Episode Transcript
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0:00
Music.
0:26
Oh, you've seen many points, my God. It's just so much.
0:30
It's a silly question. Is there anything you want to talk about today? It's just, I wouldn't even know where to start.
0:35
There's so much going on. Because I'm obviously talking to Germany.
0:38
I'm talking to my friends in Germany. I'm talking to my family in Germany.
0:42
So the Chancellor of Germany now declared this time no official pre-war era.
0:49
So it's now no potential war.
0:53
They call it a pre-war. How do they know that?
0:57
They're basically talking war all day. Right. And they're basically preparing everyone.
1:01
Usually, historically speaking, pre-war is something you retrospectively talk about.
1:07
You go pre-war era because the war hadn't happened yet. Yeah,
1:10
it's totally. But now they're like, oh yeah, when the war happens.
1:14
Yeah. If, right. Okay. Well, that's good. Yeah.
1:17
Now that obviously one of the Biden admin staff is
1:22
deciding to put Ukraine into the the nato that's obviously
1:25
okay because it's the thing that we know is the
1:28
primary reason why putin is at the
1:31
start like the war right is because of the nato thing and so they're like
1:34
yeah let's do that everything is just stirring up
1:36
yeah and then on top of it obviously anyone who wants to listen to the last
1:41
brett weinstein podcast is john ryan about this famous pathologist yeah about
1:46
the just when you think you know about what the vaccines are doing in terms
1:50
of damage listen to that podcast which came out last week,
1:54
which is the end of, yeah, just beginning of April.
1:58
So, yeah, then you just, boom, there's a new awakening.
2:02
The patterns, they develop because now they've got three years of observation.
2:07
And they can see now that there's a foreign protein introduced into the body
2:14
of those who receive the vaccines. And those develop into patterns. And now you've got new proteins in the body. and so.
2:22
Proteins, as they're outlined in the podcast so well, is when you have an injury,
2:27
the body immediately repairs the damage and uses the proteins derived from the body.
2:33
And then you have a scar and then eventually it's disappeared.
2:36
But now you've got proteins in the body that actually will develop something new.
2:42
And obviously there he
2:46
he talked about that there are all kind of toxic
2:49
dna traces because when they did this vaccine they
2:52
rushed it so heavily and then they took
2:55
obviously from animals and things like that and then they cut the sequences
2:59
short in order to make things fit yeah it's just like incredible however obviously
3:05
from my perspective from a china's medicine perspective I knew all along that
3:09
it's targeting the jing, the kidney. Yeah.
3:13
And that's what DNA refers to from a Chinese medicine perspective.
3:20
It's a jing. And it's an information that is partially cosmic and partially
3:26
material from the body derived. So we call it the prenatal jing, the postnatal jing.
3:32
So that's all affiliated with the information that is actually from the cosmic source,
3:38
God source or whatever you want to call it, that is actually instrumental for
3:43
actually creating the body in the first place because no one really knows exactly what's going on here.
3:48
As Rupert Sheldrake in the famous development of the morphogenetic field idea
3:54
has postulated that the protein that are produced in the cells of the hand are the same as in the toe,
4:04
but it's not a toe that's growing on your hand.
4:09
No, that's right. And so he postulated that there's a field around it and the
4:13
protein that are developed are actually put into a field.
4:16
It's like you're blowing up a balloon, and whatever happens within that balloon,
4:20
obviously, will be placed in conjunction with the constraint of the balloon.
4:25
That's like the field. So you can't, whatever is within the balloon can't be
4:29
outside the balloon, yeah? And so the morphogenetic field idea is that there's an energy field,
4:35
which is like the balloon, and then all the biological processes within the
4:40
balloon, actually then what they produce in terms of proteins in order to create something will be put.
4:46
Within that balloon so you have the shape already created
4:49
so so but now
4:52
everything is just really in an uproar because
4:55
there are new new proteins now
4:58
entering the body that no one really knows what to do about it yet yeah and
5:02
this too which is just this it's like this because i was in the same podcast
5:06
and it was i didn't get to this point yet because i was already blown away i
5:09
don't want to pull over because i was trying to understand what they're talking about that it's it's not Not only was this introducing this foreign substance,
5:16
this stuff, and this hell-bent directive to keep developing this platform,
5:21
even now it is the safety signals have been triggered since day one in 2020. But that there's like.
5:28
Diet and lifestyle and those other aspects already were almost
5:31
weakening our body to begin with
5:34
so they're already and the thing they mentioned that
5:36
i kind of was quite surprised and when you talk
5:39
about this too is d3 what d3 actually is and you also
5:42
refer to it as vitamin where it's not actually a vitamin it's a
5:44
pre-hormone pre-hormone i didn't i've never heard this before this is
5:47
i mean i've been taking d3 for years now and this is the first time i've heard
5:50
that and also that one of the ways ways
5:53
to disable that is to eat high fructose corn
5:56
syrup and shitty food yes and like 80 of the
5:59
food in america is full of this stuff so like it's it's
6:03
just you know it's so hard not to
6:05
see some intention there or just it's it's a series of
6:08
unfortunate events or follies that it'd
6:11
be so hard to see exactly now it's it's it's amazing
6:15
that from every angle it was having someone who's
6:18
going into this week already who are eating foods that that disable this
6:21
this this basically hormone pre-hormone then there's the injecting of some other
6:27
substance so we don't know what it does on the outside and into the body and
6:32
then all the other crazy practices of wearing masks and other things and and
6:35
it just seems like this from every point of view there's nothing that wasn't done.
6:40
Poorly or wrong and then it's so very hard to see
6:43
it as an accident and i struggle i'm struggling quite
6:45
a lot with that it's quite i'm kind of speechless i wouldn't think i would be
6:48
but i don't sound naive about it but everyone a lot of people left the conclusions
6:52
early on that you know this is a bioweapon this is not intentional and this
6:55
and that and even through everything it was so hard to believe that that was
6:59
done on purpose it was like well and as he pointed out in that interview he
7:03
said that 99% of doctors aren't immunologists they don't understand.
7:07
Immunology in the immune system which is also like i get it
7:11
but also it's shocking to hear that where you go to a doctor
7:14
and they're a specialist in a certain field but they don't understand how the immune system works
7:17
or they have an individual speciality or
7:20
a place they focus on or they look at a certain aspect oh
7:23
it must be your one this one area here and isolate we talk a lot about what
7:27
happens when you isolate things you isolate a diet or isolate a certain aspect
7:30
or isolate that and you don't understand the whole and if we don't understand
7:33
how to fix it or what's going wrong so there's this ignorance or just a lack
7:39
of skill understanding of how that whole system works works,
7:41
and then this all rolls out and then they're telling us that this is the one,
7:45
one step solution to everything. So it just, yeah, I'm, I'm struggling with formulating in the words on what
7:51
I think about that, but it's. Yeah. We are. Yeah. Well, yeah, it's, it's, it's pre-war talks.
7:58
Yes. Well, pre-war. It's war. So when the German chancellor said we are pre-war era, I, I nearly texted him
8:05
and said, hey, you got it wrong. We are fully in the war. Right. Right.
8:12
It's the aspects of the physical world
8:15
is colliding left right and center yes and there's
8:18
no it's molecules going crazy yeah yeah
8:21
and and and hitting each other and causing all
8:24
kind of like free radicals and all kind of other spin-offs and so it just and
8:31
therefore creating new vibration new frequencies and then you're trying to make
8:34
sense of it and and it doesn't add up anymore no well it's like putting everything
8:38
in a cocktail shaker and then just it's someone's...
8:41
Yeah, just like... Kind of gentle, but I think it's getting like...
8:44
It's like the good old days when you do the party, you know,
8:46
like someone has got an idea to do something, you know, after you've smoked
8:50
and copped a bunch of pot and drinking a little bit of tequila. Right.
8:55
And then you're just going to put everything into a pot to see what happens. Right, yeah.
8:58
You know, you're going to... Okay, is this something that... Yeah, yeah, that's what we did. Yeah, that's what I was... I didn't go to these kind of parties.
9:05
Back in the day. So you put... Maybe you had the good old days.
9:08
Yeah, yeah, put whatever you thought, you put in kidney beans, oats.
9:11
Yeah, it sounds like a, what do you call that, stews where you just put everything.
9:14
Yeah, yeah, put everything in there and see what happens, you know.
9:16
Put something green in there, what you found in the floor.
9:19
Could be grass, could be weed, yeah. And just, yeah, and put it all together.
9:23
And then it turns into something that looks like a mixture.
9:26
And then you heat it up so it looks official. Yeah. And then you put it in the bowl and eat it.
9:30
But in the day, you know, you explore all kind of stuff to see what happens.
9:34
And I think that's what we're experiencing now. Now, it's just like,
9:37
it's almost like what we, back in the day, did the crazy drug escapade.
9:45
And in order to explore the madness of reality, now we actually see without drugs outside.
9:53
Looks about the same. Yeah. Yeah. And then at the same time,
9:57
a few days ago, Germany finally made 50 grams of marijuana and hashish legal.
10:02
Legal. They legalized marijuana. around it. They realized, so you're not allowed
10:06
to have 50 grams every day.
10:12
And they did parties in the parliament and all the MPs were standing outside
10:17
and people outside were smoking joints and it was televised all over the country.
10:22
It was for a two-day party. So, whole Germany was just completely going up on smoke. Yeah.
10:30
And is that, what do you think that's, is that because like,
10:32
like, fuck it, why not do that? What do you think the- Everything has gone so crazy, so why not legalize this?
10:38
Right, just add that in. Why not do that? Yeah.
10:40
Or maybe just trying to like- You can't save it anyway. It's too late.
10:46
Maybe it's trying to get everyone to chill out a little bit. Chill everyone out.
10:49
Well, it's like the whole oxygen masks in planes. And supposedly it's like,
10:53
it doesn't matter. It's just to make you a bit high.
10:56
So if you're going down, or so it has to make it up anyway. Anyway,
10:59
yeah, like something to do with you losing oxygen.
11:01
Dirty oxygen on the legal side. It's like just try and chill for a bit before the plane crashes.
11:05
Chill, Scott. It's like it's for your own safety. It's like,
11:08
no, no, it's just like stop screaming while the, you know.
11:11
Yeah. Yeah, it's so, it seems to me like when I heard that, that marijuana is
11:16
legalizing, that Germany has not legalized, 25 you can carry with you in the
11:21
day in the streets and 50 grams at home.
11:24
That's a lot. That's a lot. Yeah. What is that for? Like how many joints is
11:28
that? Back in the day, when we started, we got done with three grams.
11:32
Three grams? Oh, yeah. A good friend of mine got thrown into jail just for two
11:36
grams. Okay. And this is- Yeah, he had six months jail.
11:38
Right. So for me, as an ex-SIPI and just really exploring the psychedelics of
11:43
the world in Germany, when he was so restricted with the laws,
11:46
that was like unheard of. If someone would have said, you will see a day where there will be 50 grams legal. Like 25 times.
11:53
That's two ounces. That's almost two ounces. So you can actually carry an ounce
11:58
and go to the police station, roll it up, and say, how are you going,
12:02
mate? Oh, they'll probably join in, apparently, by the sounds of it. We've got nothing to do anyway. It's all right. But the fact is that most of
12:10
the MPs actually joined in.
12:13
So just like- This doesn't seem very German to me, but I don't know.
12:16
Maybe I don't know much about Germany. Yeah, that's why I'm sort of surprised.
12:20
Well, everything is just like another one of those factors where it sort of
12:25
scratched my head and thing. That doesn't seem to make any sense. It seems like nonsense.
12:28
No sense is this defense. Yeah. There's got so many problems going on and so many challenges and they
12:34
spend like years legalizing, which is a good idea anyway, because you got it. It's bullshit.
12:39
It is crazy. The amount of like this, this war on drugs. Yeah. It's just done your own.
12:43
I've never seen any good from that, you know, because if you want to smoke,
12:47
you smoke, you know, I never bothered about the law, you know,
12:51
back in the day, I made it happen.
12:54
And you know i smuggle it into jails and
12:57
things like that because my friends didn't have it in jail so i made
12:59
sure they're gonna have some good stuff and you know so i was fully aware that
13:04
this is not an accepted behavior pattern in japan to to smuggle me into the
13:10
jail but that's what you do because you just forget the law and you transcend
13:15
the law so people understand that there's.
13:19
You really are motivated from within, yeah? Yeah. And then you always make it happen.
13:25
Like smuggling is like an incredible skill because you really have to go into your inner world.
13:31
And then when you pass the customs or the police officers or whatever,
13:34
you have to be really in a state. Yeah, like a yogi practice. Yeah, full on.
13:39
You're in a full on, some sort of ninja state, yeah?
13:42
Yeah. And so the internal path became very evident during those practices,
13:48
which later was a benefit to me. When I got into Chinese medicine, I had to do the pulse diagnostics and learning
13:54
all kinds of other skills that needed to transcend the references of the external.
13:59
I had to go and rely on what is from within.
14:02
Then actually those practices actually have some sort of contributing factor
14:05
in order to master this. I found it actually worked good in that regard. Yeah.
14:10
So, but like when I was a hippie and I was an outcast and I was roaming the streets and having,
14:19
you know, fighting cops in demonstrations and we were the mad people and we
14:24
were often in the newspapers and we were looked at the mad people. Yeah.
14:30
Like, I'm just so organized in my life with every day.
14:34
I look at them and say, I was actually never mad.
14:38
You guys are mad. Right, yeah. Well, I always wonder that, like,
14:41
what is crazy you mean? Yeah, yeah. You look back and you go, that was a crazy talk, a crazy behavior.
14:46
And you go, oh, that was actually true. Just because I smoked some pot, I was mad. Just because I had my VW van covered
14:53
in 50 colors, it was considered mad. And now what you see, what the external world is doing, that's beyond.
14:59
Oh and encouraging that and then saying you're mad if you
15:01
don't accept it or you go against it you're you're weird or
15:05
you're you know too yeah formal or old-fashioned or
15:08
whatever you know yeah so we have to actually define the word mad
15:11
well yeah that's probably a bit time to to madness to
15:14
make yeah yeah to find a new definition but even like because it's like this
15:17
psychosis right but even psychosis is is a different it's
15:20
a little related right but that's a more of a pathological description
15:24
which is so broad though if you're psychotic or psychotic
15:26
behavior everyone knows what that means more or less but then
15:30
i bet a lot of experience with sort of
15:32
mental illness in my family and sort of bipolarity and
15:36
schizoaffective and those those kind of things but a lot of those i know a lot
15:39
of creative people musicians who were diagnosed bipolar like quite common you
15:43
know einstein all these really brilliant people and that's like you know they're
15:47
crazy or can't regulate you know it's it's i'm sure there's a whole discussion
15:51
there obviously on chinese Chinese medicine and what that actually is.
15:53
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Because you can't have an incredible gift without the corresponding liability.
16:00
Yeah. It's yin and yang. Yeah. So if you are born with a very specific gift,
16:05
there's also somewhere an incredible weakness. Yeah. Liability. Yeah, yeah.
16:11
And so it's no much point focusing on strengthening your gift.
16:14
You've got to focus on your weakness. Yeah. Yeah. This is something you don't ever hear. You never hear this in,
16:20
I don't know, motivational. Oh, maybe you do.
16:23
I don't know much about motivational culture or Western culture or,
16:25
you know, it's quite often it is.
16:28
More maybe focus on building up strengths than
16:32
using the weakness as a starting point i think
16:34
yeah it seems like avoiding weakness avoiding what's weak or
16:37
being safe or being careful don't damage that and focusing on
16:40
strengths is more common maybe yeah but what i've you know
16:43
learned from from you in the past few years especially is
16:46
that you know your weakness is your strength like i started
16:49
out with asthma and other issues and a lot
16:53
of self-esteem issues and things and that was like a starting point without that
16:55
starting point there's nothing to work on there's nothing thing to step on because if you wake up
16:58
and you feel great or you're a happy person then there's no way to
17:02
you know what are you going to work on there's nothing to work on right so once
17:05
you have something to a challenge to work on or a problem i call
17:08
it problem like yeah from a chinese medicine perspective it's very
17:10
straightforward like the soul needs to
17:13
evolve so when we were born according to chinese
17:16
medicine there was within us the drive to
17:19
expand and there was within it what the
17:22
idea idea that i can get
17:25
a grip of myself as long as i keep evolving there so
17:28
the need to evolve is directly affiliated with actually
17:31
understanding the self so then i've got different different ways of naming it
17:36
which is why the word self in chinese medicine is not isolated by itself even
17:41
possible to be used it's a shen jing jin cheng is like that means there's the
17:46
awareness of the self in conjunction with the jing, which is the kidney.
17:49
And the kidney is the fundamental force for development.
17:54
So the self actually can only exist if it develops itself.
17:58
The self has to develop itself. Yes, yes.
18:01
So as soon as you don't develop yourself, then you actually don't experience
18:06
yourself as self, and now it goes into a non-self.
18:12
That sounds a bit selfish, yeah. Right, we'll say that again. All right, so if you don't develop the self,
18:21
then you don't have the support from the gene from the kidney, the water.
18:24
So now the self is by itself, and that can't exist by itself.
18:28
So it actually needs the perception of evolving itself.
18:33
So this is where we are almost the happiest if we tackle a challenge.
18:39
Yes. Yeah? Yeah. And then after the challenge, so what? Yeah, yeah.
18:43
It says there's a little bit of great moment. Yeah, no, it's fine.
18:46
But it's kind of, I experience that more as time goes on that I finish something
18:51
and it's just kind of, I don't, you know, dwell on it or rest on it.
18:55
It's a bit like, okay, well, okay. That's why we have so much, so much, so much madness now. Right.
19:01
Because the self is without the self.
19:05
That sounds crazy. Because the self is without the G.
19:10
Yeah. It's without the development. Because like from a Chinese medicine perspective,
19:15
it all comes down to the one fact. I need to always be aware every moment what I do now, how does it impact on
19:23
the development of my soul? Right. Because the only thing we know for sure is death.
19:30
That's the only thing. like when someone is not really sure what's going on
19:35
i said oh look it's very simple you will die yep it's not a comforting thing
19:39
to say maybe well that's true though, in a world where it's very hard it brings you back to reality yeah it's very
19:45
hard to get to the truth we know at least at least from the outside like we
19:48
our experience of death is often usually someone else dying yeah that person
19:52
is no longer here but when we die it's probably quite different experience yeah
19:56
right like you know maybe it's not something you even think about you're like
19:58
oh cool that's done but i don't know maybe it's not you know it's like the end of a,
20:03
I don't think it would be like that. Oh, okay.
20:05
It's done. All good. Shit. I didn't expect it.
20:10
I've seen it will be that slight. Okay. That waking up from a dream.
20:15
Okay. That suddenly, woo. And then we just, shit. Oh, you go, I didn't do this. I didn't do that.
20:20
When you wake up from a dream, you're like, well, that was really weird. What is that about?
20:23
What are those people doing there? What's it about? Yeah. But the fact is they'll be moving towards it.
20:28
Yeah. And therefore, it is of importance to always look, everything we do,
20:34
we need to look into how does it actually impact on my soul?
20:38
So without it actually connecting to the soul in terms of where is it connected
20:43
to the development of the soul, it's actually moving away from being yourself and into no self.
20:50
And we see a lot of what we have seen over the last three decades is that move
20:55
towards becoming successful, having lots of material gains.
21:01
I mean, there's more people now having money than ever before.
21:04
There's people having more goods than ever before. I mean, look at what we have. It's incredible.
21:08
We couldn't imagine that 30 years ago.
21:11
So obviously that takes over. And, but then whatever we gain and whatever we,
21:19
we work on in that regard, you know, how does it actually has,
21:23
how does it benefit the soul? Yeah.
21:26
Yeah, when you get trapped, like I've seen so many of my clients are so trapped
21:29
in it because with the mortgages, you know, with the houses.
21:33
So 30 years ago, 20 years ago, they bought a house and obviously the values
21:37
went up. Oh, we're going to get a different house.
21:41
And then bang, and suddenly it's got four, five houses.
21:44
And then the interest rate went up and then the stress factor began.
21:49
And then, boom, this financial overcommitment started. And now you have no idea to think about this all.
21:55
No. So if someone comes up and says, look, what you're doing is the most important thing is to look at that.
22:01
How does it impact yourself? They're not going to tell you to find out.
22:04
Yeah. They can't think that. Yeah. It's just like irritating.
22:07
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, it's like there's the things that seemingly bring you happiness,
22:10
like the car or whatever, you know, but that I can not see that being like soul nourishing.
22:19
There's those levels of like happiness or it's great or it's a sense of accomplishment.
22:23
I don't know, because I never really craved new things or nice things.
22:26
I moved so much that material goods at a young age were almost irrelevant.
22:30
Like, you get something, and then a year later, we move and sell it all at a
22:34
garage sale and move to the next place and go to someone else's garage sale and buy other stuff.
22:37
And then it became, so I was very, like, was owning things.
22:42
And even being in the same space for very long just meant nothing.
22:46
Thing so i need people who like you know parents live in the
22:48
same house since they were a kid they have their bedroom still from when they're you know
22:51
their same bed and the posters on the wall from when they were a teenager and i
22:54
have no concept of that so therefore my attachment to owning objects
22:58
or spending a lot of money on external things other than the technology i needed
23:02
to do my job having more than i needed like another extra car i know people
23:07
you know collect motorbikes or collect things but if i couldn't use it i wouldn't
23:11
see a point in owning it because it's going to sit there it's like another thing
23:13
to have so i was never really
23:16
be happy if i get that that new car differently like i'll probably enjoy it
23:20
but also like i could see a different priority or different like i'm not some
23:23
reason just never really appealed to me which is considering i'm an industrial
23:26
design which is about making stuff it's like new stuff and i know a lot of designers
23:29
who like they love stuff so it's like i'll get the new kettle new this or new
23:33
that or upgrade that because it's beautiful. That never appealed to me because it was a accumulation. To me,
23:38
there's two different things. Yeah, there's two different things. Like, for example, if I look at an engineer
23:43
at Ferrari, I believe many of them are passionate about the engine,
23:49
the acceleration, the shape, the form.
23:53
So they, in many ways, are impacting on their soul because they actually are
23:58
motivated from within in order to explore that.
24:01
And there will be a buyer who's motivated from within to actually explore that,
24:08
what they have designed. And there's a direct communication between the two.
24:13
But what happens to those who buy the Ferrari for status? Which is, yeah.
24:18
Yeah. In that moment, it's not impacting on the soul anymore.
24:21
It's impacting on the neighbor. So it's impacted. So in that moment, you're creating a no self.
24:27
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, because it's not affiliated with the kidney gene,
24:31
which is affiliated with the soul develop itself. So the soul will not develop how the neighbor perceives you.
24:38
Yeah. Well, there's people who, Ferrari doesn't even need to announce the new
24:41
model, they're already on the list. So they'll go to this few hundred people, a thousand people in the world and
24:47
say, there's a new Ferrari, are you on the list? Yeah. Put me on the list.
24:49
They don't even know what it is or what it looks like, how much it is. They're just on there.
24:52
It's almost like a guarantee that they'll get it. Some there's one thing they you can buy that you can't
24:57
even own it ferrari keeps it so you
25:00
buy a ferrari from them and they go no you're not allowed to drive we'll bring
25:03
it to you once a year and you can drive it and then we'll take it back because
25:08
they can't because like it's also a status thing oh i'm one of 10 people that
25:12
owns this fx is this race version fx so it's yeah it's more like you said and
25:16
it's the person next to you going they have their 100th ferrari what's going
25:19
on you know And that's a big knock-on effect. And I've thought about this a lot lately. It's like someone,
25:24
a friend of mine who did a podcast recently, and she has a lot of stuff around
25:27
nasal health and she listens to the podcast. So she knows who she is, Alex.
25:31
And I was thinking sort of like in sharing something you're interested in or
25:36
passionate about while seemingly very small.
25:39
A, is an indication to people that you can follow through with things that you're
25:43
passionate about that aren't about, they're about more than just how they appear externally.
25:47
So you want to pursue something that's real and legitimate.
25:50
It's an indication that you can also inspire people to do the same thing.
25:53
So you can inspire people by your effort and your path and
25:56
what you are passionate about and creative about versus the end
25:59
goal where you've become so successful that you've got got all this money and
26:02
wealth in external objects so by sharing the
26:06
success but not the success in the look how
26:09
many friars i've got or how many houses i own but the success of
26:13
being yourself and being passionate about what you do and continuing that
26:16
through the challenges to me is a there's a high value i
26:19
find more value from that than the person who's sitting up
26:22
high and achieve these things and accumulating and
26:25
doing things because of the status of the brand or what what it looks like not doing
26:28
because they love it and it's you can tell when you
26:31
talk to someone who loves what they do because quite often they
26:34
they think about the financial benefits secondary or the challenges
26:37
or whatever it doesn't seem like work it's something that they're pursuing out
26:40
of love and and also because they want to help someone like i see a lot of people
26:43
like yourself and people who are in the health field you're not doing that because
26:46
it's like you're gonna like it's a financial incentive it's like you get paid
26:50
for you do but the first goal is to to do what your soul wants to do. It comes from within.
26:55
It comes from within. It's not a, oh, I saw that, that you can be an influencer
27:00
in 10 minutes and make $50,000 per post, whatever that shit. People just imitate.
27:05
They start somewhere and they work backwards from that. Yeah,
27:07
it's the wrong motive because you actually lose your inspiration after a while
27:11
because it's such a crazy journey. Absolutely. Yeah. And so it's just because it's not an rewarding journey.
27:20
The reward needs to come from within. It needs to be, all right,
27:24
what I just did now is impacting on my soul.
27:27
Yeah. Like if I do a post, I look at it, yeah, it impacts on my soul because
27:31
I actually, it reflects what I need to explore, what I need to develop,
27:35
and I need to develop the strategies how to express it in a way that it fits
27:40
in with the bigger scheme. Yeah. Yeah.
27:44
That means I have to learn all kind of other little tricks in order to actually manifest that.
27:49
So it all comes, so that means it all connected to this aspect of that mysterious
27:55
jing that's in the kidney. That is actually this developmental aspect.
28:00
And that is, in fact, once again, connected to the universe.
28:04
So that means if we are connected to this jing, we actually got a direct line to the source, to God.
28:13
And then when we develop the soul, our spirit, it's actually directly connected.
28:20
We've got a direct line to the White House.
28:25
I don't know if I want to line with that. I don't want to talk to that. We call it the Lighthouse.
28:29
Yeah, Lighthouse is better and not the White House. So we've got a direct line
28:32
to the origin, to whatever the source is.
28:36
Is and that source then that information comes from
28:39
us and influences us in our behavior
28:42
towards improving the self yeah
28:45
yeah so the self get then get a grip of
28:48
itself by the exploration of its need to evolve certain thing about itself which
28:55
comes directly from directly from source because the jing is mysterious substance
29:00
that is is a god force yeah yeah so it's a god molecule if you want want to call it.
29:06
And there's an interesting thing that's like, I've been reading today in Africa,
29:11
they're discovering a new drug that's now pestering the streets.
29:16
It's called KUSHO. K-U-S-H-O. It's a terrible drug, apparently.
29:21
But it's primarily derived from skeletal bone, human skeletal bone.
29:26
Okay. That's not very nice. Yeah. But what I immediately thought about it, oh yeah, they're tapping into
29:31
the gene because gene gets stored to a certain degree in the bones.
29:35
And so for some- Marrow particularly? Like in the marrow? Yeah, in the marrow, yeah.
29:41
So the bus they're getting from that drug is actually connected somehow to the jing.
29:48
So they're tapping into source energy through this because our jing is,
29:56
the source energy is accessible via our bone marrow balance.
30:01
Balance, which is why when we do Tai Chi, how much incredible impact do we have on the balance?
30:07
Yeah. I mean, every Tai Chi practitioners gets bone like steel.
30:10
Yeah. Yeah? Yeah. It's just the hardening. I remember that when I had that x-ray 10 years ago, because I had this excruciating
30:17
knee pain and the suggested surgery and I had an x-ray.
30:22
And when I looked at that x-ray, the surgeon said, because I was 55,
30:27
and he looked at me, I can't believe this is the bond density that you have.
30:34
It's this, that's like someone like 30. Yeah. And that was like the evidence
30:39
of, of cheat practice, you know, how the cheat practice just strengthen the bone. Yeah.
30:44
And how many times have I, you know, slipped and with my modern bike and that
30:49
all kind of shit, you know, falling, falling off cliffs and things like that.
30:53
And I thought, oh, this is going to be a broken bone.
30:56
No worries. Yeah. And it got up and bam, back on again. Yeah. Keep going.
31:01
Yep. But so I've seen how through these tea practices, how the bones are impacted
31:09
on in terms of making them seriously strong and solid.
31:14
And then at the same time, when there is an impact, they become instant yin or liquid.
31:21
Yeah. Well, it's funny because I think when you're a kid, the same thing, right?
31:25
You, you know, almost on purpose have, you know, you crash your bike or you
31:28
fall out of a tree and quite often it's like you're rubber. In that moment,
31:32
yes, yes, and then bang, back again, and then it gets a steal.
31:35
You got shit to do. You keep playing. Yeah. Yeah. So you've got water, steal, water, steal, water, steal.
31:41
And that's obviously what Qi practices do.
31:45
And Qi practices actually then this constant contraction of,
31:50
and then electric impulse,
31:52
and they have on the bounce, which has been through lab tests,
31:56
been proven that Qi practices is create a high electric current around bonds.
32:04
Especially the FEMA. Yeah. So that actually makes you access source energy.
32:10
Yeah. Well, I can see that. I've seen evidence of that. I've felt a bit of that
32:14
and I've seen it from, you know, from Yen Jin, Chen Yen Jin in terms of the,
32:17
what he does. There's no way, it doesn't seem possible.
32:21
So even every year I see him, there's something more and more.
32:24
It's actually difficult now to see his body doing anything other than just being very standing there.
32:29
And then the force and energy you can exert is like, I call,
32:32
it's like planetary now. Like it's gravitational. like it's some bizarre feeling when he put he puts
32:37
sort of a hand on you you feel like, someone's put the weight of the earth on you and the more you try and resist
32:42
the worse it gets and you've been driven like into the ground or something with
32:46
him seemingly on the outside doing absolutely nothing yeah so the what was happening
32:50
there is there's yeah it feels like this density, it's it's more than just his physical stature of his body doing it and the fluid
32:57
becoming solid makes tons of sense in martial arts too if you are very very
33:01
rigid and you're trying for a strike or kick or whatever it is,
33:04
then more likely you're going to get hurt or miss your target or.
33:08
Not achieve what you want to achieve. But if you're fluid and then at the last second it becomes a different material.
33:13
If it's water, it becomes steel. It's, you know, Bruce Lee, if water can flow or it can crash.
33:18
So you water your fluid until the last moment and then it becomes a weapon or dangerous that it's,
33:23
and then back to the state changing, sort of alchemical or,
33:27
there are new modern technologies that do this, simulate this,
33:30
where they they can change their structure based on like an electrical charge
33:34
so it goes soft and solid again but the fact that the body can do that is fascinating
33:39
that you can actually like you said,
33:42
improve that over time not get worse we're told like if you don't take your
33:45
calcium or you drink milk or do this or do that you're deteriorating basically
33:48
you're seizing up or you're atrophying or the less you use something and strengthen
33:53
it the more weaker it becomes which is yeah but,
33:56
People might read that and go, oh, I've got to drink more milk and go to the
33:58
gym more often, but that's not really necessarily the- Yeah, yeah.
34:01
I mean, that's why I'm always proposed strength training. I'm big on strength training.
34:07
But what people don't see is that I spend 80% of my training on the flow,
34:13
internal Qi practice, and then the actual strength training is only 20% of my practice.
34:19
But there's so much impact in that moment that goes through it that it strengthens
34:27
the bones and muscles on a level that otherwise two-hour training would do.
34:31
But though I do the two-hour training, or over two hours actually,
34:36
more than two hours, more than three hours, but that's me. Yeah.
34:40
And that's my dedication. And if I don't do it, I live my life as a no-self.
34:47
Because it's driven from me. I need to do it.
34:50
I need to research it. But the strength training is crucial.
34:57
I believe it's absolutely essential. But what I notice is that people purely only focus on strength training without
35:03
going through the inner part. That's what I'm always saying over and over. It's not a good idea either.
35:08
Because you need the inner development first.
35:14
And the Taoists are very clear about it. They say like external training without
35:19
internal training leads to depletion. That's not a good idea.
35:24
Yeah. Whereas the internal training is crucial in order to make the external
35:29
training of value. Yeah. So what happened then is what they say is when you do the external training,
35:37
forget about the external and do internal.
35:39
Yeah. Yeah. And so what happens now is, first of all, when you're doing the
35:44
internal training, you're becoming one with this source energy that is accessible via the bones.
35:53
And the more you're going in and relaxing into it, the more you're sinking in.
35:57
That means the yang and the yin doing its work it's supposed to be doing.
36:01
That means the more your awareness merges with the source energy,
36:06
and you can feel like you're becoming one with the body.
36:08
And now you're actually in a state of being fluid in yeah and then when I go
36:15
and use my my bar or my weights or my TRX I'm actually in the state of being
36:22
fluid within yeah and I'm letting the.
36:26
In our work, doing the external application.
36:30
So it looks like it's an external application, but it's actually internal.
36:34
But what's doing it is now you're taking the whole stress level on your bone
36:39
marrow, therefore activating source energy on a higher stimulus level,
36:43
and you're actually gaining more. So I believe that the strength training is like something that we developed
36:51
in the West and really have got good insight. and I think that the Chinese never
36:56
really looked into it as much. They more looked into the internal and I really believe that it's about East
37:02
and West coming together. And if you take the understanding, the knowledge of the Chinese in terms of
37:08
how they approach inner development and then connect it with what we understand
37:12
in the West from weight training and strengthening,
37:16
you combine that, I believe we take the whole understanding so far that has
37:21
been developed over a thousand years here to the next level. Yeah.
37:24
Yeah. And you can do that in two hour training what otherwise would just take 10 hours. Yeah. Yes.
37:31
Because not everyone has got the ability to train hours every day like an engine would. Yeah, no.
37:38
Not everyone's destined to be a Tajima. 12, 14 hours and he does other,
37:42
yeah, all sorts of different methods as well. So it's his own process.
37:46
Yeah, yeah. Which we don't have, we don't do when I have access to that.
37:49
It's his own. And like you said, study.
37:52
It's study. It's his job to do that for hours and not.
37:57
We live in that regard. We live in fascinating times because when I do my strength
38:03
training, I use primarily TIX, which is the total resistance trainer,
38:09
which was developed by the Navy SEALs. And the Navy SEALs are profound.
38:13
They're masters in terms of understanding conditionings. As I say,
38:17
I have four Navy SEALs control 2,000 Taliban. Yeah, no, that's about the ratio
38:24
of what tapping into source energy means.
38:28
Yeah. There's a Taliban, I'm mad people. Yeah. There's no connection to the source energy.
38:33
Yeah. It's just all, but it's like the random atoms, nucleus and molecules going off.
38:39
Yeah, that's why the four of them can, yeah, that's why they're organized.
38:43
Four navies. And like, I don't know what the, I don't know what the attrition
38:45
rate is, but per 100 people, 200 people that apply this, I mean,
38:49
what the number is, is crazy. But that start doing that, that make it, that's why you'd like,
38:54
by the time you get to the people who survived the training.
38:57
Yeah. Right? then you're not fucking around. It's unbelievable.
39:01
It's like the people who are in those sort of special forces units are,
39:05
it's astonishing what people can accomplish. Yeah, they have explored, they went into the depths of source energy because
39:12
otherwise they wouldn't have survived it.
39:14
Yeah, I didn't want to forget how that came, I mean, I don't know enough about
39:17
how it came about, the training method that they have and design of that and where that, you know.
39:22
You look at what was mixed, obviously they were mixing different styles together
39:25
or different understandings of, physiology but also the use of equipment and they're using a
39:31
lot of eastern principles they're using mindfulness they're using
39:33
the breathing they're using the water breathing and then also like to
39:37
be at your absolute best at the worst
39:40
possible moment yeah right that's the saying like you don't rise to the occasion
39:44
you fall yeah where do you tap into when you're your absolute best and you've
39:47
lost moment when you tap into it ones that they're worst and going chaotic you're
39:52
like the most calm yeah that's when you when you when your strength comes forward
39:56
yeah You know, when all the shit hits a fan, who, okay, now I feel myself.
40:00
Yeah. Well, it's interesting, right? Because you look, you think, and I was listening, I've listened to quite a few podcasts with Tim Kennedy,
40:05
who's not, not SEALs, he's Special Forces, I believe. Sniper.
40:08
Yeah. And I listened to like a six hour podcast with him. Because I'd heard
40:12
him in bits and pieces, but I hadn't actually heard his whole story before.
40:15
And you think like, there's in no way is he excited about it.
40:20
Like he said, the war is the worst thing ever. Like war is terrible.
40:24
Yeah. No, you look at on the outside and he has like, you know,
40:27
he has a gun and he has shooting schools and he also has like survival schools.
40:31
And that you might look at people and go, oh, he's just a gun.
40:33
He's a fanatic or whatever people, you know, he's right wing in that.
40:36
And you look at actually what his core principles are. And it's, it's not at all about that. It's like, he's doing what he's good at.
40:41
He's a, you know, his father was in law enforcement, his brother's in law enforcement.
40:45
I mean, he's raised it to protect people, you know, to look after people,
40:49
And as a protector and as someone who's got this goal, it's like,
40:51
that's where he's clearly his path and why he's become so good at it is like,
40:56
it's, it's, he's driven by more than just the external, what it looks like on the outside.
41:00
We're trying to be a hero or gung-ho things that we always get,
41:02
I think, compounded upon people in those sorts of situations and cops and military.
41:07
It's quite often, it's like, we're willing to be proud of those people,
41:09
like veterans, but then when the job's done, it's like, no one cares anymore.
41:12
You know, you know, there's, there's, there's a lot of disrespect for those
41:16
people who go through that. But a lot of them, especially in those situations
41:19
where they're so highly trained, it's beyond just wanting to have shoot or shoot or, you know, go to war.
41:25
So they don't even want that necessarily. But there's something else.
41:28
You see that, something else, that spirit, especially when you hear him talk about his experiences.
41:32
And now he's like going to education, starting schools, teaching kids.
41:36
Yeah. When he talks, you can sense he's stepping to source. Absolutely.
41:39
It's not like he saw something and wanted to imitate it. It's kind of part of his core.
41:45
He's truly himself exactly yeah there's no no self no that's why sorry great
41:51
now you hear him speak and you watch him follow his Instagram and stuff and
41:54
he's just being himself absolutely and he's also doing, he's able to do make the right choices and do the right thing and he's got this
42:01
whole program he's part of which is several allies which is when you know people
42:06
end up in war zones he goes and gets them out of these war zones American citizens
42:08
yeah when the Americans fled Afghanistan,
42:12
he just and they left all these people stranded there. Yeah,
42:16
well, they informed them. And he got in with a couple of his mates and then helped like 2,000 people. No, 12,000.
42:21
He coordinated a lot of groups of people. So not just him, but a lot of groups
42:25
of Save Our Allies and he coordinated the extraction of 12,000.
42:28
And the government didn't want him to do that. No, exactly.
42:31
And this is the thing too, this is like patriotism and they'll be the first
42:36
people to talk about how the government's let them down and the US is falling apart.
42:38
They're not blindly patriotic, but they are in the sense that that's what they
42:42
were trained to do and they want to help the people next to them, they want to do the right thing and help.
42:45
I just think it's a really fascinating topic because it'd be so easy to write
42:48
people off like this who are crazy or this or that or far right.
42:52
And I think when you hear these people talk. Especially on like a podcast or something, it's like anybody who's been cancelled
42:57
over the past few years, the opportunity to hear them talk, you know pretty
43:02
quickly if they're full of shit or not. Right? I mean, we met Peter McCulloch in person and there's no sense meeting
43:08
him. You instantly know this person is real. He's real.
43:12
He's connected. I felt, even just getting near him, it felt like,
43:15
oh, this is not a person who's just talking or he's not like, you know.
43:19
He's not a selfie-throwing, swaying influencer.
43:23
No. No, or saying it sounds good, or he's being paid to say it.
43:26
He became a hero because I believed in the cause. I didn't fight because I'm becoming a hero.
43:31
He didn't put the hero position in the first place. No. He acted on his drive from within.
43:38
And he did this. He knew what he was doing. How does it impact on my soul?
43:42
He questioned himself. If I follow this mandate, how does it impact on my soul?
43:48
What about if I oppose this mandate and help those unfortunate people?
43:51
Well, how would that impact on my soul? And he could sense in that moment that it's far better to impact positively
43:59
on your soul than you neglecting your soul. So he's one of those examples.
44:04
And then, obviously, the result of that is he tapped into himself,
44:08
and then the source energy moved through him.
44:11
And he became almost like a realized being, because when you met him,
44:16
you're just like, wow. It was pretty. I felt like I'm in the presence of some sort of master type.
44:20
I was surprised. I didn't expect it to get that sense.
44:22
And that's because he just, he didn't give in to the narrative. Yeah.
44:27
And he sacrificed his status. Yeah.
44:31
Yes. But in this one mood. He lost his income. By the time we saw him speaking
44:36
live, I mean, he was in debt. He lost all the money. Yeah. To choose a different path. Yeah. Yeah.
44:42
It's just like he lost all his status. Yeah. Yeah. So that's obviously what
44:46
really brings forward the meat in a person.
44:49
Yeah. and really to get connected to it.
44:53
So this is obviously, the interesting thing is that this jing that is responsible
44:59
to develop the self so that you are your true self rather than a no self.
45:04
And that jing, that is your power source, but it's also under the influence of fear.
45:11
So when fear is about, then it cuts you off from tapping into the source energy, into the jing.
45:19
And I think that's probably what they do with the Navy SEAL,
45:22
why they're so, the ones who get through this process and come out at the other
45:28
end have got this enormous sense of self. Yeah.
45:32
Because they actually were facing all those fears and had to dig into something
45:36
that in this chaotic circumstance had to be their best self.
45:41
And there was nothing else other than to dig deep.
45:44
Yeah. And when you dig deep, where do you go? You go into the kidney.
45:47
Yeah. Because in China's medicine, this gene is actually the darkness in yourself.
45:53
Not darkness in dark spirit.
45:56
In darkness, it's hidden. It's a mystery.
45:58
It's a mystery. So, because when you are faced with this beautiful situation,
46:04
what happens is life becomes a mystery because you don't know in that moment what you can rely on.
46:09
All trust just goes.
46:12
And I listened to my uncle and my father in the second war when they were full
46:18
on in this combat situation. Like my uncle, he was one of those crazy SS guys who would stick themselves
46:26
into holes and waiting for the Russian tanks to appear.
46:28
Yeah. And then he climbed up on the Russian tanks and put the grenades on.
46:32
Right. You know, this sort of stuff. Yeah, Texans. So he had to, yeah.
46:35
It's just like he said in that moment, it sounds all very good when the intent
46:40
is said, yeah, I'm going to blow those things up.
46:42
So you go there because usually the night before you drink lots and get charged
46:46
up and then you just go into the field and you just, because there's only a
46:50
few of them and in that moment, there's no one there you can rely on.
46:54
Yeah. Yeah. And then you see those tanks.
46:56
You hear the tanks before you see them.
46:59
That's a scary moment. So the fear that comes up in that moment,
47:02
because those army tanks, you can't see for a while. Yeah.
47:07
But the noise is full on. Yeah.
47:11
And because there's not only one. Right.
47:15
There's several. Yeah. Yeah. And so then obviously the fear comes in.
47:19
So obviously what happens in the moment is you have to dig very, very, very deep.
47:25
In order to actually trust,
47:28
Yeah, and that's source energy. Yeah, but then is training, right?
47:32
That's not just a, it's not like, oh, I'm just trying to be afraid,
47:35
a mental process. If you're trying to do it in the moment, it's not going to work.
47:37
Like, clearly it has to come from. But it requires a fear also.
47:41
To activate it. In order to get, yeah, it requires a fear. This is the interesting
47:45
thing. Yeah, what that means that. This is why the physical world is essential. The setup of the physical world
47:52
that has so much uncertainties is actually essential in order for us to tap
47:56
into the source energy in order to create ourself. Yeah.
48:00
Because you never know of the outcome. So if you opt out for security,
48:05
what happens is that at the moment you're actually cheating on your soul. Yeah.
48:09
Yes. Because you're actually not allowing to dig deep into source energy.
48:14
Yeah. Because instead you're giving into the security of the outer and then you feel safe.
48:19
So the fear factor is actually essential in order to dip in.
48:22
And my uncle, he said it a few times, In that moment when he just realized he
48:26
had to dig in, there was nothing else, he said there was always something coming
48:30
towards him. There was always his presence suddenly.
48:34
And so he never was a spiritual person, but he said the war made him spiritual.
48:38
Is that something you'd expect to hear? Yeah, yeah. So he said because there's
48:43
too many situations where he was faced now with that suddenly,
48:47
a non-ordinary experience in place.
48:50
Yeah. yeah um yeah nims die
48:53
perger nims perger who did the 14 peaks
48:56
reclined the 14 tallest peaks oh yeah yeah
48:59
in the record yeah his story being special forces sas was
49:02
very similar to that there was these moments where he's like i got shot at from
49:06
a rooftop and the bullet hit the part of the rifle the only area could have
49:10
hit him without killing him he fell off the rooftop and so there were these
49:12
moments in combat that were he should have died or something should happen and
49:17
there it was an almost like an intervention where he's like, he was obviously he's.
49:21
You know, it's like Nepalese, so there's obviously a spiritual practice into
49:24
that, right? But obviously, as a soldier, you're not really thinking about that.
49:27
They said there were these times when it was almost like you were supposed to
49:30
be in that situation at the exact moment for that to happen. You don't really associate that often with war, like spiritual awareness or
49:36
enlightenment or... Yeah. But you hear it all the time. Like people who, like you said,
49:40
the four seals that take down 2,000 enemy or whatever, the stories,
49:43
like the Battle of Britain or when it shouldn't have happened,
49:46
it shouldn't have gone a certain way. Yeah.
49:48
Yeah, absolutely. My uncle, when he got into the, he became the Leibstandarte
49:53
SS, Waffen-SS, which is the black uniform, those like highly trained soldiers under Hitler.
50:01
He joined for status. Yeah.
50:04
And he was the man. I mean, he was like six foot four, blonde,
50:08
blue eye, big, you know, wherever he went. Yeah, he's a dude.
50:11
Yeah. And so he fit the exact picture of the status of that time.
50:17
But there was never a thought about spirituality.
50:20
Right, no. Someone would have said, like, talk about some sort of,
50:24
like, chi or Buddha or stuff like that. Yeah. You know?
50:30
However, then the situation where the fear was overwhelming and where he had
50:35
to dig deep, it is then when he discovered that presence came through to him. Right, yeah.
50:41
And then after the war, when he was finished, when he escaped.
50:44
His life changed totally. Yeah. And he went to, he was one of those German SS who then escaped to Argentina.
50:52
Yeah. Yeah. And then he went to the, lived in the jungle with the Indians for
50:56
three years. Didn't want to see a white man. Yeah. Because he was, because he, he was the war really. Yeah.
51:03
Completely made him disillusioned about what the physical life had to offer.
51:07
Did anyone know the last people he talked to who knew what he was doing there?
51:10
Like, do you know what the last thing, where he was at before he died,
51:13
in terms of what he was doing or what he... No, he was obviously in Russia.
51:17
Yeah. And then he got captured. Yeah. And then my father and another guy helped
51:24
him to escape, which is a long story in itself.
51:26
Sure, I bet. So he got out. So they escaped. So, they escaped to Italy and then
51:32
hopped on the boat in Italy and then arrived in Argentina.
51:37
And then as soon as he arrived on land, he went straight away for the Indios,
51:41
for the jungle, because he had the survival skills.
51:44
I mean, that's what they learned, yeah. And the Indios who then met him discovered, saw in him that warrior. Yeah.
51:53
Samavudis was accountable for himself. Yeah. They didn't see like someone who
51:59
was like whatever race affiliated with it. They just saw the person. They saw the self.
52:03
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And they saw that was someone committed to the self.
52:08
And obviously those guys in the jungle obviously were also committed to themselves.
52:13
And so it became like this interaction.
52:16
And he learned the language a little bit. He loved it.
52:19
Yeah. But he learned, I mean, he took ayahuasca and all kind of stuff.
52:22
Sure. So he was into it before. when I was a hippie and talked about mescaline
52:27
I said I've done all that right,
52:30
I've done it in the jungle yeah okay you know it's them and I mean I talked
52:35
about opium I smoked when I was when I was kept in a prison of war right,
52:40
crazy stories wow yeah yeah because obviously when you're in this sort of situation
52:47
and someone offers you a moment of escape you obviously go for it you don't
52:50
ask any question if it's legal or not yeah Yeah, probably not.
52:54
Yeah, you're already in prison. Are you in trouble for this? Yeah.
52:58
Yeah. Yeah. So the interesting thing is that obviously it's the fear factor
53:04
is essential in order to tap into this. Yeah. No, I've never thought of it that way, but that makes a lot of sense.
53:09
It's necessary as an activator, right?
53:12
Yeah. Otherwise, you know what you can do because it's like the idea now that
53:18
we need external security or someone's going to help us or come in to save us
53:21
or that someone else will tell us what to do in an emergency or in a bad situation.
53:26
Situation, you feel like that's being more and more pushed as you're on your way.
53:30
Yeah. Because I believe there's a spiritual awakening now on global scale.
53:34
Because you can't actually wait for the government to save you anymore.
53:39
You can't wait for the politician to save you. I mean, they're all just like
53:42
a bunch of puppets. I mean, I look at them, you're just going to laugh.
53:45
You can't take them serious anymore.
53:48
And now that most MPs in
53:51
Germany are smoking hashish all day and smoking pot and
53:54
getting stoned all day yeah is that okay it's yes
53:57
and then talking about pre-war rather than
54:00
war yeah no idea what they're talking
54:03
about yeah because they're obviously so removed from life like they don't even
54:07
know what what a conflict means it sounds like pre pre like pre-workout like
54:12
creatine or something i'm just taking loading up before the actual workout you
54:15
know we're just taking that stuff yeah it's just like a fad yeah let's talk
54:18
about the war yeah we're gonna be wanting We're going to arm up,
54:22
so when Russia attacks us, we're going to attack them before they attack us. So it's a psychosis.
54:28
Yeah, it's a full-on psychosis that goes on there.
54:31
And obviously, that's a result of obviously not being connected to source energy anymore.
54:37
And so we can see this now when more and more people, like when I talked to
54:42
my sister a couple of weeks ago, like she just said, it's just like,
54:45
it's just total, it's beyond madness now. It's a new level.
54:50
Like, where the parliament makes absolutely no sense anymore. Well...
54:54
You know, maybe he never did. But, you know, like, it's always level. Yeah, I know. But it's always at a level
55:03
of like. Look at the back. There were some great guys. Sure. I mean, look at Robert Johnny. Look at Kennedy.
55:09
Yeah. Bobby Kennedy. I know, isn't great. We don't really deserve.
55:12
If there was a politician, I reckon it's him. Yeah, him and Tulsi Gabbard as well. She's not running for president.
55:16
She's incredible. But him. So there is someone there who would be the ideal president of America.
55:21
Yeah. I mean, he's just. But instead, they're going through the madness.
55:25
Yeah, well, yeah, you got to see it through, hey? The Trump behind it is just madness on each opposite scale. Absolutely. It is.
55:35
So you either get the left madness or you get the right madness.
55:38
Either way, you will get mad. You get mad, yeah. And the person who makes the most sense is the outlier and people calling him crazy.
55:44
He's a conspiracy theorist and anti-vaxxer. All these priorities that if you
55:48
listen to him talk, you know he's not any of those things. He's actually, everything he says, there's complete rationale
55:54
and research and experience behind it like not only direct
55:56
research but also like his job is to
55:59
research and write books on legal yeah but look at the
56:02
fear that he dealt with he kept
56:05
on going yeah he's connected to to himself
56:08
yeah I can't imagine and he's still being
56:11
denied secret service but look at his he practices hard yeah
56:14
I mean look at his body the guy's 68 look at that I
56:16
just look at his eyes you just just need
56:19
to look at his eyes you're like it's something something so crazy not crazy
56:23
but it's incredible something really otherworldly there
56:26
i want to see trump and and and and kennedy
56:29
in the ring well let's sort it out the
56:31
old way yeah the old school yeah that's pretty good forget it forget the forget
56:36
the political debate put him in the ring i don't think biden could even get
56:39
up the stairs into the ring from that point you know yeah i don't know what's
56:43
going on there it probably will last a second no i don't think again i don't
56:46
even find the arena yeah pretty lost the only problem with that is you put putin
56:50
in there he's going to a problem. Yeah. Him and Kennedy. I think Kennedy would be the one.
56:55
But it is- Maybe meanwhile, yes. Yeah. Yeah, I think Kennedy's stronger than him now. I think so.
57:00
But back in the day, I think Putin, because he was forced in.
57:03
No, that was, yeah. Yeah. But apparently, he's not that healthy anymore. No, he didn't look that healthy in that interview.
57:10
He didn't look as healthy as he used to, but- I mean, he's probably another
57:13
of those- I mean, it was his interview with Tucker Carlson was great,
57:16
but still, he's a madman.
57:19
He's still mad. Yeah. I just think it was so fascinating.
57:22
He's a very interesting man. Madman was like, a madman will make sense.
57:26
Totally. Like I mentioned this one before, the Banksy's work and he did this
57:29
whole exhibition where he did these installations in New York and the reaction
57:33
to it was more important than what he did. And I think the Putin interview, the most remarkable thing was the reaction.
57:39
Before the interview even aired, the reaction was like as if it had happened.
57:42
And all these fucktards in the media were like, oh God, this is mad.
57:46
And I'm like, this hasn't happened yet. Someone that you don't like is going to interview someone else you don't like. Yeah.
57:52
That's all you know. So, yeah, and then the interview came out and it was pretty
57:55
reasonable and it was a lecture about Russian history, which was fascinating.
57:58
Like, clearly knows what he's talking about. But all the things that were like, you know, being the drum about didn't happen,
58:04
but didn't matter because they'd already had their fear reaction and made everyone else afraid.
58:07
And all the people who just still think the media is real, you know,
58:10
react in the same way. It's all predictable, right? The whole thing is predictable now in its insanity.
58:15
The reaction is like, oh, of course they're going to bring it. Yeah, this is why I believe. But to me, it looks like every time I talk to my
58:22
friends in Germany, I say, look, because they're scared. Yeah.
58:25
I mean, even Joe Rogan on the podcast said, I'm scared. I want Jesus to come back.
58:33
And when he said that, someone took that and put it on the Christian side.
58:37
And now everyone's like, wow. Dude. There you go. See him coming off drive. Got a new market now.
58:43
You just made it as a joke. He's probably just added two million new followers in the podcast by saying
58:47
that. I think that's how you realize there's something not quite in line with
58:51
their understanding of what this thing coming off crisis is about.
58:57
Yeah. Yeah, but obviously, I hear this often.
59:01
Here in Australia, we don't get that much. Yeah, we don't have that fear.
59:05
Oh, right. Yeah, we don't have that fear. When you talk to friends in Germany, there's a lot of them.
59:09
Yeah, I know. It's a bit of a, we should be here. Yeah. And when you talk to
59:13
America, they're scared. Yeah, I think people here probably should be,
59:16
but there's no point in making them afraid if they're not really afraid. I think people like, maybe you should be a little more, I think you're concerned.
59:22
Too consumed in the mortgage crisis, too consumed on what got,
59:26
you know. What's caused that? The thing that we see as being very obvious of what caused it is people are
59:31
still in a bit of a bubble about what caused it.
59:34
And it's like, oh, petrol prices are high because of the war in the Ukraine.
59:37
I'm like, no, that's not really what happened. but if you think that's true,
59:41
sorry that you think that, but it's not what happened. The reason why we have
59:45
a cost of living crisis is. 500 or 600 billion dollars spent on covid crisis in
59:50
australia that's the current maybe conservative like that's
59:53
a obscene amount of money not to mention
59:56
a lot of you know i don't think it's probably a bit trillion i'm guessing but it's
59:59
it's a it's an amount that's put in forward money right so insane crazy so it's
1:00:04
all these words mad crazy and saying that's not working yeah you couldn't have
1:00:07
seen that like 20 years ago there's no way what it was that the government would
1:00:10
have spent like hundreds of billions of dollars online on something that's not
1:00:14
proven not that quick Not that quickly. How did that happen? Yeah. How sudden? Within months.
1:00:21
And how sudden everyone was suddenly caught off and paid off and this corruption so sudden.
1:00:27
Yeah. And so that's obviously where people now have no choice other than to go within.
1:00:34
Yeah. Because the fear is actually the key to get into the gym.
1:00:40
Yeah. And then to dig deep and then to find a way how to connect and then the
1:00:47
information will come through and then to just act on it.
1:00:51
Yeah. It will not work without fear. Yeah. Well, it's interesting because I
1:00:55
just watched the new Dune movie, the second Dune movie, which is pretty amazing.
1:00:59
It's hard to even watch it again.
1:01:01
There's so much happening. But there's a saying in that book that says fear is the mind killer.
1:01:05
Maybe it's more like fear is the soul igniter or something. In terms of that's
1:01:11
putting fear as this negative thing, it's going to kill you. And if you don't, if you let it, it will.
1:01:16
Jing is the power that is essential for developing the self.
1:01:21
But jing is also the power that will regulate protein production.
1:01:25
So what we spoke about in the beginning, for example, all the vaccine damages,
1:01:29
they can all be regulated with Chinese medicine.
1:01:32
Because Janus Medicine focuses on the Jing, because I had quite a few vaccine-damaged clients over the time.
1:01:38
And I focus on the kidney. Yeah.
1:01:42
And lots and lots of herbs and lots of breathing, lots of qigong.
1:01:47
Obviously, the herbs are crucial. Yes. And after a while, that information that is in the body in terms of this
1:01:53
proliferation of that information to produce protein that aren't belonging to
1:01:57
the body is now more and more suppressed.
1:02:00
Yeah. And eventually it has got no need to exist and then it disappears.
1:02:05
So the good thing about it is that vaccine damages can be easily healed.
1:02:11
But they require, easily is probably the wrong word, but you can heal it and
1:02:17
it requires a departure from the old lifestyle.
1:02:20
And it requires, okay, I've got to get into digging deep into the kidney.
1:02:25
And because in there is a Jing that then actually provides the information to
1:02:31
correct this, whatever those patterns are that John Ryan talks about in the
1:02:35
Brett Weinstein podcast, which I tell everyone, you got to listen to it.
1:02:39
And then you really just get it.
1:02:43
But keep in mind that there are Chinese medicine got solutions to it because
1:02:48
this is obviously where Brett Weinstein, those people that I interviewed,
1:02:51
Chinese practitioners or the practitioners of Chinese medicine, they don't go there.
1:02:56
So we only hear one side of the coin, which is essential for them to bring that
1:03:00
forward because they're essential for the awakening process.
1:03:03
I think even the guy John Ryan said at some point in the interview,
1:03:09
he's like we can dwell on that or we can just move forward and get on with something.
1:03:12
And when he said that, I'm like, that's what we need. That's the getting on
1:03:15
with it and doing something about it is more than just speaking out about it
1:03:18
or highlighting it. It's what actually. way. Yeah.
1:03:20
Yeah. I think that would be the next stage will be where people like Brett Weinstein
1:03:24
and this Peter McCullough who started going against the narrative and then as
1:03:31
what in their words, they're developing the tribe. Yeah.
1:03:35
And now more and more people will appear. Yeah. And the group that has been
1:03:41
neglected so far is the group of those who have, who are really focusing on
1:03:45
the Chinese medicine, but not the Western Chinese medicine.
1:03:49
Yes. The Western Chinese medicine is academic. Yeah. But it's bullshit.
1:03:53
It's bullshit. Because you look at that and I go, whoa. Yeah.
1:03:55
But you saw them all crumble under the, oh, no, but hysteria. Ah, it is.
1:03:58
They just backed off on their own. What they should have known to be true were just completely.
1:04:02
I'm talking about the Chinese medicine. And the original idea of the Chinese
1:04:06
medicine is if you are a practitioner of the Chinese medicine,
1:04:09
that means your job is to wake up at 4 a.m. Yeah, okay.
1:04:14
And you do your three-hour, four-hour qigong. But other than you.
1:04:17
Then you sit down and have a congee, a solid breakfast in order to ground that
1:04:23
energy that you receive. Now you're going out and treat your clients. Then by the time it comes lunch,
1:04:29
around 1.30, 2 o'clock, your job is to rejuvenate yourself and have a big meal.
1:04:35
And then in the afternoon, you do research and study.
1:04:38
And then by 5 o'clock, 6 o'clock, you're just going back and do your Qigong
1:04:43
and your Tai Chi and your martial art. And then you take some herbs, have a glass of wine, chill out, go to bed.
1:04:51
So that is the path of a Chinese doctor. doctor that has been the path in ancient times.
1:04:58
It is because of that lifestyle that they discovered the Chinese medicine because no one gave them a book.
1:05:06
The original Chinese doctors were out there four o'clock in the morning and
1:05:11
were just knocking at heaven's door over and over through the Qigong practices
1:05:15
and just asking questions and didn't give in.
1:05:18
Not knowing what they were doing, they just transcended the fear, they dig deep.
1:05:23
They were like the Navy SEAL. They kept digging, kept digging,
1:05:25
kept digging and putting themselves in incredible situations of stress in order
1:05:31
to find where is it. Yeah.
1:05:33
And then explored it, explored it.
1:05:36
And like I studied under one of those Chinese doctors.
1:05:40
He was 80 by the time he came to Australia. I was a student and he came to visit us.
1:05:46
And he talked about how when he studied China's medicine,
1:05:54
a lot of the acupuncturists were doing four-hour Qigong before they went to the hospital.
1:06:03
So they worked in hospitals and treated 60, 80 patients and did an enormous help.
1:06:09
They helped the humanity, but they had a really dedicated practice.
1:06:15
Yeah, it's like, how else can you do it, really? Yeah. And they said it over and over.
1:06:18
Like, I remember that when I talked to Jiang Man. I like, lots of us in Brisbane
1:06:22
know Jiang Man. Yeah, she's amazing. One of the best acupuncturists in Australia.
1:06:26
And she said over and over to me, she said, you cannot understand Chinese medicine without Tai Chi.
1:06:33
You cannot understand Chinese medicine without you have living the lifestyle. It's not from the book.
1:06:38
The book cannot give you the understanding. The book is the structure.
1:06:42
Yeah. The understanding comes from the application.
1:06:45
And this is what I mean when I talk about Chinese medicine to the rescue.
1:06:50
I mean, those people, when Brett Weinstein, John Ryan, those people that need to open up to those,
1:06:57
practitioners of Chinese medicine will live the lifestyle, will dedicate themselves
1:07:01
to qi development every day, will have a four-hour practice,
1:07:04
five-hour practice, will live it fully dedicated. And those people do exist.
1:07:10
And there, people have an understanding of how to work with Jing in order to
1:07:15
regulate the protein proliferation and therefore to control the pattern on a
1:07:20
level that no one else can do. Well, I should give you a call then. Yeah.
1:07:24
It's about bread. Hey, Fred, give me a call. Give us a call because you can
1:07:28
help. Yeah. Yeah. And come over, do some Qigong with me.
1:07:32
I don't know. Show you some. Farmers, right. Show you some real far Jing.
1:07:36
Yeah. So don't be afraid, but use fear to your advantage.
1:07:40
Yeah. That's a way to end that.
1:07:43
So face the fear, dig deep, let the source energy come through you and become
1:07:49
your true self. True self. So you're not the no self.
1:07:52
Not your no self, true self. Yeah. Yeah.
1:07:55
Yeah. Till next time. Yeah. Music.
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