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matter for yourself. This is Strange Thing With I Am Joshua BE Warren, and each week on this show, I'll be bringing you brand new mind blowing content, news exercises, and weird experiments you can do at home, and a lot more on this edition of the program, A new magic word. Let me just tell you that this topic is so weird that I have been struggling for days trying to figure out whether or not I even wanted to do this show. I think you'll see why. It's
it's a very very complex subject. But then I'm always reminded by that quote by John F. Kennedy. We choose to go to the moon not because it is easy, but because it is hard. So here we go. I'm I'm gonna do something that's hard. Abracadabra, presto, al kazam, bibbity bobbidy boo, hocus pocus, shazam. These are what you might consider magical words magical sounds. And you know what's funny is that some of them maybe what most people would consider nonsense, but other people would have some kind
of meaning attached to the word. For example, the word presto, you might hear a magician used that, you might hear a cook use that presto is just an Italian word for fast or you know, quick, or let's say, like a shazam. Well, that actually is a word that comes from the fictional world of comics. There are characters that are related to the word shazam in the comic world. As a matter of fact, I really like the word shazam. I mean, who doesn't, And I thought this was kind
of a cool thing. I would share with you, apparently from what I have found. The word shazam, as many say, was coined by a comic book writer named Bill Parker, using the first letters of Solomon, Hercules, Atlas, Zeus, Achilles, and mercury. Okay, so sometimes one of these words again
they sound like ridiculous and crazy and another. At other times they they have some relevance to your own life experience, but that doesn't really matter, because all that really counts is the way that these things make you actually feel. And in fact, you know, I wasn't going to do this, but I think this, you know what, I think this is a good opportunity for this. I am holding in my in my hand right now, the tail of a rattlesnake.
I believe this is a diamondback rattle rat Atler, Yeah, a diamondback rattlesnake from Texas, and it's got the rattle on it. And hopefully you've never heard this sound in person, but I can. I'm gonna try to shake it right now in front of my microphone and let's see if you can hear this. Are you ready? This is a real rattlesnake rattle I have in my hand, and I actually have two. I have another one from I don't think this one's from Texas. I don't know. Oh yeah,
good lord. This box has two rattlesnake rattles in it. Let's see how they sound. Here's the first one in the second box and the second one in the second box. But these are harder to rattle because they're just actually the rattlers. And the first one was the tail attached to the rattler, and it's a much bigger snake. So okay, the reason I thought to to give you that sound is because this goes to show that, like, this is
not a word, that's that's a vibration. But when you hear that vibration, when when you experience that vibration, you know, uh, get away, get away. Something is warning me something bad is happening here. And I'm sure there are plenty of animals out there that certainly do not speak English, that
are very well aware of what that sound means. So the point is, uh, there are sounds that are the product of vibration that you're able to understand without having to sort of intellectualize it and reduce it into some kind of a clear language. I bet you that almost everybody in the entire world, no matter where that person is, from what language that person speaks, would hear that sound and be like, Oh, I think we need to go
in the other direction right now. That that's to me just a very basic example of the power of sounds that don't necessarily represent accepted words in a particular language. This is sort of what magical words are about, in my opinion. So they mean different things to different people and in different cultures, in different kinds of animals. But there's there's some thing about the way something sounds that represents a certain vibration that you can kind of intuitively appreciate.
I'm trying to set the stage here for where we're going because I have what I believe maybe an experiment here that we can all do together. I am going in this podcast to give you a new magical word, and we as an audience are going to start using this word to see if it does anything in our lives. All right. Before I get to that, though, let's, you know,
let's cover our bases here. So if you if you go to the almighty Wikipedia and you look up magic word, it says magic words are often nonsense phrases used in fantasy fiction or by stage magicians. Frequently, such words are presented as part of being a divine divine a damic. Oh boy, now I got to look up. What is a dammit? I thought? I said, academic. Okay, well that's it, says a language spoken by Adam in the Garden of Eden.
Maybe I'll I might have to do a whole other show on that anyway, or other secret or empowered language. Certain comic book heroes use magic words to act fate their powers. Magic words are also used as easter eggs or cheats and computer games. All right, and right off the bat when it comes to magic words, I guess, like the Granddaddy, here is abra cadabra, and I you know,
I think I should point out before I continue. I believe you can also see the relationship between um, these magic words and the idea of like scymatics, which I have turned into parasimatics, the idea that when there's an actual vibration, that that vibration is connected to a sound. So if you had you know, there may be a vibration that we hear as a sound, and then you can express that physically through particles of sand or a body of water and you can see form evolved from that.
And then there's this whole thing that I talked about an episode seventy of this podcast called anamatapilla, and that is this whole concept, this universal concept that we have certain words that represent things that we all understand, like a cat goes me ow, pig goes oink, a burgoes chirp, or something explodes and goes boom, or you know, something
falls and it goes splat. That's called atamatopea when we try to take the vibration that something creates that we perceive as a sound and then turn it into a word to express it. It's a lot like what happens in comic books when or you know the old Batman show where your boom pal playing. This is leading somewhere, I promise you. But first off, we're up on a
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Normal Podcast Network. I am your host the Wizard of Weird Joshua Pee Warren beaming into your wormhole brain from Mice Studio in Sin City, Las Vegas, Nevada, where every day is golden and every night is silver. Abra cadabra, Abra cadabra. What does that mean? Well, you know, I remember when I was a kid, I was reading magic books and they made a big deal out of abra cadabra. It is a magical word, historically used as an incantation on amulets. And when it comes to the entomology, that is,
you know, the word origin. It says that abra cadabra is of unknown origin. But according to the Oxford English Dictionary, its first known occurrence is in the second censory works of Serenus Salmonikus. Okay, Serenus Salmonikus. You know Serenus Samonicus, right, who doesn't, Well I didn't, So here is who he was. Died in the year two twelve. He was a Roman savant and tutor, and uh, you know, he just he was a very popular, smart guy back in the day.
And it says here that the first known mention of the word abracadabra was in this book that he wrote, and he was functioning at that time as a physician to the Roman emperor Caracalla, and he said in chapter fifty two that malarious sufferers should wear an amulet containing this word abra cadabra in the form of a triangle, and that when you do this it makes lethal diseases go away. So here's what that means. So try to
imagine this, or you can look it up. The word abracadabra is spelled A b R A c A D A b r A. So imagine you see that word written in front of you, and then on the line below it, you see it written again, except this time it's missing the last letter, and then the line below it is missing the last letter from the line above it, and this keeps going on until finally, you know, you end up with like a b r A and then a b r and then ab and then a. So at the top you have the word abracadabra, and then
it keeps getting shorter and shorter and shorter until finally it ends with the word a. And so it looks like a triangle that's pointing downward. And so apparently nobody knows the origin of that actual word to begin with. But the idea is that if you take this the well you, if you take these letters and you fashion them in this manner and you wear it on an amulet,
it's going to cure you of things. And there are all these uh, you know, references talking about like supposedly Daniel Dafoe wrote about it warding off sickness during the Great Leg of London. The religion of Thalma has has a similar belief in this, and that's you know, Alistir Crowley stuff, and it was used as a magical formula by the Gnostics in certain cases. So look, I don't know,
I've never done that. I've never actually going I've never taken like the word abracadabra and whittled it down like they're describing. And if you can't imagine what I'm talking about right now, and just like listening to this, just go to Wikipedia and look up abracadabra and you'll see a picture of it. But you know what, I'm going to try it. I Am going to try wearing this.
I bet you you can just jump online. I haven't done this, and I bet you can just find like some pendant somewhere that's that's made with the abercadabra thing. But when when it comes to this whole topic of like magical words again, like the idea is there is something about transmitting vibrations, and vibrations are the root of
all well reality, but especially physical reality. And it reminds me a lot of the conversation that I had with Dale Alan Hoffman not too long ago on this show where we were talking about you know, toning, and I've told you before that you know, people talk about like a magical book of spells being called a grimoire, and that word comes from the word grammar. So it's all
about language being used. So you know, when you have like bibbity bobbity boo and alec azam and all this kind of stuff, you wonder, you know, what is it going to the mind? In some cases, it's it's freeing the mind. It's distracting the mind from the critical self. So it's taking you away from your logical thinking to
open up the creative side. And I have looked at different letters in the whole English alphabet, and I have looked at them as they appear, and then you know phonetically, and some words are composed with Well, let me put it this way. I guess I should say some letters have a certain energy attached to them that is magical, but it can be kind of good or bad. For example, my friend Darren Evans, he always talks about the letters Z and how that in many cases throughout history, the
letters Z has been associated with something evil. And he said, he told me that a lot of ancient people said that when somebody died, you would look at the face of the corpse and the lips would draw back into this grimace as if it were pronouncing the letters or you know, the sounds Z like when you say Z, do it right now, Like whatever you're doing, I don't care what you're doing, do it right now out loud. Go Z. You see how your your mouth forms when
you go as ze. It looks like apparently the grimace of a corpse. And so you have a lot of like evil and deathly and morbid things associated with that, like Pazoozu, the demon Bazoozu in The Exorcist or um. Yeah, of course he talks about this. Uh, this demon named zozo. Z is a weird word, but it's not always a you know, not always an evil word, but people have been afraid of it, and they've taken it that way. As a matter of fact, Narin named one of his
sons zach And look at the word. I think one of the most powerful words you could do at the end of of some kind of a spell, like if you just you know, and you shouldn't do this because there's too much baggage attached to it. But if there were no baggage, it feels very satisfying to say, shah zam. You know, it's got that z right in the middle, zam. If that were not associated with a comic book or or a cartoon or a movie or whatever I mean, you would be like, ah, that sounds like an awesome
magic word shazam. And you know, HP Lovecraft, he was always trying to come up with words that he thought matched sort of uncomfortable vibes that could be associated with aliens and interdimensional beings like Cthulu. He liked to take like he knew that from and our culture. You could take um like two or three consonants and put them together and that would throw us off. So like Cthulhu, I believe it's spelled like ct H's. It starts with
like cth We're not used to that. Usually we have a consonant and a vow or a vow and a consonant to to start most words. So if you have cth that you're like, oh, this sounds totally like a total something from a different world, right cthulhu. You know it sounds alien. So here, here's here's what I did. Okay. Um. I took all this information, all this stuff I've been thinking about, and I said, you know what, let me see if I can come up with a new magical word.
And at first I thought, well, maybe it should be simple, and then I thought, well, maybe it should should be complex. And then I thought, well, it's somehow it should be easy to remember. There should be some kind of I don't know, alliteration there. Um. And I sat around and I studied, and I just I couldn't quite come up with anything that sounded magical. And so I put the request out there to the universe. I asked the spirits. I said, give me some inspiration. Here have an angel
whisper a new magical word in my ear. And about an hour ago I got this word. And I don't think it's a great word, but I think it's a starting point. This word may suck, okay, but I figure we're going to do an experiment here, a mass experiment, and we're going to try it out. When we come back. I'm going to give you this new magical word and we are going to start using it, and then we are going to see what does or does not happen.
And from there we will start refining this process until we work together to come up with the new mac Daddy magical word. This is one of the fun things about having a podcast that people listen to all over the world. You can do crazy experiments like this. I'll tell you the word when we come back. I'm Joshua Pee Warren. You're listening to Strange Things on the iHeartRadio and Coast to Coast. Stay in PAMA Normal Podcast Network. I'll be back after these important messages. Welcome back to
Strange Things on the iHeartRadio and Coast to Coast. I am Paranormal Podcast Network. I'm your host, Joshua pe Warren, and this is the show where the unusual becomes usual. I kind of broke some of my own rules here with this because I was thinking like it should be simple and I should not have a connection to it.
It should, it should almost be like nonsense. But then I kind of realized that this is this is a harder mission than than you'd think, just like, come up with a magical word that doesn't have a connection to to know anything that you know, it's it's almost impossible because you associate every thing already. You know, human beings have been around for a long time, and it's hard to be like, all right, I've just manifested something brand
new and original. So here's here's the plan. Okay, So I am, I'm going to tell you this magical word and how we're gonna experiment with it, all of us. But I was going to do something simple like szam, But it turns out we're gonna start with a very complicated word, a word that has seven syllables. And I bet if I ask you right now to tell me a word with seven syllables, you'd have to think about
that for a while. We're gonna start here, and we're gonna see what happens, and then eventually all of you will experiment and I'll get that feedback and we'll keep going and keep going, and one day we're going to come up with a new super powerful magical work and hopefully it'll only be like two syllables. But okay, are you ready? Here we go. You might want to take out a piece of paper and write this down. This is going to scare the heck out of you as
soon as you hear it. But then I'm gonna spell it. Or you know, I said a piece of paper. But if you're able to take notes on your phone, fine, okay, here, here we are. I'm just gonna say it, agia tata zume, agia tata zume. Now here is how that is spelled. A G I A t A t o z o O m A y. So the idea is you finished your manifestation work and then you go ogia tata zume.
Or let's say that you're at a fancy restaurant and the chef or the bartender comes over and puts the finishing touch on the magnificent cocktail or dish, and you go agiam ojia tata zume. Now you see, some of you are just gonna be like, okay, I can't do this. I'm out. I'm out. That's okay. We're starting with the people who can participate at this level. Okay agia tatazume,
ajia tata zume. Now let me explain to you how that inspiration came to me earlier before you know, I was outside under the bright moon, and um, this is still what I'm about to tell you is still too literal for me that I'm taking baby steps because this
is hard. Uh okay. So I started playing the piano when I was a very young man, and one of my favorite pieces was the Moonlight Sonata and the most challenge and everybody knows the Doo Doo Doo Doo doo doo dude, like the beginning with where it's all slow and but there's this section in the middle called the presto agatato, the presto agatato where where it's super fast and so difficult, like I can't even imagine being able to play that. And so the first part of this
is agiatato. This word is it's it's not agatato or ajatato, it's agiatato. I've I've mixed it up a little bit, agiatato agiatatos which means agitation. Because when you're manifesting something you're not happy with how things are, you're trying to agitate them. You're trying to mix them up. Agiatato and then zoom, meaning like I'm shooting this thing out there, and then a is just like that one final punch Agia tato zume, agia tato zume. And there is a
lot of Italian inflection. But that's okay. Who cares you can't come up with the word that will not be interpreted a certain way. Let me just tell you. Beethoven, I believe, was a true wizard. You know. He was born in seventeen seventy. He died in eighteen twenty seven when he was fifty six years old. Born in Bonn, died in Vienna. If you don't know much about him, it doesn't hurt to watch the movie Immortal Beloved. That will give you. I mean, it's a very romanticized version
of his life, but it's a great movie. And he was a man who was tortured and yet he has become well immortal through his talent to manipulate tones and vibrations. He was a man who was a great composer who became deaf, yet achieved the impossible, creating powerful, world famous music even after he was deaf. It's been almost two hundred years since he died. He was fifty six when he died. As I said, around the age of twenty eight, he started having difficulty hearing, and he was stone deaf
by age forty four or forty five. And you've probably heard the Ode to Joy from Symphony number nine that he composed just a few years before he died. And you know, it is said that he had some kind of an abdominal element. Nobody's sure what happened to him,
but he was suffering a lot before he died. And according to one of the witnesses there, they say he died about five PM, and there was a flash of lightning and a clap of thunder, and then quote, Beethoven opened his eyes, lifted his right hand and looked up for several seconds with his fists clenched, and then not another breath, not a heartbeat more end quote. And then all these people came in and sort of like cutting
the locks of his hair off. And so anyway, this guy was deaf, but he was still so in touch with music that he created the Symphony number nine, which included the Ode to Joy, with is one of the greatest masterpieces of music in all of known human history, and that shows you how in touch he was with this relationship between vibrations and music and just you know, sounds and the whole thing we're talking about here. So again,
this is a little bit too literal. I'm still trying to separate myself from from the literal part of this, but I really can't at this point. And so therefore there you go. I there's a there's a bit of that in this word. Agia tatazume. Try it out. Anytime you need a little umph, a little extra help, a little luck, a little something over the next for over the foreseeable future, just say it out loud, Agia tatazume,
Agia tato zume, and let me know what happens. Anytime you need something to boost what's going on in your life, Agia tatazume. We're going to start there with the experiment, and we're gonna take it from there, and we're gonna see what happens. Now. I'm sorry if that is disappointing to you, because it's not, you know, like a super easy word, but I think you understand the point of the experiment. And now for something completely different, I've had
a really interesting evening. And that is because earlier today, earlier this evening here in Las Vegas, I told Lauren before we went out to dinner that I wanted to go to this relatively new shop I think they've been around about a year called Cemetery Pulp, and it's an oddity shop in Las Vegas. And they have like all the typical weird oddity stuff that oddity stores have, you know, things in jars and skulls and taxidermy and just you know,
morbid and all that. All that stuff I love. But they also combine it with like a comic book shop, so it's kind of like a freaks and geeks heaven there. And so we went over there tonight and we were walking around and I wasn't I mean, I have so much stuff. It's just like I don't need to buy anything else. I mean, it takes a lot to impress me. But they had this section with basically mystery boxes, and they call them box of Weirdness, so it's a it's
a box. They had one for twenty dollars and then one for seventy dollars, and I've never been there before, so I said, okay, I'll take one of these twenty dollars mystery boxes box of weirdness, And then I thought to myself, why don't I open this while I'm doing my podcast? And I have no idea what's going to be in here? If it's gonna be like really cheesy or if it's gonna be amazing. What are you going to get out of a twenty dollar mystery box at
an oddity shop in Las Vegas. Well, when we come back, you're gonna hear live so to speak, as I opened this thing and tell you what is inside. I'm Joshua Peane Warren. You're listening to Strange Things on the iHeartRadio and Coast to Coast am PARMA Normal Podcast Network, and I will be right back. Welcome back to the final segment of this edition of Strange Things on the iHeartRadio
and Coast to Coast am PARA Normal Podcast Network. I'm your host, Joshua Pee Warren, Ajia Tata Zome Bojia Tata Zume. How many of you are gonna master that one for the experiment? Well, we'll see. So, yes, I was at Cemetery Pulp, and I do not know the folks who own this place. They don't know me. I was just a stranger that walked in there with Lauren. I'm not being paid. There's like no relationship there whatsoever. And but I will tell you that the shop was really cool.
Everybody was super nice. The only thing that I honestly didn't really care for was that they have a gigantic albino Boa constrictor that I guess one of the owners took out of the case and was sort of sharing it around the shop with people. And yeah, a beautiful, a magnificent, amazing creature, but I'm just not a big
fan of snakes. And at one point I was just like looking into a display case and then I turned around and there's this huge snake next to me, and I maybe, I guess I'm just a pansy, but I just don't care for having a Boa constrictor like that, just kind of floating around the shop. And then there was a second boa constrictor in the back of the shop, but that one was in a case. And this is all despite the fact that I shook a rattlesnake rattler
for you at the beginning of this podcast. But so anyway, look, I'm telling you that because you're going to get an honest review of what's in this box. I have a ruler here. I measured it. It's a glossy black gift box and it is six inches tall and look about four inches wide. It's a really nice looking box, and it's got a top that slips right off, and there's kind of like a broad black ribbon around it that has gold trim and these gold skull faces all over it.
So I'm just gonna I think I can just slip this off. Yep. I didn't even have to untie it. And it says on the top box, oh weirdness, really cool looking sticker. So okay, I know my time here is limited in the show. I am opening it now. I've never done this before. The first thing I see is black tissue paper, so I'm gonna okay, so I'm getting the swif of like I don't know, kind of like a patruly kind of kind of smell. And the
very first thing that I see. Okay, So I'm looking in here right now, and there's actually a bunch of stuff in this twenty dollar box. The first thing I see is a big bone, so I'm gonna take this out and this okay, So this bone oh, where'd my ruler go? This looks like a jawbone of some kind about seven inch is long, and it's got a bunch of spaces for teeth one, two, three, four, five, six, set like fifteen. I don't know. I have no idea.
It's uh, it's bleached, and I get kind of a fishy vibe off of it, like this might be part of a fish jaw. It's got some little like pores in it. Already, this is this is looking really cool, I mean, like for twenty bucks. Yeah, this is awesome. I have no idea what this is, but I have a jaw of some kind of creature here, and this is cool enough that I will display this. Okay, next thing in the mystery Box of Weirdness from cemetery pulp. Let's see. Uh oh, okay, this is uh. I've never
seen this before. A it's a pencil, but it's called a plantable pencil. So this is like a very very thin pencil and it's got the little green recycle emblem on it. And on one end I can see the lead because it has not been sharpened. On the other end, there's like a little plastic bubble with so I guess it looks like it says sesame, So I guess there's
sesame seeds in here. That's pretty cool. So I guess what you would do is use this pencil all the way down to until you get to the sesame seeds and then you just throw it out in the in the yard and maybe you'll grow some some more sesame seeds. All right, that's cool, All right, Well, what's next? We have here? Oh, here is a pin. Oh this is cool. It's like, you know, it's a metal pin. Like it's in a blast in a plastic bag. So I'm not sure it's metal and I don't have time to open
it here it might be. I think it's about yeah, I'm it looks like a metal pin and it's a black cat with a white skull on top of it. All right, cool, all right? Next we have whoa, Here is a bracelet in a little baggy. And this bracelet looks like, um, I don't know if it is hemat tight, but it kind of looks like that. It's like a bunch of little, uh, dark silver beads. And like I said, I don't I don't know exactly what it's made out of, but it's it's it's got some weight to it, so
that's really nice. I think Lauren might like that. All right, cool, a little bracelet there. Next we have a little box inside what is this? Okay, So this is a box that is um kind of like a box of matches. And there is a picture of a man on the front and it says Kate in Satium setti and uh there there is some writing on here I don't recognize. Okay, I think this is incense. Let's see. You've got to cut it open here, gonna good knife here? Ah, come on, Yeah,
it definitely smells like incense. Um, and I think it's gonna be oh god, see this is you know, people usually do these kinds of things like on YouTube or whatever. But I'm the idiot. He's going on on a on a podcast. Yep. Uh. This is a little box that has those kind of little conge shaped uh instance things. So I guess that that's what I was smelling when I said I smelled something that was similar to pajuli. I'm not a big fan of that smell, by the way. Uh. Okay.
Next we have here a sucker. Oh man, okay, so this sucker, uh, this is a sucker that has like a it's a chocolate sucker on a stick and the the chocolate is shaped like, um, um, how do how do I phrase this? It's it's well, I couldn't put it on TV, and uh, it's it's it's kind of let me put it this way. It looks like a man's best friend. That that sounded stupid. Also, all right, um, what do we have next? There's like three more things in here. The next thing we have is a stone
of some kind. All right, let me look at this under my light and this m I don't know exactly what this stone is off the top of my head. It kind of looks like a piece of flint or something like that, but it is striated, it has it has actually kind of the pinkish color, and then there is sort of a gray stripe that runs around the middle of it. So I'm just not sure off the top of my head what that is. But imagine like a little chunk of flint that looks like that. Okay,
the next thing is a really cool die. You know you always hear of dice, Well, if you only have one, that's a die. So we have a die here, which is you know what people would use for role playing games. And let's see how many sides have one, two, three, four or five. Okay, so it's got ten faces on it. That's gonna be really helpful for me because I'm always doing you know, like experiments and stuff with gambling. And the last thing I thought I knew what this was. Yep,
oh boy. The last thing I have here is so it's about four inches long. This is a bone, and this is it's a very skinny arct bone, and it's the kind of bone that certain male animals have in their most precious places. I guess I think you know what I'm talking about. I know some people use them as toothpicks. Well, that was pretty cool for twenty bucks. I'm impressed. All Right, there you go, Mystery Bucks, the Claucus Goddess. Here it is the good Fortune Tom. That's
it for this edition of the show. Follow me on Twitter at Joshua pee Warren. Plus visit Joshua peewarren dot com to sign up for my free e newsletter to receive a free instant gift, and check out the cool stuff in the Curiosity Shop all at Joshua Peewarren dot com. I have a fun one lined up for you next time, I promise. So please tell all your friends to subscribe to this show and to always remember the Golden Rule.
Thank you for listening, Thank you, you for your interest in support, thank you for staying curious, and I We'll talk to you again soon. You've been listening to Strange Things on the iHeartRadio and Coast to Coast a UM paranormal podcast Network. Thanks for listening to the iHeartRadio and Coast to Coast and Paranormal Podcast Network. Make sure and check out all our shows on the iHeartRadio app or by going to iHeartRadio dot com