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October 14, 2025 55 mins
The Lynn Monet is a paranormal consultant and lecturer who specializes in hauntings, dying, death, afterlife, and mental health related to otherworldly attachments. They possess empathic abilities that allow them to see frequencies interdimensionally, a gift known as second sight. With over 30 years of nursing experience, primarily in end-of-life care, management, and geriatrics, Lynn also holds a degree in biological science. Additionally, Lynn serves on the board of directors for the upcoming Health and Recovery magazine set to launch in 2024.


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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
Oh hurry, Welcome to the episode. A place where fact
is fiction and fiction is reality. Now here's your host, Robertconnell.

Speaker 2 (00:30):
You to in that thing YouTube, breaking my hearty into
a million.

Speaker 3 (00:38):
Pieces like you always do. And you don't need to.

Speaker 2 (00:47):
Be cool in there either.

Speaker 3 (00:52):
About the body, I din't go answer the child chid.

Speaker 4 (01:13):
And good evening, one and all, and welcome back to
the X Zone. I am Rob McConnell, and for the
next two hours I'm your host and your guide. Us
Together we will cross these time space continuums that I
call our traveling way, our traveling highway to the X Zone.
The Xzone is a place for people dare to believe
and dare to be heard. It's a place where fact

(01:34):
is fiction and fiction is reality. And the Xzone comes
to you Monday through Friday from ten pm Eastern until
midnight right here on the Xzone Broadcast Network, talk Star
Radio Network, Mutual Broadcast Network, and in the province of Ontario,
the northern tiers of the state of New York and
Pennsylvania on your hometown Radio Classic twelve twenty am. That's

(01:57):
CFAJ right here in St. Catharine, down the street from us,
and they stream us as well on Classic twelve twenty
dot CA. As you know, this is the X Zone
where we explore the stories and journeys of remarkable individuals
making a difference in our world. Well, this evening, we

(02:18):
have a truly inspirational guest with us, Lynn Money, as
a death duela, nurse and author. Lynn combines her medical
expertise with deep compassion to guide individuals and families through
one of life's most profound transitions, from navigating the emotional
landscape of dying to offering support at the end of life.

(02:39):
Lynn's work is invaluable. She's here to share with us
her insights, experience and wisdom and you can learn more
about her work at www dot Lynnmoney dot com. That's
l y n n m net dot com and Lynn,
welcome back to the Zone.

Speaker 3 (02:58):
Oh it's my pleasure, Rob, Thank you so much much
for having me.

Speaker 4 (03:01):
Lynn. Let me ask you, what was it that that
you know you made you decide to do the great
work that you're doing. And I don't think there are
a lot of people who really understand and appreciate the very,
very compassionate role that you play at a time when

(03:22):
most people enter into a very deep, dark pit of grief.

Speaker 3 (03:28):
You know, I'd been a nurse for forty years. Seventeen
of that has been an end of life care. But
I also have a bit of second sight that I've
had ever since I was a little girl, And with
that combined, I did geriatrics and end of life care,
and I would see things during that time that people
would be in that active state of transitioning between leaving

(03:50):
the earth and moving upward to heaven or whatever you
want to call it there. I call it heaven. So
and that there were some very beautiful things that occurred
that I would see over and over again, or that
I got to be a part of an overheard like
babies that haven't been born yet, and different things that
people would talk about seeing, like loved ones coming in
to collect them. So I wanted to write a book

(04:13):
that would help take the stigma of death and dying
away and have people look at it in a different way.
I mean, there's such a finality to death, and really
we don't die. We just simply shed our bodies and
we go on.

Speaker 4 (04:28):
My wife, as you may remember, was also a nurse,
and she was a practicing nurse for a number of years.
She retired about five years ago, and she agrees with
everything that you've said when it comes to the end.
She worked in the palliative section of a hospital in Hamilton,
and I would hear her and her other nurses talking

(04:52):
about different patients, and for the first little while, I
couldn't understand how they would talk about it in a
positive way. And I'm saying, well, wait a minute, hold
on here, death, that's it. You know, the person is gone,
they shed the meat suit, the consciousness or the soul
goes and away you go. And they would look at

(05:15):
me and just smile and say you just don't get it.
And I said, please explain it to me then. And
what what they would say is that they two at
the time of passing with patients, the patient would see
his or her loved ones, his or her pets that
have gone beyond. They would be that they would be

(05:41):
freed of the head of the earthly chains. And they
knew at that time that they were going on another
journey that being born on this side in our suit
and finally getting out of the suit and going to
the next part of the life trip. I don't know

(06:04):
if we can call it a life trip, but you know,
it's just a continuation of why we are here. And
the Irish have a great way of looking at the passing.
They look at the person's life and they don't mourn it.
They celebrate the life. Vikings used to do the same.

(06:26):
Why is it then that there are so many people
who still look at death as final that they get,
you know, grief, I can understand. And I was wondering,
is it because they themselves, those on this side that
are left behind, are really suffering their own loss and

(06:53):
not the passing of the person into a celebratory area
of an an exciting chapter in their existence or in
their soul's journey. How do you take it?

Speaker 3 (07:05):
Yeah, I believe that death should also be celebrated. And
people the thing that that you know, since there is
such a finality to death, people don't realize that this
is not the last time you're going to see your
loved ones. As you had mentioned your wife, and I
totally concur with her on all of that. I mean,
you see your pets again, you see your family again,

(07:27):
and so it's not the last time. And I think
I think that people see it as just such a finality.
And then and then, like you said, also, it's kind
of a loss for them.

Speaker 4 (07:38):
Yea.

Speaker 3 (07:38):
If they if they could see what I've seen and
what what I have heard, you know, about people, they would,
you know, they would be so happy for them. I mean,
they're they're healthy, they're they're they're around us more than
they can even be in in life because they're not
having to work and pay taxes and they you know,
they're still around us. You can feel that essence of

(07:59):
them around you, and I would and if people could
look at it in that way. And I also think
that traditional religion has had a lot to do with
that and the way that we've been taught things. I mean,
you know, how many times have you heard a child say, oh, well,
you know there's something in my room or my flaws
that people say is that there's nothing there. So even

(08:20):
in the medical field, and I find this interesting, is
that a lot of times when people are in that
transitioning state, when they start talking to loved ones that
are deceased, the people that are in physical form get
freaked out about it because they're not comfortable being in
the room of the dead person, even if it's a
person that they know that they knew in life, like
Uncle Bob. So they come running down to the nurses

(08:42):
station to me to get the meds to take down
to silence the patient because they're not comfortable with what
they're talking about, so it's their discomfort.

Speaker 4 (08:53):
I also learned that many times when the person who
is you know, turn that corner and their time is near,
they're actually held back by those members of their family
who just don't want to release them and let them go.

Speaker 3 (09:15):
I've seen that as well, or they linger, you know,
to touch base with somebody that hasn't quite shown up
so that they can have that, you know, that final thing,
and you know it is okay to grieve. However, extended
grieving does kind of anchor part of them here, if
that makes sense. They're multifaceted. On the other side, they're

(09:36):
doing many things, and they do everything by thought, so
they just think of something and they can just go
from what I understand. But yes, that's true. If people
it is okay to grieve and feel it, but they
really want you to live your life here. They don't
want you to stay in that state of suffering. They
want you to drop into your heart and stay in
that space of love and compassionate understanding that again, this

(09:59):
is not the last time that you're going to see
your loved ones, you will see them again.

Speaker 4 (10:04):
Lynn. How has your experience as a nurse influenced your
work as a death duel.

Speaker 3 (10:09):
Oh wow, you know, because I've seen so many wonderful things.
I and because I'm very comfortable with talking about death
and the act of dying and with people that that
to engage with them on another level and give them
comfort and having them look at it in a different way,
and also to help them navigate. You know, when when

(10:32):
somebody is passing, it's very easy to get taken advantage of.
So I even help them with like the end of
life planning and their end of life directives and that
sort of thing, so that they have everything in place.
I mean, I've actually had patients that I've gone to
that that have been diagnosed with terminal illness and when
I've walked in, they're laying in a fetal position in

(10:52):
their bed with their beating on, literally waiting for death.
And I'm like, wait a minute, Oh my gosh. You know,
these days are precious. This is not a time to
wait for death. This is a time to get your
things in order, or your loved ones that are going
to be staying here. You know, if the roof needs
to be fixed, it's time to get it repaired, if
it's going to make it easier for the loved ones
that you're leaving behind. And then I've come to the

(11:13):
house the following week to check on them. They actually
greet me at the door. They're all shaved and have
nice clothes on. So it helps to have them look
at it in a different way. That light bulb kind
of goes on for them when they realize that it's
not and also sharing with them the stories of the
loved ones coming in and then they share back and
they're like, you know, I saw my parents, And I

(11:35):
know my parents have been passed away for years, but
I saw them, you know, just the other day and
it made me feel happy. Then it makes them realize
that there is life after death and that it's not
something that you're just gone type thing. So it brings
them comfort that way.

Speaker 4 (11:50):
Lynn, I've got about a minute before I have to
go to our first break, and I was wondering if
you could, if you could explain what a death duel
is and what services that you provide for those who
may have been hearing the term death duela for the
very first time listening to us tonight.

Speaker 3 (12:11):
Yes, it's basically a mid A death midwife is another
word for it, as a midwife brings in babies, a
death duel that helps people go out and the services
are also end of life directive planning can help you
with the difference between healthcare power of attorney and power
of attorney and give you a lot of tips, like
how to do that for free, you know, how you

(12:33):
do it yourself so you don't have to pay an
attorney and that sort of thing, and kind of getting
the family on the same page and bringing them all
in together to help make decisions and even patch up relationships,
and you know that sort of thing. And so we
do a lot of things. We're a huge support system
not only for the patient but for the family too.

Speaker 4 (12:51):
So basically you are an end time guardian.

Speaker 3 (12:54):
Angel Oh, I appreciate that. I just love my work.
I love I love connecting with people, and you know,
and I'm still I'm still connected to a lot of
them even years after their loved ones have passed away,
just because we built that rapport type thing and they
check in with me every once in a while and
kind of update me on what's going on in their life.

Speaker 4 (13:15):
So I love that explanation. Lin Money is our special guest.
Your website is Linn Money dot com, and Lynn and
I will be back on the other side of this
very short break as the xone continues with yours truly,
Rob McConnell and my special guest, Linn Money. On the
other side of this break. You're listening to us on
the X HOW Broadcast Network, Talkstar Radio Network, Mutual Broadcast Network,

(13:37):
and on your hometown radio Classic twelve twenty c FAJ
and Saint Catharine's and they stream us on Classic twelve
twenty dot CA. So whatever you do, don't go away,

(14:23):
you said.

Speaker 3 (14:23):
I was in my early forties with a lot of
life before me, and a moment came that stopped me
here on a time.

Speaker 4 (14:35):
I spent more stuff the next days, looking at the
X rays, talking.

Speaker 3 (14:42):
About the options and talking about sweet time. I asked
him when it.

Speaker 2 (14:49):
Sank in that this might really be the brilliant how's
it get you when you get that.

Speaker 4 (14:56):
Kind of news man?

Speaker 3 (14:59):
What you do?

Speaker 4 (15:01):
He said? I Winstart David W.

Speaker 5 (15:06):
Dock, you man lavin.

Speaker 2 (15:08):
Up in seven seconds.

Speaker 3 (15:11):
Audible name Mandy and.

Speaker 2 (15:19):
Sweeter Game mag if this happened to die.

Speaker 4 (15:26):
And we said Sunday out you given change to thev
black to Die. Welcome back everyone. This year is the
X Zone and we're coming to you on the X
Zone Broadcast Network, talk Star Radio Network, Mutual Broadcast Network,
and throughout the province of Ontario and the northern tiers
of New York and Pennsylvania on your hometown radio Classic

(15:49):
twelve twenty c F A J A M. And they
stream on Classic twelve twenty dot ca A. Lynn Money
is our guest. Her website is Lynnmoney dot com and
that's l y n N M O n e T
dot com. And we're talking about death. We're talking about
what it's like to be a death doula. And Lynn

(16:12):
has also written a book that we're going to be
talking about. And again, Lynn, thank you very much for
not only coming here and talking to the audience, but
for those many hearts that you've touched over the years
and who may not have had the opportunity of saying
thank you. I would like to thank you for them.

Speaker 3 (16:29):
Oh, thank you so much for that that it warms
my heart. Thank you so much. You know, as you
were mentioning before about grief. A lot of times people
miss a very very important time when that person is
in that state of transition. And I'm sure that your
wife will back me up on this. When they start
into that state of transition to patient, they their filters

(16:51):
start to eat face so they have the ability to
hear the telepathy from the other side, which is how
our deceased loved ones communicate on the other side as
they start coming in, and they also have the ability
to hear the people speaking in human form. And a
lot of times people miss an opportunity to actually speak
to loved ones that have crossed over through the person

(17:14):
that's passing in that moment because of their grief and
their fear of even having a deceased person in a room.
And I have a story that I would love to
share with you, if that's okay.

Speaker 4 (17:24):
It is totally fine. Thank you for sharing it this
one with us.

Speaker 3 (17:27):
Okay. I had a patient that was totally blind. And
I've mentioned this one because a lot of times the
medical field will say that it's hallucinations that they're having
with that it's a deaf thing that happens, and I
don't believe that because I've seen the angels and loved
ones come in for people. So I had this client
named Edge that had been totally blind for ten years,

(17:47):
and she had been on my unit for about two weeks.
And her son and daughter come to the nurses station
and they say to me, moms talking to people in
the room that aren't there. Well, I kind of expected that,
but I, you know, to comfort them more so than her,
because I knew she was fine. I offered to walk
down to the room with them to check on their
MoMA and see if she needed anything. And when we

(18:09):
stepped into the room, Edna was sitting at a slant
and she was reaching up into the sky as if
she was being handed something very very delicate, and she
was smiling, so she was very happy with what she
was receiving. And I said to her, I said, Edna,
who's here? And she immediately said George, and her daughter
turned as white as a sheet and she had to

(18:30):
sit down and she said, George is my father and
he passed away X amount of years ago. And then Edna,
my client, spoke up and said, and he's glad that
you're taking good care of Pixie. Pixie was Edna's poodle
when George passed away. The son had to take possession
of Pixie that was still alive, like fifteen years old,

(18:51):
but still alive. And he told me the story about it,
and he said, do you think my mom's hallucinating? And
of course, in a professional setting, I can't come forward
and say no, I think your dad is here. So
I turned it around and I said to him, I said,
do you think she's hallucinating? And he said, well, I
don't know. And I said, well, do you mind if
I try something? I said, I'm not trying to change

(19:13):
her religious beliefs or anything, but it's been my experience
the loved ones do come in to collect their family
members and help them transition over. And he said okay.
And I asked that, and I said, Edna, can I
ask George a question? And she nodded her head yes,
And I said what color is your son's shirt? And
Edna said yellow. Now keep in mind, and he was

(19:36):
wearing a yellow raffler and polo shirt. Now keep in
mind that ed was as blind. She was blind, she
couldn't see shadows or anything. So George had to tell
her what color the shirt was. And in that moment,
her son got it and he said, hi, Dad, and
he realized that his father was really there with his mother,
helping her to transition over. And so I left them

(19:59):
and I said, well, if you need anything, call me
and spend time with your mom and your dad.

Speaker 4 (20:05):
What a wonderful story.

Speaker 3 (20:08):
Anyway, How can a blind person hallucinate? You know, the
medical field says it's hallucinations. It's impossible for a blind
person to hallucinate.

Speaker 4 (20:16):
Why is it that talking about you believing somebody who
could not be seen in the room, was you know,
was thought of being unprofessional?

Speaker 3 (20:27):
Well, you know, because I was working in a medical setting,
and medical setting is always about give them a pill,
you know what I mean. If they're hallucinating, give them
a pill. If they'd hear voices talking to them, give
them a pill. And so you just can't come out
and engage with them and validate what they're seeing. Although
I had a couple of patients that I did because

(20:48):
they were totally saying and seeing things and I was
seeing the things at the same time. And I have
another story about that that we might want to tell
on the next part to kind of bring that home
as well. But everything is about, you know, even people
with mental illness. It's the same thing. Give them a pill.
So you're given the people with mental illness lithium. You're

(21:08):
giving the people that are passing talking to loved ones
that nobody else can see but them. They're giving them
sarahquil abuse part trying to lower their frequency for lack
of a better word, and it does. It lowers their
energetic frequency because we are electric and water and then
we're inside of these meat soups, so and everything is energy.

(21:28):
So you know, I can't come out and say no,
you're really seeing something and have a patient say to
the doctor as he's prescribing or something that will help
them not see things and say, well, the nurse said
that she can see it too. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 4 (21:43):
I truly do. However, being the Devil's I've got over
here in support of these patients who God bless them,
who knows what they've gone through in their lives, and
here they are at that final transitioning stage. That should
we not give them more credit or acknowledge more of

(22:08):
what they're seeing and what they're saying at this point
of their life.

Speaker 3 (22:13):
Yes, absolutely, absolutely I agree with that because I can
see them too, and to validate them. And it's not
something that's negative. It's something that is so beautiful when
you get to be in the room during that time
the person's transitioning, even if you're a you know, onlooking
or you're in there doing something, the energy in the

(22:33):
room shifts, yes, and you can you can feel this
this joyful love feeling that that there aren't human words
to express because it's it's it's otherworldly in a good way.
It's coming from the other side and it's invigorating, and
you can see movement in the room sometimes as well,
so it's just, oh, I am yeah. I don't I

(22:56):
don't know. I don't know why the medical field doesn't
go along with that too, But I'm hoping that with
people like your wife and like me and other people too,
that we can start getting that shifted into a better direction,
because you know what, I had to get to the
point that I am also retired as a nurse. I
just retired this past year, so I don't care if

(23:17):
they take my license or not. So I'm going to
talk about whatever I want and I'm going to tell
the truth, you know what I'm saying. So now I
can talk about those things and it's not going to
Repercussions are not going to come back on me.

Speaker 4 (23:28):
Lynna, I understand what you're saying it. I fully support
what you've said and what you've done, and thank you
for your service.

Speaker 3 (23:36):
Oh, thank you so much.

Speaker 4 (23:38):
I believe that the reason, and this is just my opinion,
that the medical community does not want professionals like yourself
and my wife and other members of the medical community
to acknowledge what the patient is seeing or the patient
is hearing because they can't explain it's nothing that can

(24:00):
be replicated in a laboratory.

Speaker 3 (24:05):
That's true. And you know, as from a science perspective,
you know, energy cannot be created or destroyed, right, and
we are all energy, and when we leave our meat suits,
that energy still exists, it just changes form. And they
don't They address the physical of what they can see,
the mental of what they can hear and touch and feel,
but when it comes to that energetic field that is

(24:28):
is beyond the body and within the body, they don't
know how to address that because they can't touch it,
taste it, or feel it. Yeah, you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 4 (24:37):
I certainly do, and and I've had my I had
one member of the medical community, try and slap my
wrist for what I was saying and about my beliefs
about what you and I are talking about. And he
was very staunch, and he was very arrogant. And you know,
what would I know. I'm not a member of the
medical community. I didn't go to university for eight years.

(24:58):
I don't hold an MD or a PA. And after
he calmed down, I said, well, can you answer me
one thing, then, doctor, do you go to church? Do
you pray? And he said, of course I do. I said,
then what evidence do you have of there's somebody actually

(25:20):
listening to you when you pray, or that any of
these miraculous events in that happened in the Bible really
did happen. You can't see it, you can't explain it,
and yet you believe it. And then there's a person
who is getting ready to pass on from one part
of his life to another part, and because you can't

(25:42):
see it, you can't hear it to you, it doesn't exist.
Why the double standard?

Speaker 3 (25:50):
Yep, exactly. And you know, I have so many events
that have occurred that can validate the fact that loved
ones do come in. I have a a lady that
I call her Abigail of my book.

Speaker 4 (26:03):
Why why don't we do this? I've got about fifty
seconds before I go to the break, and I didn't
want to distribute because these are testimonials from a professional you.
This is first hand evidence. This isn't hearsaying, this isn't
a story, this is a fact. And when we come
back from this very short break, Lynn Money will be

(26:25):
sharing another story with us. We're also going to be
talking to Lynn about her book and much more. Are
you a skeptic or a believer? Send me an email
x Zone at xonradiotv dot com and on all social
media sites Xzone Radio TV, and to all the people
on x dot com who are a little upset with
me because of my views and because I don't cater

(26:49):
to their beliefs when it comes to politics, when it
comes to science, when it comes to medicine, when it
comes to the news, the fake news. I'm not going
to apologize because I believe if it's good enough to think,
it's good enough to say, as long as you could
substantiate what you're saying, and that's all I'm trying to do.

(27:09):
You know, as a police officer, I learned one important lesson.
There are three sides to every story, his side, her side,
and the truth. And what I try to do here
in the ex Zone Monday through Friday is bring both
sides of a story to you, our listeners, the members

(27:30):
of the worldwide Exone nation, so that you can form
your own opinions and beliefs. I'll be back on the
other side of this break as we continue here in
the ex Zone, So whatever you do, don't go away.
I'll be right back.

Speaker 3 (28:00):
A back rides.

Speaker 2 (28:12):
You, sir, matter When you read my book, it's a
bes the Rite when you take a look.

Speaker 3 (28:18):
It's based on a novel by a man named me.

Speaker 2 (28:21):
And I need a job, so I want to be
happy for back Rider Vapor Bagarrider. It's a dirty story
of the dancer man Annis cleaning life doesn't understand when
the sun is working for the daily Man.

Speaker 3 (28:39):
It's steady job. Buddy wants to be a for back
Rider Vapor magarader.

Speaker 2 (28:49):
A back Rides.

Speaker 4 (28:56):
And welcome back. Lenn Mine is our guest www. Dot
Money dot com. And we're talking about death. We're talking
about dying. We're talking about the transition from this reality
to the other side and how it has been witnessed
by members of the medical community, by family members, by friends.

(29:16):
At the time of passing, or of that close time
to passing, there is a certain look that happens to
the patient if they're conscious, They get a there's an
electricity in the air, there is a feeling that a

(29:37):
heavyweight is being lifted the patient. And sometimes the people
who are in the room as the patient is is
getting ready to pass, they see friends, they see members
of the family, pets. In my opinion, based on the
hundreds of people that I've had the pleasure of talking
to here on the show over the thirty five years

(29:59):
have been doing it, people like Lynn Money, I believe
that there is more to life than we will ever
understand at this point. I was at a school one
time and the teacher asked me if I could explain
to the nine graders how I see what happens at

(30:23):
a time of death. I said, you know, Mother Nature
has been trying to tell us about every part of
our lives, but for some reason, we don't want to
take a look at nature because it may be so simple.
So let me give you this example. As a little

(30:43):
caterpillar that starts off at a larvae progresses through his
life or her life, they get bigger and they you know,
they do what caterpillars do. And then there's a time
when this part of the caterpillar's life is coming to
an end, that caterpillar spins a cocoon. I look at

(31:09):
the caterpillar as that point the caterpillar is, if you'll
excuse the expression, has died. But something very fascinating and
marvelous happens within the cocoon. What went into the cocoon
was a live caterpillar that died and was transformed into

(31:31):
a beautiful butterfly. That's the way that I look at death.
As we get closer to the time of our death,
before we shed the meat suit that carries the our
very essence, our soul, we too change like that butterfly
did that caterpillar. And when we emerge on the other

(31:56):
side from where we are going to start the next
chapter of our existence, this is where we are now
changed from this person who died on this side has
transformed and brought across to the other side by friends

(32:16):
and loved ones. And Linden, does that make sense to you?

Speaker 3 (32:22):
Oh, that is a beautiful analogy. And you know the
thing is is this life is just a drop in
the bucket. Life really doesn't start until you die and
you cross over. It's more of a rebirth than a death.
So you know, I totally totally agree with that. And
you know, there are so many things as a nurse

(32:42):
that I've been able to be part of that I'm
so grateful for. I'm seeing people with Alzheimer's having those
lucid moments right before death, hearing loved ones talk about
babies that aren't being born, and also you know, people
talking about their loved ones come in and actually having
some humorous examples as well of things. But all of

(33:05):
them have had that consistency of seeing loved ones and
angels coming in to collect them. And some of them
that have been close to death have even seen other
people's angels and loved ones come in and commented on that.
And I had a lady with Alzheimer's that had not
spoken for three years. I had remembered her, And if

(33:26):
you'd like me to share the story, I would love to.

Speaker 4 (33:28):
I what please.

Speaker 3 (33:30):
I would like to say first that a person with Alzheimer's,
their soul is intact, so this mental thing that happens
with them is their soul is still perfect. So anyway,
I was at the nurses station. I had this lady
named Surely that was kind of strolling along in her wheelchair,
and she parked in front of the nurses' station, looking

(33:50):
down the hallway. And I remember her years before because
I had worked at this facility for almost ten years.
But I remembered her when she would come down as
a volunteer and pass out the mail and pass out
magazines to people, and she was very pleasant, but she
had been on the unit for several years and she
had not spoken one word in three years. So she's

(34:11):
sitting there in front of the nurse's station, and I
walked to the back to get my things in order
to start my medpass and all of a sudden, I
overhear somebody yelling out, take me home, take me home, please,
please take me home. And I immediately come out of
the nurses station looking to see who it is that's
yelling in the hallway. And I'm looking down each hallway

(34:31):
and I didn't see anybody, and they're Shirley sitting there
in front of the nurse's station, just sitting there. So
I assumed that either a CNA or another nurse had
stepped in and addressed the issue with the person that
was hollering out. So I turned around and I went
back into the nurses station, and just as I hit
that doorway going back into my area, I hear again,

(34:52):
take me home, Take me home, please, please take me home.
And I turned around and it was Shirley. Surely, I
was sitting in her wheelchair, and I walked over to
her and I said, Miss Shirley, I said, who are
you talking to? I mean, I was surprised to hear
her voice. I hadn't heard it in three years. And
I'm like, who are you talking to? And she's pointing

(35:12):
down the hallway where we had a client that was
actively passing. She was in. She was in the room
that was the first door on the right as she
went down the hallway, just past the nurses station, and
Shirley is pointing down the hallway and she says to me,
look at the angels. Aren't they beautiful? And I looked,
and of course I didn't see anything. But then I

(35:33):
looked again and I could see them bulging out of
the wall into the hallway of this woman's loved ones,
and angels that had come to collect them, and Shirley
could see them too, and she continued to call out
to them, take me home, Take me home, Please, please
take me home. So even in her situation, she could
see them and she it hit a part of her

(35:55):
soul in her memory that you know, she didn't forget
and she knew what they were so and that touched
my heart so much. And she was right. And that
lady passed away about an hour later, and Shirley herself
passed about three months later. And a lot of times
they'll start talking about seeing loved ones even as much
as a year in advance before they pass away. I mean,

(36:17):
I've had people talking about their parents and so many
other things. And I would love to share more stories.

Speaker 4 (36:23):
With you if you like, sure go, I'd like to
share something with you. First. My dad, God bless him.
He's ninety six years of age and my mom passed
away during COVID. So Dad went home for a while,
but he just couldn't handle the home by himself, and
he's a very stubborn irishman, and God bless him. My
brother did his very best. My dad lives in Montreal,

(36:46):
and my wife and I get down there as often
as we can. And it came to the point where
Dad kept on falling. He wouldn't use the walker, and
he had to go into a home. And the other
day I called him up, and you know, I must say,
since he's been in the home, he's made new friends,
and his mental attitude as well as his is his

(37:13):
jois villa, his love for life has come back. And
I said, so, what's new, Dad, I said, oh. He said, oh, nothing.
I had a good breakfast and when we were talking
and he said yeah, I was walking by the window
and I started talking to your mother and I said, okay, Dad,
what do you and mom talk about? He said, well,

(37:34):
we talk about what I could have done better in
my younger years, and your mother was telling me about
the things that she could have done in her in
her younger years. And I said, well, Dad, how often
do you talk to mom? And he says, well, she
comes around ten o'clock every night. And he said, you
believe me. I said, yeah, I do, Dad. He said, well,

(37:56):
thank you for believing me. Thank you. And the next
time I see your mother, I'll tell her that you're
doing fine. And I said, Dad, I know her. In fact,
she knows because she visits me as well. And I
believe that if people opened their heart and they they
weren't so skeptical, that they would be able to see

(38:18):
here and understand much more. And like you and I
both know that life is never ending.

Speaker 3 (38:29):
That is so true. That is to back into something
that parallels also what your father was mentioning I had.
And if you'd like, I'll share this.

Speaker 4 (38:38):
Story with please do, please do, Okay.

Speaker 3 (38:41):
I had a lady named Abigail. She had come to
the facility that had three levels of care, and I
was in the skilled unit, which was the last level
of care because because of her husband's health and they
had no children. They were both only children, so all
their relatives had were passed and so they only had
each other. And she fell and fractured her hip. And

(39:04):
when she was on the unit, I got to build
up a rapport with her and I went into her
room one day and she was upset and she said, Lynn,
she said, do you think I'm crazy? And I didn't.
I was teasing her because we had that report. And
I said to her, I said, define crazy, and I'm
kind of smiling at her. She says, no, I mean

(39:24):
crazy crazy, And I said, well, no, of course not.
Why would you say that? And she said, well, I
see my parents, she said, and I know that they
passed away X amount of years ago, but it makes
me happy and it comforts me when I get to
when they stop and to visit. She said. And now
they're going to start me on a medication because I'm
seeing they're saying that they're hallucinations, and I don't want

(39:48):
the medication to take away my ability to see my parents.
So fortunately she was going to be discharged that morning.
I had heard that report and I told her. I said,
first of all, I said, you're going to be discharged
home to your apartment tomorrow morning. And as your advocate,
you are of sound mind, you have the right to refuse.
I said, I'm not going to push the meds on

(40:09):
you if you don't want to take them. And I said,
and you have that right. So she was happy with that.
So the next day she goes home and lo and behold.
About six months later, she comes back on the unit,
and now her health she's got some terminal illness and
she's quickly declining from it, and she starts talking about,
in addition to her parents, she's seeing this young woman

(40:30):
with this little girl that comes to visit her in
her room, and it was so real to her that
she was actually sneaking cookies and cakes from the dining
room back to her room in order to give to
them when they would visit. And of course this was
creating a bug problem, so we had to stop her
from doing that. But there was one day in particular,
I was working midnights and I volunteered to work a

(40:51):
day shift for a friend of mine in the day
off Lyn.

Speaker 4 (40:54):
I hate to do this, but I have to take
my final break. We're going to have a bit of
a cliffhanger here and exonation. Linn Money is my special guest,
a very a very special segment on tonight's show, And
if you'd like to find out more about Lynn, please
visit our website, Lynnmoney dot com. And we'll be back

(41:14):
on the other side of this break as we wrap
up this hour here in the X Zone with yours Trillie,
Rob McConnell and my special guest, Linn Money. And you're
listening to us on the Talk Star Radio Network, xone
Broadcast Network, Mutual Broadcast Network, and on your hometown Radio
Classic twelve twenty C Faja streaming us at Classic twelfth
twenty dot ca a.

Speaker 2 (41:36):
Job back rider. It's a clean story of the nerds,
amount tennis clean.

Speaker 5 (41:56):
I see true so great.

Speaker 2 (42:00):
Red rosist, I see them blue.

Speaker 5 (42:07):
Foming you, and I think to myself, what a wonderful
I sees guy's so blue and drives white the right

(42:31):
pleasant day, the dog say good night, and I think
to myself, what a wonderful.

Speaker 4 (42:44):
And welcome back every one. This is a wonderful world.
And I'd like you, I'd like to thank you all
for joining us tonight here on the x zhone. My
guess this hour is lend Money. And we've been talking
about death dying, what it's like to have been a
nurse that worked with people in their near end times.
We've talked about Lind's work as a death duel and

(43:07):
Linn has been sharing some wonderful first hand accounts of
what has happened in her life. And she's the author
of a very exciting book. And Lynn, before we get
back to the cliffhanger, tell our listeners the name of
your book and where they can get it.

Speaker 3 (43:22):
So it's called The Colors of Heaven Beginnings Never End.
It's on Amazon. You can also get it on my website.
If you get it on my website, I can personalize
it for you and sign it, and I think it
might even be cheaper on my website. So however, if
you do live out of the country, please order it
through Amazon because the shipping is ridiculous otherwise, and I
believe that you can get the shipping sometimes for free

(43:43):
through Amazon. So outside of the USA, please order it
from Amazon unless you want to pay the extra money
and have me sign it. But just fair warning, I
think that.

Speaker 4 (43:53):
Your signature would be well worth it.

Speaker 3 (43:56):
Oh well, thank you, Lynn.

Speaker 4 (43:58):
Please continue with that cliff that we had to take
it before we went to the break.

Speaker 3 (44:03):
Okay, Well, as I had mentioned, I had volunteered to
work a day shift for a friend of mine, so
it wasn't my usual routine. But all of the patients
had come back and they'd gone it was lunchtime. They
had all come back from lunchtime. They were now settling
in their rooms, and I was pushing down the treatment
cart to go start my treatments, and I passed Abigail's

(44:24):
room on my left hand side, and she was sitting
in a recliner next to a picture window. Kind of
like those with an air condition underneath, kind of like
the hotels have it in the United States. And she's
leaning forward with this piece of yellow butterscotch wrapped candy,
and I'm thinking to myself, I'm walking past, and I
see this woman and this little girl standing in front

(44:47):
of her, and she was leaning forward offering the candy
to the little girl, and I thought to myself, I thought, oh, well,
how nice. You know, Abigil's got some visitors today. You know,
it's a you know, she doesn't have a lot of
people that come through. And then I took about three
steps forward and it hit me and I'm like, well,
wait a minute. Those people didn't sign in at the
nurses station. And of course we legally have to have

(45:10):
a head count of all the souls in the building
just in case there's an emergency, and the fire department
has to know how many people to get out. So
I stepped back and I knocked on her doorframe and
she invited me in. When I entered the room, she's
still sitting there with the candy extended, and there was
no one there. But I could see, as energy can't
be created or destroyed, I could see this waffling to

(45:32):
the air right next to me, that I knew the
spirits were still there. So Abigail says to me, she says,
I'd like you to meet my friends. She says, isn't
the little girl beautiful? And I said, yes she is.
And Abigail's eyes got big. She comes forward in her
chair and she says, can you see them? And I
said yes, And she said, don't tell anybody. They'll think

(45:57):
you're crazy and put you on medication. This woman, yeah,
So here, this woman was on all of this medication
now to make her stop seeing things, and she still
was seeing things because they weren't hallucinations. They were real
and she had the wherewithal to know about it, to
know the difference. So she was one of them that

(46:19):
I had this you know, that secret with it. She
knew I could see them and she could see them too,
So that was something that was very very interesting to me.

Speaker 4 (46:27):
But but Lena, I'm sorry for cutting you off, but
why would the medical doctors want to suppress her. She
wasn't hurting anyone. They don't, you know, Like there are
people who walk the streets who talk to themselves, and
I wonder if they're actually talking to themselves or is

(46:48):
there someone there that we cannot see.

Speaker 3 (46:53):
Well, I can tell you this. I did do a rotation.
I went back to further my degree later in life,
and I had to do a rotation through the psychiatric
wards for my psych class and walking through that facility,
I mean, there are so many people in there that
are diagnosed with schizophrenia and things like that that are impacts.

(47:15):
They are actually hearing angels and things speaking to them.
I had, a, for instance, that is kind of going
off off culture of this beautiful story about things that
I actually saw a girl that had attachments on her
and that was leaving claw marks on her for that matter,
And the medical facility claimed that she was self inflicting

(47:37):
those and she wasn't, you know. And and yeah, So
I mean a lot of people in those mental facilities
aren't mental mental, you know what I'm saying. They they
are actually gifted and they are seeing things that people
can't see. They they they're vibrating at a higher frequency

(47:58):
than other people, and they're able to see the things
that are paralleling us in the lifetime. And and the
loved ones that come through because they're of a higher dimension.

Speaker 4 (48:08):
Because you are so empathic. What is it like for
you or any other member of the medical community that
that deals like you do with people at the end
of their time when it comes to a child.

Speaker 3 (48:25):
Oh wow, you know I have not had to deal
with the time because I was I was doing geriatrics
and that type of end of life care. I cannot
I cannot imagine. I know that. You know. For instance,
my my younger sister was murdered and passed away, and
I remember seeing her with that as well. But you know,

(48:48):
the children, from what I understand, what I've been told
by other people that do take care of children, is
they talk about the rainbow bridge. They also talk about,
you know, seeing people come in as well, and they
even though they're upset during some of the transition, they
a peace comes over them finally where they're letting their
parents know that they're going to be okay and that

(49:08):
they're going to see them again as well. So and
again you're going to see them again. It's not this
is not the last time. It's kind of like they're
going on a long vacation and you're going to catch
up with them later on, or they move out of
the country, you know, And if you have the ability
to sit quietly and listen. You might be able to
communicate with them, as you know, through telepathy, and you'll

(49:32):
know that they're not really gone. So I hope that
that brings some comfort to people.

Speaker 4 (49:38):
How do you think that the new advances in science,
especially in quantum physics and quantum mechanics will be well,
do you think that these sciences will be used to
help better understand the end times?

Speaker 3 (49:52):
I hope so. I hope so, And I'm glad that
they're becoming more popular. I mean, there used to be
more of the small group, and then they were considered
the weirdos, you know what I'm saying. But now they're
expanding and more people are becoming aware of it, and
I think some of these new younger doctors that are
coming in are a little bit more open to it
than the hardcore, staunch doctors you know that have been

(50:15):
in practice for many, many years and or older, because
there's still that frame of mind that you know, those
things are oogie boogies. You know, those things aren't real,
and you know, I find I find myself even talking
to a person that has been diagnosed with terminal illness
or they're in that transition state, when you start talking
about things that have to do with death and dying

(50:37):
and those sorts of things, they're actually interested in talking
about it. You know, most people are like, oh, well,
don't talk about don't talk about your death, aunt aunt
so and so you know you're going to be fine.
But really they do want to talk about it. So
and they like sharing some of the beautiful things and
some of the things as I had mentioned, when they're
in that state of transition, because they can hear the

(50:58):
telepathy with the filters e facing of the people that
have crossed over, and they can also hear the human speaking.
There's a lot of times that if Uncle Bob, say,
for instances in the room, you can ask them where
the clock is and she and the transitioning patient can
answer for you because she can hear the teleptothy and

(51:20):
she can speak in physical terms. So and people miss
out on that. So you know a lot of times
that you can have that communication with them as well.
There's so many things that people miss because of their fear.
They've been taught to be afraid. Children when they're born
and they come in, they're not afraid. They talk about
seeing things too, usually up until five years old. The

(51:41):
condition it's the conditioning that they receive and they're nurturing
that they receive in their families that puts that light out,
so you know, and all of that reopens on the
flip side, so they learn to be afraid. And I
think that that's kind of where the medical field comes
from too. Plus you know, I mean having to do
things a different way for the medical field too. Like,

(52:04):
for instance, I'm sure that there's been a treatment for
cancer for many, many years, but they don't want people
to be healthy because they make more money if they're sick.
So you know, even that with the spectrum of the
dying end, if they can give them a pill and
treat it, you know, that makes big Pharma happier.

Speaker 4 (52:22):
It also makes the hospital an administrator happier because the
longer that the patient is in the hospital, the more
money the hospital is making. Absolutely, it's a horrible way
to look at it, but that's the fact. Lynn. I've
got about two and a half minutes left before I
must say so long for tonight. As as always, thank
you so much for joining us. Please come back soon.

(52:42):
But what are your final thoughts in the next sixty
to ninety seconds that you would like to share with
the x Oon nation.

Speaker 3 (52:50):
If your children come forward saying that they're seeing something,
believe them. Please don't tell them that they're not real
and that they just because you don't see it doesn't
mean that it's not there. So give you know, So
ask them, so what are you seeing? And engage with
them a little bit, and try not to show your
discomfort with it, because then they'll grow up unafraid, and

(53:12):
then on the flip side, death won't be so scary
for them. Death is not scary for me. I know
where I'm going. I've seen where everybody else goes, and
it's not about religion. People. I've seen Catholics, Jehovah's Witnesses,
Jewish people, Baptists, and I'm telling you the same thing happens.
The loved ones come in to collect them. So it's
not a religious thing, and we're going to cross over

(53:34):
and you're not.

Speaker 4 (53:36):
I have a friend of Montreal. His name was Gus Zackerman,
and he once told me, he said, you know, Rob,
we're not here for a long time. We're here for
a good time. And I've always remembered that. But just
talking about the you know children and not not you know,
making fun of them about if they're seeing something, or

(53:56):
get angry with them if they say that they seem
that they see or if they have an invisible friend.
Don't take a negative attitude towards them, because after all, you,
as a parent, also are guilty of this because you
teach them about a cow that jumps over a moon,

(54:17):
a lady that lives in a pumpkin. Let me see,
you've got a rabbit that hides eggs and everything at Easter,
you've got lefrakauns, and you've got Santa Claus. So why
should we be so negative with our children or anyone
at that time? Lynn, thank you so much for joining us.
A pleasure talking to you, and I look forward to

(54:38):
the next time you're back here with us in the
ex soon.

Speaker 3 (54:40):
Oh, I thank you so much for having me. It's
been my pleasure.

Speaker 4 (54:43):
Explanation, what a powerful discussion we've had with the Lenden Money.
Her insights as a death doula and nurse offer us
a deeper understanding of life, death and everything in between. Now,
I hope that you found her perspectives as enlightening as
I did. And remember for more information about her work
and access to her resources, her book, and much more,

(55:05):
visit www dot Lynmoney dot com. I'll be back on
the other side of the short break as our number
two of the X Zone, with yours truly, Rob McConnell
starts right now. Don't go away, We'll be right back.

Speaker 1 (55:21):
Real system.

Speaker 5 (55:24):
I see them blue following you, and I think to myself,
what a wonderful I see scys so blue and
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