and that's all I want to do,
and I want.

Speaker 2 (28:53):
To do anything else.

Speaker 6 (28:54):
So I've had four or five people that really had
a profound impact on my life.

Speaker 2 (29:01):
And they helped me begin to understand who I am.
But I think it's a process.

Speaker 6 (29:06):
I don't think you ever get it all put together.
I think it's it's a process.

Speaker 2 (29:11):
So you keep becoming more and more aware.

Speaker 6 (29:14):
And the more aware you've become, I think the more
effective you are, the better you're able to share.

Speaker 3 (29:20):
How much of that was them believing in you even
though you didn't believe in yourself.

Speaker 2 (29:27):
Oh, I think it was. That was an enormous part
of it. You see. I think what they do is
they lead you to start to believing in yourself. I
found there's a couple of things.

Speaker 6 (29:45):
First of all, everything you study, I don't care you
didnta by Vadia, the Kuran, the Tora, the Bible, all
the psychological books, all Hells and Carnegie and every place
they tell you you have to believe. And that was
really playing on my mind because I was thinking, how
do you believe?

Speaker 2 (30:01):
You know? Somebody said just believe it? Well, how do
you believe? And I was having lunch with one of
my mentors, Leland Bell Vandewell.

Speaker 6 (30:10):
He was a brilliant man and he's gone now, God
bless him, but he sure helped me and.

Speaker 2 (30:17):
He said something, and like everything fell into place.

Speaker 6 (30:21):
He said, our belief system is based upon our evaluation
of something, and frequently if we re evaluate a situation,
our belief about it will change.

Speaker 2 (30:32):
Well.

Speaker 6 (30:34):
Most of our beliefs we inherited, we didn't originate to
ourself at all.

Speaker 2 (30:38):
Most of the.

Speaker 6 (30:38):
Beliefs that people have are absolutely absurd, have no foundation whatsoever.
And when he said that, I got him to repeat it,
because it was like Bell's going off in my head.

Speaker 2 (30:50):
I suddenly found out how and why I changed. I
had changed my belief.

Speaker 6 (30:54):
System about who I was and what I was capable
of doing. And I did that through reevaluating him. I
was all this material I was studying. I was trying
to figure out me. I was trying to figure out
who I was. And as I started to reevaluate my
belief about myself, my relationship with God or infinite and

(31:14):
my relationship with you, with Michael, with the world in general,
shifted completely.

Speaker 2 (31:20):
And I can see we're all one. There's only one power,
and we're all in the expression of that power. Everything's
in the expression of that power.

Speaker 6 (31:27):
We're a special expression because we're created in God's image.

Speaker 2 (31:31):
We've got creative faculties. We're creative beings, so we can
do something that no other form of life can do.

Speaker 6 (31:39):
All the other forms of life I have everything we've
got except our creative faculties.

Speaker 2 (31:47):
Well, all the.

Speaker 6 (31:49):
Other forms of life are completely at home in their environment.

Speaker 2 (31:52):
They blend in.

Speaker 6 (31:53):
We're totally disoriented in our environment.

Speaker 2 (31:56):
And that is because we've been blessed with the faculties
to create.

Speaker 6 (31:59):
Our own environment, and unfortunately too many have not learned
that and there a product of their environment rather than
create own environment.

Speaker 3 (32:10):
Thank you for that, Bob. We're going to have to
have him at the pulpit on s Day. Right from Michael,
that was great.

Speaker 5 (32:20):
Come in this month, you come in this month, Bob.

Speaker 2 (32:24):
Absolutely.

Speaker 3 (32:28):
Up, I know right, and we're going to have to
take a quick little break a second.

Speaker 6 (32:34):
Michael had me speak at his church one time, and
it was the first time I'd been there, and I
said that everybody should go there at least once.

Speaker 2 (32:44):
It was it was a spiritual experience the like of
which I had never had.

Speaker 6 (32:51):
It was something very special, and when I got up
to the front, he had everybody stand up and put
their hands out and send love to me.

Speaker 2 (33:00):
It changed my whole being.

Speaker 6 (33:02):
That is, I think the GOPI is without question, one
of the most phenomenal centers of spirituality on the on
the planet the most powerful one I've ever been in.

Speaker 4 (33:21):
Oh, thank you, Bob.

Speaker 3 (33:22):
That's my home, and that's and that's my teacher, and
and my thoughts.

Speaker 2 (33:28):
I think that's the thoughts of a lot of people.

Speaker 3 (33:30):
That's beautiful, and we will come back with a little
more of that love. But we do have to take
a quick promotional break to thank those who help sponsor
this show, so we'll be back into and too.

Speaker 4 (33:43):
Peace in and peace out, remember.

Speaker 3 (33:47):
The movie The Secret will come to Carnegie Hall, New
York and celebrate the Lifetime Achievement Tribute for Bob Proctor,
the Father of Personal Development. November fourteenth and fifteenth, joined
Dot Marissa, the Asian Oprah, and the who's who of
personal development, including other Secret Teachers doctor Michael, Bernard Beck,
with Laura Langhamire and Moore for an event to remember.

(34:11):
For tickets, go to www. Modern Daymillionaire dot com. That's
Modern Daymillionaire dot com and we are back. You are
tuned in to take my advice, I'm not using it.
Get balanced with Doctor Marissa Every Tuesday at naturally high
noon out of the sunset Gower Studios in Hollywood, California,

(34:34):
Universal Broadcasting Network and every Thursday and Saturday on my
CNBC news radio channels KCAA, AM ten fifty FM, one
O six point five and all over the.

Speaker 4 (34:46):
Place with iHeartRadio.

Speaker 3 (34:48):
Now and today, we are continuing with our Wisdom series
with two brilliant men, Bob Procter, the Dean of Prosperity
and Self Growth, and as well, doctor Michael Bernard Beckworth,
founder and spiritual Director of Agape International Spiritual Center, and Bob.
Before you were mentioning people and how they helped you,

(35:10):
and the most influential people, and that they believed in
you even when you didn't believe them in yourself the
same way. And I have to say, that is exactly
my story. And I just wanted to give a little
love right now to Reverend doctor Michael Bernard.

Speaker 4 (35:25):
Beckworth, who really did do that for me.

Speaker 3 (35:29):
So almost eight years ago, I was a person who
did not I had a belief system about myself that was,
you know, on the outside looked pretty good, but on
the inside just did not. I you know, I thought
I was a piece of Shataki. No matter how how
hot Shataki I looked or acted, I felt that way.

(35:50):
And it was because of his teaching and his belief
in me that I could change how I saw myself
and now look at me now. So thank you, thank you.
I love you so much, thank you very much. So
You're always good about that for me. So I wanted
to make sure I did that on the air. So anyways, okay,

(36:13):
enough love next Rever Michael, who would you say are
the two people who really influenced.

Speaker 4 (36:21):
You to be who you are?

Speaker 5 (36:24):
Well, like Bob, it's way more than two.

Speaker 7 (36:27):
But as an adult, I had a spiritual awakening in
my early twenties that loved me to go on a
path to discover when it happened to me and so
naturally I bumped into the teachings of Jesus the Christ
again and understood them from a much more higher metaphysical
mystical awareness and not merely from religiosity awareness. Ralph hold

(36:51):
Or Emerson was another individual that the Law of compensation
and other essays really hit me. I also picked up
thank and Girl, Rich Napoleon Hell. Doctor Daniel M. Morgan,
who was the founder of the Guidish Church Religious Science,
a great articulate word master of metaphysics, helped me put

(37:12):
language to the experience I was having within Doctor Homer Johnson,
a great metaphysical mystic that I would sit with on Saturdays,
many saturdays, riding my bicycle over to his house. Helped
me understand the inner dynamic of my oneness with God
that I was feeling so intensely. Doctor Thomas Trowart, I

(37:33):
mean here, doctor Thomas trot I studied his work, studied
Ernest Holmes. I studied Thomas Horror, who was a great
psychiatrist who created meta psychiatry.

Speaker 5 (37:45):
He was a great teacher of mine back in the
early eighties.

Speaker 7 (37:49):
There's been so many Doctor Howard Thurman really was able
to language the deep human thanks to the human experience.
But at the same time, the underst standing of our
mystical connection to a presence that's never ever absent, absent,
and it's inexhaustible.

Speaker 5 (38:08):
So many teachers on this side of the bail in the.

Speaker 7 (38:11):
Other influenced me to really have, as Bob was saying,
just to have a deep practice. I think, as you
transcend belief systems into what are we really practicing? Bob
was saying, And he wakes up, he studies every day,
you know, been at this over fifty something years, and
every day he's still a student. That's where I live, Marisa.

(38:35):
My mind, I have a beginner's mind. I'm a student
of the teachings. I meditate every day, I pray every day,
I study every day.

Speaker 5 (38:45):
I asked to be of service every day.

Speaker 7 (38:48):
And I have the same fire in me today that
I had over forty years ago when I had my
initial opening as an adult.

Speaker 5 (38:57):
There's been no waning of that at all. Like I'm
just beginning. I'm just beginning.

Speaker 7 (39:02):
I read something a paragraph twenty forty fifty times in
the same book, and every time I read it, the
lines may not have changed in the book, but I have.
I've had a deeper understanding of myself life, and I
see what's written in between the lines. And so Thurman,

(39:24):
Doctor Dan Morgan, Homer Johnson, Ralph Holder, Emerson, Napoleon Hill,
these individuals. Walter Russell, another great teacher of mine, was
the greatest mystic that ever came out of America.

Speaker 5 (39:38):
Maybe you don't even know about him, but he.

Speaker 7 (39:43):
You know, he recorded many of the elements in the
chart before individuals could see it. He was a multi millionaire.
He was a ice skating champion. At sixty nine years old,
he had been in the due play.

Speaker 2 (40:02):
Across.

Speaker 5 (40:03):
He was a deeply spiritual man. But like we were.

Speaker 7 (40:05):
Talking about earlier, he had no problem with money. He
was a deeply spiritual man. He went into cosmic consciousness
and at the same time was a multi millionaire, a
great wonderful mansion in Virginia, great teacher. He was one
of my early influencers because when I would go into

(40:25):
these bouts of being in the light for periods of time,
I didn't know what that was until I studied Walter
Russell and studied some of the great mystics that understood
I was being taught in the light from these cosmic awarenesses.
So Walter Russell influenced my life tremendously, right and everyone
Walter Russell is if you're an American at least. There's

(40:46):
a wonderful book called The Man Who Tapped the Secrets
of the Universe by Glenn Clark, and he writes about
Walter Russell. And the other book he wrote was about
George Washington Carver, the man who talked to flowers. That
was another great influence because most people thought that think
that George Washington.

Speaker 5 (41:04):
Carver was a scientist. He was a mystic. He woke
up at four o'clock every single day, talked to the flowers.
They would tell him what they were useful for. Then
he would go into his laboratory and prove what the
flowers had told him. So most people think that he
was trial and error going into a laboratory and discovering things.

(41:24):
And he wasn't doing anything by trial and error. He
was having a direct encounter with the spirit via the
plot flowers and the trees in.

Speaker 7 (41:31):
The ground, and then he would grow go into the
laboratory and prove it. Most people don't understand that I
have a picture of George Washington Carver in my office,
an actual photograph, because I was teaching about him one
year and this gentleman who was into demolition brought back
these pictures of him, and he said they had been

(41:52):
thrown away in the trash can at a Hollywood studio because.

Speaker 5 (41:55):
No one knew who this black man was. Wow, he
had taken my class. He knew it was George Washington Garver.

Speaker 6 (42:02):
Wow.

Speaker 7 (42:02):
So I had these actual photographs of George Washington Carver
in office as a reminder to wake up every single
morning and to commune with the presence and the commune
with nature.

Speaker 5 (42:13):
And one thing he said. He said, if you fall
fall in.

Speaker 7 (42:17):
Love with something deep enough, it will reveal its secrets
to you. So I fall in love every single day
with the Presence. I fall in love every single day
with the infinite, and it reveals its secrets to me.

Speaker 3 (42:30):
And I think that answers the common the question that
has a common answer between the two of you, is
the secret to success is that thirst for knowledge. That
secret to success is not sitting around waiting for something
to fall in your lap, or think that I deserve
to have something or that something is entitled to me.

(42:53):
And I've worked so hard, WHI am I not? But
that just for the sake of wanting to learn the same,
the sake of wanting to grow and expand and be so.

Speaker 4 (43:05):
In love with life.

Speaker 3 (43:07):
And that seems to be a disease in life that
I see more and more in my life.

Speaker 4 (43:13):
Balance coaching sessions where people are.

Speaker 3 (43:16):
Just you know, they don't want to live or they
see no reason to live, And I ask them, how
much do you read?

Speaker 4 (43:23):
How much you know?

Speaker 3 (43:25):
Do you is there anything that interests you? Is there
anything you know? When was the last time you took
a walk? And it's like this, this well it's I
don't I don't feel like doing it, and and it
seems like this, I don't know.

Speaker 5 (43:38):
That's a disease it is.

Speaker 2 (43:39):
That's aase.

Speaker 5 (43:40):
Emotional reasoning is a disease.

Speaker 7 (43:43):
Whenever someone says I don't feel like it, that is
now classified psychologically as a disease. You do not not
do something because you don't feel like it.

Speaker 5 (43:52):
That's that's that's.

Speaker 7 (43:54):
A train wreck starting to happen when you start to
become inspired and motivated and you start to yield it
to your greatness.

Speaker 5 (44:04):
You do things you don't feel like doing it. You
don't feel like it up, You get up anyway. You
don't feel like eating the right food, You do it anyway.
You don't feel like studying a little bit, You do
it anyway. And that's so I don't feel like it.
Is a disease that many people have. It's called laziness.
And many people.

Speaker 7 (44:20):
Are afraid to break free from the herb because they
don't want to be talked about. You know, because when
you start to break free, people don't like you. They
talk about you. Who do they think he is? But
you know what, they never.

Speaker 5 (44:32):
Gossip about a couch potato. The only gossip about.

Speaker 6 (44:34):
People who are trying to make a difference, you know, Mike,
So you just said something you were saying you read
the same thing.

Speaker 2 (44:41):
Over and over.

Speaker 6 (44:42):
This is a book holder that I have on my desk,
and I'll keep this offen.

Speaker 2 (44:48):
This is The Hidden Power by Thomas Troward.

Speaker 6 (44:52):
And right now I'm reading Affirmative Power and it's only
three pages, but I've been reading it for.

Speaker 2 (45:00):
Three months, right every day. Let me read you this start.

Speaker 6 (45:05):
It's so good thoroughly to realize the true nature of
affirmative power is to possess.

Speaker 2 (45:11):
The key to the great secret. Yeah. Truward is such
a phenomenal author, my goodness.

Speaker 6 (45:19):
I mean, he takes the most complicated and he windows
it down so I can understand it.

Speaker 2 (45:26):
But I have this. I have a it's a book holder.

Speaker 6 (45:31):
When I went into Earl Nightdale's office way back around
nineteen sixty five, I noticed he had a holder to
hold the book open on his desk, and that stuck
in my mind and I asked him why I had it.
He said, because I read the same page over and
over again for a couple of months.

Speaker 2 (45:50):
I've been doing it ever since then.

Speaker 7 (45:52):
Yeah, yep, the same thing I love Thomas Truwort. I
have a powerful statement that I love of his. He says,
in order to understand the wonders of the universe, you
have to do two things. You have to realize you're
at the center of it. At the same time, you
have to withdraw all thinking that you can contribute anything
to its efficiency. So you have to the universe and

(46:15):
you can't control any of its efficiency.

Speaker 4 (46:17):
Well, you know you're not all that.

Speaker 6 (46:20):
In the Dory Lectures, he says something that's very interesting
and a person could easily miss. He said, my mind
is a center of divine operation right now in everything.

Speaker 2 (46:31):
If I was holding a basketball, there's only one center.

Speaker 9 (46:35):
There's only one center in this studio that I'm in,
there's only one center.

Speaker 6 (46:39):
In a city by at an Apple, there's only one center.
He said, my mind is a center. That would indicate
there's more than one center, right, And I stumbled on that,
and I thought, wow, that's huge. You're dealing with infinite
any point center, every point is centator.

Speaker 2 (46:54):
That's right.

Speaker 5 (46:55):
Yeah, You're at the center of the universe and we
are centers. I think some people got admit stuff. They
thought it was a mistype. They heard center, but it.

Speaker 2 (47:04):
Was center centers.

Speaker 5 (47:07):
We're original centers in the mind of God.

Speaker 4 (47:11):
That's great.

Speaker 6 (47:11):
Well, and anything you know, I know, And there is
no outer measurements. I have here a globe, there's only
one center, and that's determined by the outer measurements. But
when you're dealing with infinite there is no outer men measurements.

Speaker 2 (47:32):
So every point center, every point is center.

Speaker 3 (47:34):
Yeah, And if you're not following, I just want you
to just don't worry about following. Just watch the transformation
of these two young men.

Speaker 10 (47:48):
On camera when they're talking about something that they're excited about.
You guys look like you're like eight years old and
you're all excited about what you're talking about.

Speaker 4 (47:58):
It's beautiful, doesn't I mean?

Speaker 3 (48:00):
And they look ageless when and this is and this
is the fountain of youth right here. Be interested, be enthusiastic,
love what you're doing, want to think. You know, there's
nothing worse than contemporal for investigation. Just go out and
learn and grow and think and be rich and use

(48:21):
the money that you have to do everything that you
want and more.

Speaker 4 (48:26):
And that I think is the bottom line here.

Speaker 6 (48:29):
You know, I have traveled all over the world now
for well over fifty years, and I have found everywhere
I go, I keep asking people what do you want?

Speaker 2 (48:39):
What do you really want?

Speaker 6 (48:41):
And I've come to the conclusion people just want three
basic things. Oddly enough, most people don't want to be
really wealthy. What they do want they don't want to
have any financial concerns. They want to be free and
so far as money is concerned, if they want to
take a trip, they want to be able to take it.
They want to buy addresser suit, they want to be

(49:01):
able to buy no financial concerns.

Speaker 9 (49:03):
Number Two, they want to wake up and really be
excited about how they're going to spend their day. They're
going to do what they love all day.

Speaker 2 (49:11):
And they want to mix with people who are creative.

Speaker 6 (49:15):
And productive and creatively productive, their upbeat.

Speaker 2 (49:21):
And there the three things. One I've got those three things.
I love my life. All I want to do is
just keep growing greater awareness.

Speaker 3 (49:30):
Beautiful, That's and that's the final word, and nothing more needed.
I have that life too, and I'm so grateful for it,
and I know that you do too. Reverend Michael, Is
there any last word from you for the listeners out there?

Speaker 4 (49:45):
Thank you, Bob. That was perfect.

Speaker 7 (49:48):
I would I think everything that we say is covering
a lot of material. I would say that we, all
of us are at the center of the universe. As
he quoted forward, our mind is that is a center
in the mind of infinite possibilities. We have to know
the difference between thinking and mentation. Mentation is the regurgitation
of thoughts and opinions and points of view that you

(50:10):
have every day.

Speaker 5 (50:11):
As Bob mentioned earlier, some of them you've inherited.

Speaker 7 (50:14):
Some of them you get from the collective race, consciousness
from the overculture, from the news. We have to have
inspired thought. Inspiration is a different kind of thought than
your normal Mentating inspiration comes directly from the mind of
the universe. So you have to court it. It has
to be important to you. You have to wake up
and want that. You have to study, you have to meditate,

(50:36):
you have to vision so you can be inspired. Inspiration
pulls you to a greater expression of your real destiny.
And I will say one other things. Every single being
there's not a throwback in the bunch. Every being has
a great destiny within them. They have to discover it
and cover it, activate it, and ultimately express it.

Speaker 5 (50:55):
There's not a.

Speaker 7 (50:55):
Throwback in the bunch. The universe did not create any accidents,
any extra people.

Speaker 5 (51:00):
Everyone matters.

Speaker 7 (51:01):
Everyone is a unique expression of infinite possibility, and we
have to wake.

Speaker 5 (51:05):
Up to that absolute truth.

Speaker 4 (51:07):
And so it is.

Speaker 3 (51:09):
Thank you so much, Bob Proctor, Michael Bernard beckw for
an amazing show, for amazing words of wisdom. They're talking
to you, you who doesn't believe that they are good
enough or worthy enough. You are wrapped in a warm
blanket of worthyness. You are loving, loved and lovable, and
don't you forget it. This is doctor Marissa signing out

(51:31):
for now. I'll be right back with the Balance Bar.
Thank you so much to both.

Speaker 5 (51:38):
Thank you Marissa, thank it's always good being with you.

Speaker 2 (51:40):
Bob, my pleasure.

Speaker 3 (51:43):
To call you about a date to speak of a
goping absolutely absolutely, Thank you so much. And the Asian
Oprah giveaway is part of our Balance Bar at the
end of the show.

Speaker 4 (51:58):
Where I invite you to come with me for more.

Speaker 11 (52:01):
Balance take back your life with doctor mauricepe.

Speaker 3 (52:22):
I hope you enjoyed that throwback Thursday as much as
I did. I Uh wow, I had forgotten how fabulous
that was. If I do say so myself, I'm fortunate
to have had bought practor on my show. He uh

(52:42):
was also known affectionately as the Dean of self development,
one of the pioneers behind that whole movement that continues.

Speaker 4 (52:52):
To bring us people like.

Speaker 3 (52:56):
Gosh his name just I have really good memory, but
my recalls sucks, but our whole field of self development.
He was definitely one of the pioneers that was absolutely
convinced for the power of our mind, our choices, think
and grow rich. I was on tour with that. I

(53:21):
am a student of all of that, So I hope
you enjoyed that. If you came in a little later
and didn't get the whole interview. It is free available
on my YouTube TV channel, and if you free subscribe
and give me the finger, this one not the other one,

(53:44):
you will get an alert every weekday morning to tune in.
And I am live on this channel every weekday morning.
So Thursdays is Throwback Thursday, when I go back into
my treasure chest of past shows one four hundred and
forty eight now but who's counting, and bring back the words,

(54:05):
especially when my guest is on the other side. Bob
is in heaven now, but his words and his You know,
he's like a kid.

Speaker 2 (54:15):
Did you notice he's like I.

Speaker 3 (54:17):
Felt like the older one of those two. They're like
forever young, and they have a zest and a love
for life that I want and have and will continue
to encourage for all y'all. And I'm so happy to
see eyeballs in studio today. I really hope you enjoyed

(54:39):
that interview. I'm not sure who the LinkedIn user was
because it doesn't identify here, but thank you for participating
in my Cashew gallery as I am spying on y'all
backstage on Thursdays. I also want to close out with
a brief breakfast. We're having breakfast after the fact to

(55:00):
make sure on Thursdays that you get the entire interview.
But taking a bite of my gratitude sandwich, what are
you grateful for?

Speaker 4 (55:08):
Top of the bun?

Speaker 3 (55:10):
Is that a good life habit that uh Doctor Wayne Dyer,
who's also on the other side, promoted that if we
start our day with gratitude, we're gonna sandwich our day
in the most positive way. So what are you grateful for?
I am grateful that I went to the hematologist yesterday.
Really nice guy. I'm glad I have a great doctor

(55:31):
to take care of my blood clots. They are still here.
They are dissolving, but it's gonna It's a slow thing.
I didn't realize that it was like months and months.
The bad news is I will be on blood thinner
for the rest of my life because this is my

(55:51):
second violation with blood clots DVTs deep vein thrombosis, so
to make sure that I don't develop new ones. I'm
grateful that there is a drug called Elquist that will
help keep my blood thin enough not to develop more.

(56:13):
And the bad news is because of that, I can't
race sailboats. Thirty four seasons were wonderful, but any sport
that has a higher than normal risk of falling or
hitting myself and resulting in a brain bleed that they
can't stop. I can't do anymore. The good news is

(56:35):
twelve months is the safe to ensure the old blood
clot is gone to be able to fly again.

Speaker 4 (56:44):
So world tour is off for sure.

Speaker 3 (56:48):
No more Shanghai this year, or Ireland or Hawaii or Africa.
But the good news is next June I can start
planning again. So there was some fear, not fear, but
concern that I would never be able to fly again because.

Speaker 4 (57:08):
Of the risk.

Speaker 3 (57:09):
I am grateful, grateful, grateful, but it's just a it's
a hit. I hit the pause button for whatever reason,
and I can't wait to see what good comes out
of this. I don't understand why, but a year knows
what a day doesn't, and I know that it's always
this and better. So that is my gratitude. I hope
that you don't have blood clots to be grateful with

(57:32):
me about that, But what else.

Speaker 4 (57:34):
Are you grateful for?

Speaker 3 (57:35):
And then tonight, before you go to bed, I want
you to do the bottom of the bun, which is
gratitude turns inwards. What do you appreciate about yourself? And
I will say that I appreciate my ability to feel
all the disappointment, feel all the sadness and then get

(57:55):
to the other side and feel the gratitude and the
power of positive thinking, positive choices to think, and not
stay too long on a pity pot that I that
I might get like all wrinkly and pruney, like staying
in that.

Speaker 4 (58:16):
Pot too long.

Speaker 6 (58:18):
So that's it.

Speaker 3 (58:19):
I hope you'll do that before you go to bed tonight,
so that you're not thinking about all the things you
haven't finished or who done you wrong. But instead you
can lay your head down and get a great night's
sleep because you know, just like Michael just said, that
you are. There's not a throwback in the bunch. You're
all one of a kind, wonderful, unique expressions of this power.

Speaker 4 (58:41):
Some people call God source.

Speaker 3 (58:43):
I call him my ups man, my universal power source
who delivers every morning when I praymeditate. So I hope
that you know that.

Speaker 4 (58:51):
And if you don't.

Speaker 3 (58:52):
And you still think you're a piece of chataki, that's okay.
I will know that you're hot shataki eighty a percent
of the time for you until you can believe it yourself.
All right, This is doctor Marissa reporting live, reminding you
it's all about balance PC and piece out world peace
through inner piece. Now go and have the best day ever.

(59:17):
I'll see you tomorrow.

Speaker 6 (59:30):
NBC News on CACAA Lomelanda sponsored by Teamsters Local nineteen
thirty two, protecting the Future of Working Families Teamsters nineteen
thirty two.

Speaker 12 (59:39):
Dot orgs, Hey you yeah, you do. You know where
you are? Well, you've done it. Now you're listening to
caseyaa Loma Linda, Your CNBC News station, so expect the unexpected.

Speaker 3 (01:00:06):
You're listening to the Tehebo Tea club radio show hosted
by
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