Kalimba, Yahir, Jackson y los hijos - podcast episode cover

Kalimba, Yahir, Jackson y los hijos

Jun 05, 202449 min
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Conviértete en un seguidor de este podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/con-toda-paz--6065567/support.

Transcript

Are we here yet? Are we here yet? Welcome to those who are already arriving this Tuesday 4th June, half of us are halfway through the year. And that' s one thing that' s all there is to it. Welcome to Dr Amal how good night, how you are, for it is a pleasure to be here again and so very smart to talk to dear Frad Baby, girls, how you are. Or seeing them, I think I can talk more. That' s good, and we' re really

glad they don' t say it' s quiet. It was good, but it was Friday the other day I said they said they shouldn' t talk, but it' s just that I talk a lot. That' s what happened, but there was already a lupita, because we just came to accompany you to talk to you like what I didn' t think. July 2nd is the last day, it is the half day of the year, Lupita, because we are already the other half of the year. So I' m not so lost, I' m not that bad I' m gonna put the tree on hold I' m gonna take it off.

I' m gonna take it out to get it back, put it away, even if he hasn' t taken it off. There' s still time to hear Say I' m very happy today, Ahorita, let' s talk about some things, but let' s talk about Calimba. How I did on yesterday' s Yai cover we talked about Alfredo Adame' s son and that father who has other news from other families is reconciling. I mean, I really like that. He really is always a father, to

see that families recover who make peace, that they get along well. I ' m turning down in case there' s no doggy here, but they ' re already on their nap hear and I' m going to comment here on this no longer in short, here in short and right now that there ' s almost no one. Notice that I was going to be like one of these that I like to do, that I like to do like the ones I' ve done for so I don' t know how to see,

but they' re like lards of your brain, little friends. That ' s a new one, but I don' t know where they are. I can' t find him, I can' t find him, but, well, I' m going to look for him today. But they' re kind of brainless, little fellas. I think they' re here to see, I think here' s to see if it' s this one, they' re like brain malfunctions. Well, now, I ' m sorry. I' m not rambling. I' m starting,

I' m waiting for more to arrive. We' re talking. I ' m going to do no more parenthesis because, look, I' m going to talk to you about this one. I' ll put you on. They' re like brain surgery, little fellas. There' s a lack of brain malfunctions, okay. Now ta, I put the brain malfunction, okay. Well, look, I' m gonna do a parensis while the others are coming. Notice that to this channel already of history, in

history have lately come a series of messages so deeply foolish. I wouldn' t have cared, because the hate messages I' ve received for so long, so long, so long, so long since Kinder two. No, well, I don' t know, no, not my little friends were good truths. Or Lupita in the sandbox fights, in the wrong. Yeah, you, were you, yeah, you? Okay. I have received many, but all. I think we all have that good, but where ' s the good one, then, well, no, it doesn'

t affect me. The truth is they don' t affect me, but then they started since we were at Spreaker. Daniel, you' re absolutely right. You remember, you, yeah, you remember, so I' m used to those comments. I don' t really take them into account. I' ve learned that he talks a lot, that he talks a lot about people who say it. He doesn' t talk about me because they don' t know me. However, the latter and they are going to put them there already. I won' t erase them. Some of

them I deleted because they were truly insulting. But something has even gotten into my father. Or they said you' re a mediocre you and your sister, your dad would be ashamed. I met your father and there I said ah how you met my dad and then I said ah. Let' s see where they' re coming from. Let' s follow the thread, let' s follow the thread path. Well, he' s obviously a very, very resentful person. He is a person who surely hates herself and

therefore hates all that can be and have others. But look, I' m gonna tell you one thing. Never in your history. You could have been my dad' s daughter, because he doesn' t run so much nobility for you. Never in your little soul would there be such an impossible greatness. So yes, insult me, tell me, but you have no

idea what relationship I had with my father. So, well, let' s go on and if you write to me again anyway I' m gonna leave you there for whatever you want that no more, it was a warning because he sees us on time and tells us if someone touches the hair codedin, comes hairstyle and so it goes on, but he' s a person and already and he says who he is. And then, we' re

gonna let her run. Let' s get started. We' re not with the program after making a better friend, he was already a friend He ' s also a good friend, but he' s sick, not sure, because that' s resentment. Oh, well, look, they' re telling me they say I lied live. Lupita just said she loaned the video and erased the story. In history, for look at me, as I insist or do not lie and I will also clarify it in history,

I urge. I' m going to clear them up here, because they ' re asking me, and I' m very happy to, I' m going to clear them up here. I' m going to upload these two photos to you. There you go No, I' m not lying, I' m not lying. I lent a material for Inés Moreno' s channel. Right now, I' m going to show you, that it was Boris' answer to Esteban Macias, very valid. There' s Claudia' s picture of Casa. So they see the logo of Inés Moreno on the logo of history in history. Yes, you see no, of

course, yes, at all times I am not lying. There' s Claudio from Casa. They work history in history, Claudio de Casa does not work in Inés Moreno sees you then I do not lie. That is what I lent and if you notice, if you see, it looks very clear how the logo of my correct program is crossed out, because there it is

then I am not lying. On the other hand, the other question is that, with regard to messages for an ethics issue, for a matter of responsibility, I never in my life make a screen shot of a conversation, much less the public, much less the dark ines. Indeed, he asked me for that video after someone else had asked me. Of course that conversation exists, but someone else had asked for it before. Okay me,'

cause they don' t ask me personally. Well, she knows. I would never show the conversation of the person with whom you triangulated this because I am not my style, nor will you ever see me publish a conversation that you have with me, no more, if you are careful, then with whom you write. Don' t make any screenshots for them. But, well, let' s start with us already after making many, many friends and lots of clarifications, but, well, let' s start seeing this

note first. I liked it very much because it seems to me of a great sensitivity which is what Anita, who is called Larisa Macedo, speaks about

this alter egre that she creates. But as a defense how bad this is, look at yourself, how sad not to know these stories, because you don' t really have any idea what people are going through in your life, and many times she, well, in the case of her, who has handled this image so sensual, so daring, so uninhibited, because you wouldn' t imagine that she brings a story that is the one that leads her to create this character that she talks about or, as she tells her,

alter ego, her artistic personality, but also as a way of defending herself from the pain she accounts of having experienced a situation, because very strong of abuse and when she was a teenager, she says that she was about fifteen years old and that the way she tried to overcome that was to become strong, she, to become powerful to make her music and, besides, to challenge with her femininity and with her beauty and appeal, that she suffered

for that very reason, of being a woman, of being a woman, and that there are men who do that kind of crime because they are so, far from turning it off. That' s exactly what constituted his weapon and that' s why this character is created. And so, all the rest is history. We know a woman of great success, attractive fame, her famous dance and everything she' s done. But I also find it very brave of her and I find it very generous to share that too.

Now that we see her like this with we won' t say the word that we don' t like, even if it' s used a lot, but to see her so brave, wary, powerful, it has to be said that she' s in everything and it' s the word hears, yeah, look. This is where psychologist Ale Calixto tells us. The alter ego is a way of surviving a painful reality. Many of us inject fantasy in order to breathe a painful reality effectively and famous and not famous.

Hey, that' s why sometimes they' ve seen one thing, a phrase you haven' t exactly told me, which they attribute to him. I don' t know if Jim Carry or they' re attributed to Keanu Reeves. I don' t know what it says that depression is like when your face is like you' re hiding your face behind a mask, and it' s time to take it off and take it off. I think Anita creates this alter ego, but she' s already had therapy. Tell

me exactly. I love that you said that, because it' s very important to clarify that, because if I don' t know what one stayed with the idea of ah well, then I' m going to create this alter ego, which is a simple mask. But inside I' m still in the suffering, in the pain and after where you say because but what happened here with this person you saw too. Indeed, I also believe that she must have had a healing process that today leads her to no longer be

her alterate or perhaps. Now yes, this is his actual personality today, because there is even a phenomenon that we call in psychoanalysis personality as if it had to do with it, like pretending something to not be hurt or to not be despised, but sooner or later it bursts, because it is false. So the important thing is that maybe, while one builds an external breastplate or a strong outer image that learns to defend oneself from others, that learns

to become powerful. At the same time it is healing in the wounds, that it is there to reach a balance and become the person that one wants to be that perhaps it is not either or so terribly fighting, but weak, neither accurate, well not exact. Fray and what a father that artists have this way of expressing and highlighting everything that hurts her, of generating this between ego, because I thought, I say well, Anita, we see

her so sensual doing half Challen and so on. But I thought of Leonora Carrington and Remedios Varo, who generated alter egos in their works in order to be able to strip away all the pain they had and finally the artists a way to do it, I say Anita with sensuality and all the reggaeton that gives us that I really like this one. But when I saw from where you realize that even the reggaeton and what Anita does, you can be a

protest and it' s deeper than it might seem clear. How interesting that is not, that is very, very revealing and therefore important to think definitively, to consider it, to consider it. If we don' t all bring this alter ego armed to cover something. No, I think everyone, in one way or another, doesn' t tell us what we' re not. But in the end that hits you personally. When you stop being you to make someone else ends up. These two personalities have to be brought

together. What you just said and I assumed, because it' s a therapy that makes you put these two parts together. This is not how we have always said it, to achieve the exact integration, not to be there disintegrated, unarmed hears and fragmented, fragmented like that of the film What a good film has been fragmented hear. We' re going into the children'

s issue, because it' s always a super delicate subject. We are all children of someone and we all have with presence or absence, because something that we have lived on the part of our parents, I still insist on an absent, because they affect us in some way and present also and they may not be or not live with us and still be very close and can live with us and still abandon us. Maybe. There are so many ways

to be parents, and in the end we understand it. Sometimes when we try to overcome it already as adults, we say well, we put dad and mom in the right place and we lead a healthy life. But sometimes dads, we' re young dads, we don' t know how we ' re doing with the kids. If we' re wrong, that' s even a joke to me. That' s a joke, an absolutely

narcissistic joke. But, it' s not the case that I liked the news that Ir has already reconciled with Tristan, his son, who sat down to talk, that his son resumed the music that he is and that you also know that I liked Jair' s words. I recognize the effort you ' re doing, the work you' re doing, the discipline you' re having, because that' s what it' s all about. Not super pretty, I like it and besides, good him. He makes a Tiktok Tristan where he says hear. I want you to know that I saw

my boss, not the way he talks. He says I saw my boss or I saw my dad and all, and then he came to see me, we met, we talked and the truth was very much because he was with his words and he was very chido. I want you to know that I am happy, I feel calm I know that you support me, that you like my work and I know that this news will please you and that is why I wanted to share it with you. He also draws attention because he is a young boy who sometimes they do not see things as one.

I think that in this case, maybe the dad is more filled with realizing that his son or rather being able to share that his son has come back to him, than the son to give him as this importance with his audience.

I talked to my mom there. But he does. And what also draws attention is that there are some conditions of addiction that become very evident in the physical aspect of people, that is, it becomes very notorious and on this occasion, in that tiktok that makes Tristan, he looks quite improved. I mean, it looks like he said he was recovering from his addictions and

making music, as Lupita said. But sometimes you say who knows. No, I hope so and that matter of him, but in his appearance he does look better, he looks very good, he looks healthier, he looks handsome, as he has to look, as he should have looked. Not happy and yes and go already, for neither let it be said not also exact. You saw him, yes, but they know it' s beautiful.

Taking back from Adame' s subject, Adame we have seen him ransack his children in an impressive way, because even his children have gone out but scraped with Nadame no longer go in his time in a very gentlemanly way hates the word horses, very gentleman knows that reconcile with the words of hell,

yes, do not hear. We have yes, I like it, gentlemen, it seems to me a very beautiful word and that we can rarely use today with anyone allows macho behaviors for many things that my ominist friends did then, but yes, gentleman, that would be another argument. Then I' ll go, very gentlemanly very elegant. He painted a line with Tristan, he said here, but he never attacked him. And that makes a difference to why Chistan can come back and say well, yeah, Dad was doing

it half- wrapping because apart I love how. Yeah, you recognize that it was really bad and that' s nice, yeah, sure true, but you' ve always behaved like your dad is. And that' s

the thing about what Lupita said when we started dad. It' s the one who doesn' t have to forget that it' s the dad, because even if the son is eighty years old, the dad' s going to be 100 exactly not, but notice that I think very smart and you just said Yair is this position of I' m dad, I support you, I help you, but you have to grow up, you just get right responsible for your actions. I can' t and I can' t either. I think that' s very important. I, Dad, put

on the victim as I suffer. I' ll go, because my son, when the one who' s suffering is your son. I don' t think he' s very smart. And that' s good And it ' s good that those relationships are going well And I hope Angie Agi Short says why they hate so many right words. No. No. I believe that it is not that you hate the word, but the repetition of such words. Not that sometimes they repeat a lot. I' m an exact abuse. It' s like an abuse of words and empowered empowered. I

don' t think I know if it exists. You help me if it ' s in the rae, but I don' t know if there' s the word empowered. Well, she' s very pretty. The problem is, I' ve already taken an empowered, warlike, warm warrior. Ask Boris how he likes those words. Hey, look at the licentiate. He calls me lupita. I' m watching your replay screen on your live one that' s called a bank kid. You saw something happen on your screen. At the minute fifty- four forty- seven, for I saw

it and nothing happened. I' ve seen it. Greetings to Costa Rica. But, yeah, let' s see if they tell me if yes, fifty things appear, no, there' s nothing. If that word appears, I get the verb. Let' s see the crack, I get the verb. Empowering, Empowering, Empowering And now I wish the comrades empowered, empowered, empowered, you no longer arrive and now I' ve told you what' s going on. I always have incense on at some point in my day and what you saw happening on that screen is one,

but well, forgive the interruption. But tell me, tell me, tell me the definition. I wanted to tell the dads' rupita that an act of love is to give and power the son and tell him that you' re an adult when you want me to help you, I help you but there' s your things and wash them exactly that these are also forgotten. Not because a drug dad would say ay I' m a way my son makes me suffer. Those are the parents who don' t grow up.

We have in creating your life such a program of parents who are adult children, who are children. Still go see him, look no, but it ' s true dads victimizing, because of course, my son is like that. I suffer so much and then no, no, no, no, you have your thing and maybe you may be suffering. But don' t make that pain be I' m already like the book, that pain isn

' t yours from the Jair Ephraim thing. In fact, at the time he went he did say when you were all wrong not long ago that he had helped him several times, that they had supported him by taking him to these clinics and that he refused to continue the treatments and that he could not be forced then. It' s not that they didn' t care, it' s not that they didn' t try. But, as you say, there is a time when before an adult as sad as he is, he is now twenty- six years old, because it was already up

to him to make decisions that he seems to be making. And then, well, very good news. How good you look as Daniel says, reminds me of Alejandra Guzmán who victimizes herself. It' s just that that' s a super clear, super clear case of my daughter suffering, but the victim is me or you' re responsible for what she lived through. Well, well, okay, other kids, other kids, another kid who'

s now looking at me don' t know what to think. I would be unable to judge, for example, well to callimba in this case. However, there are many things that point to it over and over again. First the case in Chetumal, with this girl who later came out in Playboy, what a good thing, because it came out that there was no proof, that it was a lie and so on. No later comes another one who is right now in a legal process. It was precisely a complaint from

Melisa and then he is in this trial and is charged. They tried not to have it faked, but it was. And now it seems another problem, because she is accused by the mother of her son, of her second son, who is called Atena, says so Look, he gave pension and everything. But because when the pandemic came, it was more absent, no longer sees the little one from time to time no longer present, no longer

wants to pay, I don' t know what. And then, because it makes you hesitate, because to see to call one, here defend yourself and defend yourself and there goes And now I think that already the authorities have accused him for not giving pension or anything. Not many say that she claims to have insisted a lot on him and that in the face of his little response, he decided to go to the authorities and that it was just not long ago that on May 7 she started, because this claim for pension.

Well, he went to file this alimony lawsuit, because he' s not getting what his kid needs. But he also says that he, from time to time when he did want to see him and he goes after him he took him away and then he wasn' t with him, but she says he left him with anyone else. Then, in addition to everything, I neglected him not and he was a child. Well, he' s a little boy. And for all this comes to light, because she has declared

it to explain why she had to take legal action on it. I did not know that the Limba also has another daughter with another mother, who is a 16- year- old girl, which this woman, Athens says neither of the other daughter took care of. That' s not what she said, too, Ephraim. Then I' ll tell you why there are things that for me are Chile in line girls, because there is no other word.

I mean, there are things that really bother salt and calimba. A few months ago in a video saying that a man by nature must be violent. No, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, a man. I ' ve already forgotten that it' s untima and unthagerlo, because that' s the way I want to tell you. A man takes care of the children he brings to the world heart. Sure, he' s not violent. A man keeps the kids he brought into the world is what a man

is. So see how these micromachismos are signs that, as the young people say, those that already the day, as we said men, now aunt efra ay, yes aunt, as you say the young are now red flags. This micromachism of no violent man. If you' re as much of a callimba machito as saying this name, why don' t you keep your kids? Why not? That' s the lookout for them Well, that ' s called vicarious violence. Maybe he also thinks he should also be a

rapist, violent in vicarious violence. You don' t tell me it' s micromachisms. That' s why, when people say it and even if they' re small, you have to be careful. And a lot of eye, a lot of eye, and they' re gonna tell us why we think of life. So we think because Alimba puts himself in order for one to make an opinion. Yeah, well, if you' re so ugly, you' re clear how you behave. So not the truth anymore. You don' t go there knock on the door, go see the

neighbor. No, well, there' s the magazines, and there' s the courts, and there' s all that. No, yes, of course, we didn' t go to his house to see anyone went to touch micro- machis. More. I want to answer Lupi' s question. Of course you' re micromachismo. These are issues that we already

have tacitly in society, which we do not realize are machistas. For example, serve your brother that the mom tells the sister, serve your brother that the mom tells the brother, give your brother a place, that is, those things as positive as they look are micromachisms and we have to eradicate them by having someone go out to say that it' s very normal for a man to be violent. Sure, of course, of course, because look at the question of service. Okay, if anyone wants to be helpful,

it' s okay, not helpful. No. I don' t see anything wrong with him. I mean, someone wants the sister' s brother to mom. Come on, whoever' s right or not serving us is wrong. On the contrary, the vocation of being a child is a wonder. The problem is that it is as an obligation, as you are the woman you have to attend to your brothers who you are. Well, no, not exactly, that has to be for your own sake, not for you to do these questions of mutual attention and so on. But it'

s your own motu. It is not a family imposition, and much less so, underpinned by gender issues and requires soriety and so on. Well, no, but that, besides, is very ugly, because he' s talking about violence, according to what you' re reminding us of Ephraim, that is, he' s not even telling a cliché that the name has to be protective, but if he' s saying it has to be violent, good or not, I didn' t exactly tell him and I already thought about it and he' s going to tell me what more violent than

punishing a woman because he had a child with you. He didn' t stay with you without keeping that kid, because that' s what he' s got. It' s at stake here and Calima, you said you ' re very machito. No, we' re not seeing you heart. Indeed, effective, it is not that and besides, well, that is

very common. Sadly time tell me ready because I will go fair, also go hand in hand and go to the precipice and quite the contrary, quite the contrary, because that is what this program is about to say things with all peace, but with all truth. So, yes, there are many

cases. So I kept thinking when you said it, because it' s true and there are many men who, unfortunately, because you find out from the work that makes them arrive, even to demand from their former women certain, as Freud said, certain favors in exchange for giving the money for the children when they are no longer together, when they are no longer a couple. And that seems totally perverse to me, because if you, because very often you' re the man who left that woman, he left her.

He left, he didn' t want to be with her, but from time to time he comes and says well you want me to give you money, because the favor doesn' t first and that' s horrifying, horrifying or cali l true, totally true. Well, I don' t know

what to do with the calimba thing. But because he' s already going to put his campaign house, like the strikers do, not that vans put their campaign house there, outside the business that they' re on strike there I' m going to put it already went to the courts, not really I hope you' re already straightened out, not because you can look there We have the sad example, boy, very young, but if it was in the grips of something as serious as addictions and it' s getting interesting

that way, reconcile with your dad. I believe that you can always ubite Frain can then always, because he knows what he has pending, what he realme has pending in his life, because I hope that he puts it in order and remains the artist who is because I are never talented, that is, he is undeniable artist and that he continues with his art and with his super father music and put his affairs in order and be happy with the children

that he brought into the world. As Ephraim says along with the moms and I hope she' s frayed and already with this one and I shut up because I really do come that I pray I don' t talk three days, but you hear I' m going to tell you girls one thing, this is going to get tattooed in the children' s psyche. And that ' s my inhuman. And if he talks so much, it' s all wrong in calimba. And I also think he is very talented, because he speaks of God, He is Christian and some very rare things and comes

out true with the legs. Yes, it is true, it is true I, in particular, am very angry, because incongruity, because an artefact is true that and an artist, even if they do not want to, are the reflection of the masses and the masses follow it. And that' s why this thing that' s going on is in degree, because if it makes it ally tales and more in your homes. Yeah, well, famous and not famous. You' re absolutely right. Yeah, that one

' s angry. Notice that tomorrow we have broken souls. I had chosen a case, but I was already in the back because it scared me and then I would explain it to Dr Abel. But tomorrow has a lot to do with this issue of vicarious violence from parents and so on, it gives you a lot of courage to use the children as hostages, use the children as shields, use the children as lifeguards. You become the victim when you are not the victim, because, indeed, many will say poor, calm

down so many things that you have on you. No, well, you ' re on, you' re on. In the circumstance, I' m going to tell you that I' m always looking for something to read differently. Then I leave them in half, then I don' t open them. The one I took to Vegas I didn' t even open. But no, no, no, no, no, in time you couldn ' t lupita. It' s a bit too. You know I took my book, too, and we opened the truth. You' re thinking about it. One day we' ll go to the Playita, the three

of us or something and there we' ll read a lot. But I found this book as the man thinks. That' s his life. James Allen knows this book about when this man was born in the early 20th century. I think he was born in nine hundred and twelve. James Allen, that is, is the forerunner of the self- help books. He' s an Englishman, but he' s got a lot to do with it. All this with you says not the circumstances. I mean, you, you can' t be blaming the circumstances for what' s happening to you,

the circumstances you create. It doesn' t seem very elementary, but it doesn' t make you think too much. It makes you think a lot. I put them on again and they want to see it as the man thinks if it' s his life. It' s very cheap. I found it on Apple, on Apple Digital, on Ibooks, because there I found it. It' s seventy- six pages. I packed it and finished it today. Or that I' m six pages short. I

' m done. It' s a very nice book sweetness. It' s not this kind of self- help right now from your thoughts are gonna heal you. No, no, no, this is the origin. The origin. Your thoughts are going to make you sick, but here it explains it very well. It says your thoughts will make us sick, because you

want to be a healthy person. However, you take for example. Well he doesn' t say it like that, sorry in the example he' d set is dreams of having a wonderful life and a great figure, but you never walk, but you never move, but you eat things that hurt you. You' re creating that circumstance and then you' re gonna blame

that circumstance for not being able to get to what you wanted. So it ' s not magic, that is, and it' s not uncommon for you to tell yourself your thinking that shapes you, because it' s true, but good to go see it. Fabiola Mendoza says that we should touch on the subject of more lenk Soto, that the doctor amel analizes Madelain' s mother because, according to her, she never noticed the stepfather doing to the girl. I think it would help a lot. Mother, I'

m writing it right now. I write it in this instant hears and other children. But these children have a name. What Michael Jackson' s children are suffering, they' re bringing a lawsuit for millions of inheritance to tell us that they suffer, because they' re not quantified now. They' re not well quantified. The amount of inheritance your dad left you is so

much that you don' t know how much it is. But this inheritance would have to be divided between the three children Michael Jackson had and the mother, the ninety- four- year- old mother, the 27- year - old Prints son, Paris twenty- six and Bill twenty- two. But they have not been able to access the full amount, i e, they have not been able to distribute all this whole cake already, because the

exact value has not been defined. And the reason is that for several years there has been a disagreement with the domestic tax service, which will be equivalent to our Treasury Secretariat, which, in addition to the Treasury Department office, did an audit and said that the assets left by Michael Jackson are far superior to what had previously been thought and that, for that reason, in order to have the total of this inheritance, successors should give seven hundred million dollars

in taxes and penalties. Then how much will be the amount. If nothing more than seven hundred million are taxes. But in the year two thousand and twenty- one, the Jacksons challenged this statement and the Court initially gave them the right. Then again he asked for a review solidarity so that he took into account now the entire musical catalog of the artist who was sold to Sony Music for about six hundred million dollars. And that' s what' s

yet to be resolved. They have the problem of those who are. The executors. John Branca and John mcclaine have chosen not to distribute the money when considering that a certain amount cannot be determined, then the money is stopped. However, what has been pointed out all along is that they do receive very

substantial monthly pensions, both mother and children. The amounts received by the children are not spoken of, but they do speak of what the mother of the star has received and in the last fifteen years they carry more than fifty- five million dollars, known, and that no more for the doctor. Besides, yes, I mean, but here there are half divided because some grandchildren already told her grandmother, since already for this, Biggi, the youngest,

says that he wants the court to forbid her grandmother. Look separately at Grandma, I say with all due respect, but ninety- four I said ninety - four years, because the more you want to spend or not. That is to say, the truth is that the more and more years, the less time you have to spend money, then you must have haste to purge.

He' s in a hurry, Biggi, who' s younger and has more life ahead of him, so he says, please, I want the Tribunal to stop letting Grandma take that money to keep paying the expenses of the lawsuit she doesn' t take anymore. Apart from that money, so that' s the lawsuit they bring with this guy, with Grandma and everything else. No, because they already share what is there, because how strange not that they are with that per se is that we have not been able

to define. That' s why wait not yet, not yet and how many add up who' s gone over the subject. It tells us very interesting things. Says the trust attorneys want more slice of the cake. And then he tells us the same lawyers are the ones who have reported to the east of hacienda the difference in the estate, I guess, in order to

recognize the increase in the estate and they can achieve more fees. Ah and there' s the lawyer' s quote, I mean the lawyers who are stopping this instead of speeding it up to make it clear, so, of course you, who do you think is winning, who' s winning? Guess who wins in a divorce, in a divorce and the later because the lawyer, of course, in an inheritance lawsuit, who wins the most, since the lawyers, not the heirs, the lawyers. He' s gonna

take a good part of the inheritance. Sure, if there' s plaito for that, you don' t have to fight for inheritance. I think I do, preference for nothing. If one could not fight for anything. I mean, that would be the ideal. Of course Simpson, they say, imagine a world that' s unprovoked and all the rainbows come out and

dance there it is. Well, he says he' s not. Vicky Sharon says no. Grandma is spending it on another son who lives like the brothers of Jenny rivera Andales who is already coming the series of Michael Jackson and who plays it his nephew. I think Kurman' s son is called but strong. Yeah, sure. That' s the way moms are. That ' s the way moms are. We' ve also seen it in broken souls, in many broken soul programs we' ve seen how moms are the

children' s lappers. Sometimes not always. Sometimes they do. Sometimes they favor one to the detriment of another or at the expense of others. Yeah,

those things do happen too. And there are some who let themselves be loved a lot and there they go and blackmail the mom and I and suffer so much and leave me the wife or I don' t know or hurt my foot or I don' t know anything And there they go and there they go that we already let you talk, says Lana or in itself talk to me a lot more hears now that I was making the kids loose and so they see that you told them a moment of a lady that fell a

minor accident, but it is already greater. She fell down, hurt herself, and then she talks a son to her brother and tells him that you already knew my mom fell and says yes, what a worry and tells her and what you plan to do. I don' t know how you' re gonna figure it out. If we' re the exact two children, we' re going to do exactly, it wouldn' t be what we do. I' ve been told a very similar case, that is, it actually makes it last Friday that my eyebrows were made. By the way,

I was told a very similar case. Look, I was already running where they were making them for me and I was hearing a very similar case. It doesn' t matter, then, how the brothers and what you ' re going to tell her and how you' re going to do with my mom, the three brothers, the sister and you how we' re going to go with the mom like this, how we' re going to

do it just like that. I do, yes, yes, that' s the way it always happens, there are some brothers who win, because Jenny' s brothers, as Ahorita told us, the smartest and the meanest exact, exact, listen, because something to add children, something that they want to tell us I read their messages. She says that Bella, Dr mel says tere as he says, as the Jiji says, what we' re going to do I hadn' t heard it and that she heard a

lot of Persian things not getting married anymore. The brothers and dads don' t care. Some are very good children, always to the extent normal, because there can' t be this imbalance that you see more for your parents than for your family, which you have created. You can' t do that, but you can' t leave your parents either. There must be a balance. There has to be a balance, not least when they already enter this age when they will have a greater dependence, when they are still

very well and are suddenly a bit of a plaintiff. But you look good sometimes they' re still in pairs, they have each other. It is just the moment that most people start to form their own family and when they already have it a bit aimed at parents they are already older and yes, they have to be supported a little more. I don' t know what ' s wrong with pacos so much law, paco is size. That' s what you' re telling him. This person worked with this producer.

What' s his name is just gone hair pepe. They say it in interviews they' ve done to him lately. But that' s in the documentary. That comes out in the documentary. They say in this documentary, in the chronic show of a murder. In this documentary they had already said it, they had already mentioned it. And he shows up when they' re interviewing Paco and Mario who arrives at an event and they try to rob them when they drive and a motorcycle approaches them and before an attack that had

left a warning to Paco. Not something like that. It' s like that if he says they were. I also think that in a restaurant they even put the name there and that suddenly some arrived as assailants and that, then, they went straight towards them and if they told them, they told him something as it goes, and then it was an assault where it says that what they took from Paco was the clock, but that he was very

restless because he said good. But if they were assailants and they came for the watch, why would they tell me that then, like he had a kind of feeling or a feeling of being threatened and that supposedly Mario Besares told him they probably didn' t want you any more afraid, but it was very impressed that they said something directly to him. Sure, I think it

' s worth it to those who are watching the Paco series? Those who are watching the Paco series on Amazon Prime return to watch the documentary, because there are many things that are being said there that are coming back to light. I think Mr Cabello and he' s a great father than interviewing, but he' s saying everything he' s already said. The documentary says very strong, very strong things. They do not repeat them now. Indeed,

you saw it, Ephraim, you saw some of it. I kept thinking because at the time that was not a line of investigation, that threat, that is, because at the time, it happened without pity or glory.

That' s what I think marruedon is. It did me because when something like what happened happened, you investigate everything and I kept thinking about this whole question that it was urgent for the government to close the case and to throw and lift and avoid looking for a more serious line, because the parties did not want to follow that line, as well as to follow it.

You guys were playing plane. I played a plane that we painted on the ground with clear history and you had seen parts where there is a plane, because maybe it rained them and erased the hiss from the line of investigation.

Or they put my paper over there before the line broke. Of course because you remember that we were throwing a ball here something not, of course here I know this loving chata and of course they have played little plane the truth And then, yes, he was very father, that was very funny. We are seven children, says Gloria or blind and the seven are at the

bottom of the canyon. We split up his dates and stuff. It should be him and not dads should not be a secmet burden are your dads and if they can no longer fend for themselves or need help, it' s okay for the kids to turn around. No, but cultural issues, as it goes for chocolate. My poor aunt who was going to marry us hear what a sorry movie that was, what a good book and what a good little movie that didn' t let her get married because she was the youngest

to have to take care of her mother. And if they are several children, for with all that they received, they can repay what they received in the care of those mothers and of those fathers among all. See what that ' s why there' s a not saying that a mom or dad can also be not a poop a mom. If they have enough time, life and everything for several children, but sometimes several children seem to be not enough for a single mother, or there is a father. Mother can create seven

children, but seven children cannot care for one. George says exactly, exactly, it is very wrong and why it should be done, in addition to gratitude and compassion, empathy for a very simple reason, for love. It ' s totally true, totally true about what they gave you, Love, and you give this back and you give it back. Well, this is today and with all peace that there is now, because there are super chats available. The store is also available if you want it. Come on in

and see. And thank you for your likes, for all the comments you

leave us. Thank you for commenting on and for being here. Everyone on YouTube, who' s a member, who' s a subscriber, who ' s a passer- by, and who' s in the know that I have to tell them, right now, that they' re being heard, the Spotify, Spreaker, there' s Podcast and Amazon, that the program of creating your life, a first chapter is already up there and we ' re going to go up it' s me another week and the week that comes in we' re going to go back with women, leaving a

to next Tuesday. Yes, however, however, well, with all, mark that we' re in a break, but we' re going back with all the preproduction, exactly, exactly, but then, time to say goodbye. Thank you very much, Doctor Amen, thank you all very much. A pleasure as always to be here and we hope to see each other tomorrow. And I' m unstoppable with this for since you have little hearts, you don' t leave them anymore. There he is. Thank you,

Chelipe frad Baby girls I want you to hear them. I always talk a lot of truth for a moment if I' m not going to say it' s not smart. Don' t say anything, one two s Sometimes we wouldn' t talk anything. But well, thank you very much to everyone, he and Knight, Thank you Alice, Thank you Laurie, thank you to all who help us this chat, in this loving chat to

moderate and so on, thank you all. Elizabeth Angelo is always here, of course, Manuel Fabiola, well, thank you all and we go there soon, in history, in history, in about twenty- five minutes we meet there until then and rest and meditate and have peace, learn your incense, which are not spirits, are my incense, until then,

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