13. Sean Chris from Kill A Mockingbird Podcast - podcast episode cover

13. Sean Chris from Kill A Mockingbird Podcast

Sep 25, 20231 hr 55 minSeason 1Ep. 13
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Episode description

Oh the places we will go! ❤️We sure did and had a great time! We discussed everything from mental health to rising above challenges many of us face in this day and age. Come journey with us as we have a candid covo about it ALL with the amazing Sean Chris from Kill The MockingBirds Podcast. Lucky #13 is definitely worth the listen!A special thanks to our guest


This week Josh, Jason and Brennan join the Unfiltered Rise this week for a swapcast for Part 2 on Mormon Expose. This particular episode circles around the occult and masonic ties of not only Joseph Smith but also his family. Come listen to find out more!Eternally Grateful for Josh&Jason and Brennan! This episode was not only full of information but so fun as well!All Glory To GOD Every Single Day


Please know my podcast and its information presented are for entertainment only and never have any threat or violence to any nation,creed, color, religion etc ….


Sean Chris please like follow subscribe and listen


https://www.instagram.com/killthemockingbirdspodcast?igsh=MWhsaWVjaHpvM2Fvag==


SUBSCRIBE please help us grow we are small but trying to be mighty! I’d you can help us with our monthly expenses we would be very appreciative we also understand if not! @https://www.buymeacoffee.com/unfilteredEMuch Love to you all and ALL THE GLORY TO GOD!!!

Transcript

You're feeling a bit like Alice tumbling down the rabbit hole. Aren't you ashamed? No, I'm not. You think you are, lady. You take the blue pill, the story ends. You wake up in your bed and believe whatever you want. You take the red pill, you stay in Wonderland and I show you how deep the rabbit hole goes. I think. I'm entitled. You want answers? What? The truth? You can't handle the truth. I'm awake. Are you?

Let's go now to our new episode of The Unfiltered Rise With Me, Heidi Love. And welcome to another episode of The Unfiltered Rise. Today I have a special guest with me. How you doing today? I am good. How are you? Good Sean. Chris is with Kill the Mockingbirds podcast. Why don't you tell us all about that? Well, kill the mockingbirds. We're news, paranormal and conspiracies, meaning we try to touch everything, and we come at everything from a different

angle. Sometimes people aren't always ready for that. Like we love to challenge ideas. We think that we're against idolizing people, we're against. Like we tell people don't idolize us, don't idolize anybody. And sometimes, you know, what we like to say on the show is we can get people's butt cheeks a little tight because we say stuff that challenges their belief system. And they don't like that. So we will. That's pretty much what we do.

But with paranormal, with conspiracies, hidden history, news. Like we try to touch a little bit of everything, but we put our own and we do our own research. We look into everything and then we put it from our perspective. We go, we don't think necessarily we're right, but this is how we see it right now and like this. Is your spin on it? Yeah, our spin on it. It resonates with some people. And some people get angry and they write us long emails that

we don't even read. You're like, so waste your finger, finger spasms and don't write me that long e-mail because it ain't going to work. But we're also very lucky and fortunate. There's a lot of great people too that reach out to us and and thank us or sometimes they challenge us which we like. We go, yeah, challenge us. Maybe I am wrong maybe we have some evidence that I don't know about. So I think keeping it open mainly our show is like focused on challenging critically

thinking and. Really building your own self like we tell and breaking this whole idol worship. People worship celebrities, people worship politicians, they worship sports teams. Like, I mean, I love football, I watch all kinds of sports, but I'm like, you shouldn't let that dictate your whole life, your day. Like you shouldn't be angry because your team lost. But maybe I'm just saying that because my team always loses. So I'm just used to it and I'm just trying to get everybody on.

My Who's your team? I'm a Raider. Fan Oh boy. So I'm a Niners fan. We'll get. Got out of the way. Don't hate me. I'll tell you why I'm not even that into football anymore since the whole kneeling because it just it. I was just done and then of course it had to be the schmuck on my team. I'm not even going to say his name because it doesn't even deserve it. But The thing is, is my dad and me when when we were young, he said.

Pick your team on a Super Bowl. And it was my stepdad and he was really mean. And so I was, he was going for the Broncos. And it was when the Broncos played the Niners in the 80s and I said whoever you're not going for, that's who I and they've been my team ever since. So and they won. And I was like, yeah, and they killed him. Like they killed him and I was like like that. That's so That is how I. Got. Always show love, yeah. See, I thought a lot differently.

I was talking about web to Webber's way about that too. Like me and him disagree on that. But like the whole kneeling thing, like I like, I understand like Kaepernick and the end people stands against him. And I understand like the the propaganda when they see BLM, but I think people forget about the purolism that Americans

have. Like it's the war machine like and I'm not saying us Americans, I mean us the the our government is like throughout the world and when you see the stuff like we see that the NFL merged with like the military industrial complex and I think it was like in 99, two thousand. I was wrong. I told him it didn't start saying the pledge allegiance, but I was. It was more of like having that everybody out there together. Saying it was like you said it with the like crowd.

The players weren't out there at the time, but then ever since they had that contract, because the Army, the Navy, etcetera, etcetera, Marine Corps, they pay. Advertising fees to the NFL. And that's why we always see, like, hey, let's honor this veteran. And to me, that's a continuation of propaganda, whether like, hey man, we gotta go to war, man. You know, like, look at these poor guys. His legs are gone, man. His legs are gone. Like, all right.

And you don't even know like how that happened. He could have just got ran over because he didn't watch where he was going. And I always explain it like this like and my son, he was the first one to bring this to my intention when we got really into. I will say spirituality, not religion. When we started breaking away from that, he came home one day and he said, mom, I'm, I'm not saying the pledge anymore. And I was like the hell, you're not like everybody in our family

was in the military, you know? And he said no, because you you pledged to somebody other than God. He's like and I don't feel good about that but I'll stand. I said, well, your ass better not sit is all I know because I will make it raised because like my uncle was a Green Beret and my brother was in the Navy who's past and like we everybody like my whole family and yeah. My whole family is pretty, Not everybody, but pretty much I have. Like my dad was in Vietnam. He was a Marine.

Yeah, my grandpa was in World War 2. My grandma was in World War 2 like. Wait, go grandma. But I still think there's a lot of propaganda that is like pushing in people in like I study a lot of propaganda, like people's expertise are different, like a lot of people are cold or mine leans more to geopolitical slash propaganda and all that. So that's where I'm That's my realm. That's what I'm good at. So you're all about the Edward

Bernays? I was just gonna say Edward Bernays and just like all the stuff that we do and like. I understand, like having the military. I'm not saying like, oh, we shouldn't have military. But I think that sometimes us as Americans, we're foolish and we're like, yeah, we just just gotta support the troops and you're like, OK, look, like I'm not saying shit on the troops.

Like everything that happened, especially like my dad came back from Vietnam and then how he told us like you know, how they were treated and this and that. But it's like why we're in Vietnam in the 1st place, like because. We shouldn't have been there. And you know who started that? Do you know who started that? What the golf of Tonkin? Yeah, Do you know? It was B Johnson, right? But the person that helped execute it was the guy from the door's dad. Yeah, yeah.

Jim Morrison's. Jim Morrison's father. Yup. Yup. And I was blown away. Yeah, that's what I'm saying. So. It's just tough because I'm like, look it I've always been under the belief is there needs to be a declaration of war. If we're going to go to war, it has to be a declaration. Congress needs to say Congress then to the same. In it, yes. Yes. But after 9-11, after we had all that BS happened. What? What happened? The the Patriot Act.

And then Now the president gets to decide when we go to. Oh yeah, so bad. I don't agree with that at all. And it doesn't mean I'm any less patriotic. Like, I absolutely love the troops. I absolutely love this country. I absolutely love, you know, everything that that represents. But it represents something different now. So it's hard to. Well, I I would. Argue that it always have,

right? But like so many personally like, people always think like for me like, oh, you must say I don't hate America. Let's not say that I love America. I'm from here like I'm proud to be an American. But to close our eyes to the propaganda that has, like, rained upon us. For decades and centuries since. Our initiation when we started. And if you don't, if you look into the secret societies that are involved in stuff and to. That's 100% Freemason right

there, 100%. Well, this country, this country was founded on Freemasonry, period. And people think it was founded out of religious freedom. But that was just a a show. That was just the vice that they put it under so that it could look good. It was actually about the Freemasons wanting their religious socalled, religious freedom to practice what they were doing and. I mean, there's not a place in the United States. I mean, I think every big city

has a Mason's lodge. Like it's very widespread. Oh yeah, they're everywhere, man. I see. I see I'm going to work all the time. But my my cohost is a former Mason. He was in that and he he there is a lot of insight to like. I think that's again where we get trapped in these cycles and what we call them, like these sheep mentality of where like you follow one thing you heard. Everybody thinks like of COVID and they're like, oh, people

were in master sheep. I'm like, well, you watching 1 documentary on Flat Earth. Or where did you get your information? Yeah, exactly. And not letting it be challenged, you're like, oh, this is how it has to be like the people I like is like, you're not going to get around. I'm not going to get around. I'm going to get it wrong most of the time. But when we're constantly trying to learn and figure it out and be like, OK, I could see this, I could move things around.

There's a lot of people that are deep rooted and whether it be Flat Earth. Where, whether it be patriotism, there's people that like a lot. I was criticizing a lot of the conservatives because they were like, oh, I can't believe all these liberals are wearing masks. I said I can't believe that you guys didn't make a fuss when TSA took over. Now we all have to go through metal detectors and have to get patted down. You didn't say nothing then. It's because at that time they

use that fear against them. And I'm not mad at them either because I understand it was fear to manipulate you to get to this point. But. The fact that you can't see that you did that and this, they're doing the same thing to somebody else and you're getting angry over it. That's where I have an issue. I'm like you're doing the same thing and they, but they. Can't for a different for a different reason. A different fear because they're going to they're going to

manipulate you off your fear. I mean, that's what the devil does. That's why to me, I always tell people too, because there's a lot of people that give a little bit. Too much credence to the devil, like they're like oh. Man, just. Like I'm like I don't care I'm not scared of that like why would you man if you believe in God like how could you possibly be scared of it. I'm not scared of any demon like I tell them all like they could all catch these hands.

An ephalum Alistair Crowley like a demon the devil like they could all catch the hands like because at the end of the day I'm protected and and to me there's even like. These people that go to church every Sunday, like, I don't go to church. That's just not my thing. I don't, I don't criticize people. I think everybody finds their own way. But I'm like if you believe in God. Don't be scared. Man, you should be. You should be like I'm. Not. I'm scared. Where's your faith?

Where's your faith? If you believe, where's your faith? You know, if you believe. And even even on the flip side of that, like a lot of people will say, oh, I'm an atheist, but I believe in demons. I'm like that's not possible. Because if you don't believe in God, you can't believe in demons. You know, like, what? Wait. And and I, I mean, I've been in arguments with different people, but I'm always like, here's my thing, this is like an analogy

for nursing. I've been a nurse 24 years and I always anybody that's been a nurse that long will tell you the scariest nurse there ever is is a nurse that thinks she knows everything. Same with people, when your mind is so set. That you cannot be changed. No matter how good the argument is, no matter how much study somebody presents that you are not growing anymore, you're stagnant and you have to be able to be. Things change, the world changes, we change, life

changes. You have to be able to learn. Always. Or you're burnt out, I tell like, like because with nurses, teachers, cops. There's a couple other fields that like deal with public, you know, like social workers, you're constantly dealing with people, you get burnt out. You you get Nurse Ratchet, yeah. Is. That on on One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, you know. Yeah, that's right. That's right, nurse. Ratchet, once you get to that point, you got recognizing, you got you got to try.

To step back yourself because. You're not. You're doing more harm than good. And that's and that doesn't mean that you were always thinking that way. It's because of circumstance. Or maybe you need to go to a different facility or you need some kind of change because your rut that you're in and you're getting the same type of patience. Cops, the same thing happens with cops, like they they get into this like cycle and then they hate their job.

They hate their areas and then they're angry and then they abuse their powers. And that's not the only issue. But I'm saying that's one of them and. I always tell people like, you gotta recognize it. It's not easy though, like you have to constantly work. If you're like, oh man, I'm kinda, I can see that I'm kinda not acting right right now, but. People are, people are like,

fearful to change too. And that's the problem is, I think that people are so scared to change sometimes they'll stay where they hate, like absolutely hate when you don't know what's gonna open for you. Like, I mean, that's a completely different. Like a podcasting. I never thought that I would do podcasting. I I didn't know how to do the computer things. None of it. It fell on to me.

It was I felt like it was called, you know, so I stepped up. But The thing is, is like, if I had been scared and just been like, well, I don't know how to do that, then I wouldn't be talking to you right now. Yeah, that's true. You know, yeah, that you just gotta like, do it, but. That is true. People are stuck with change cuz and people get into this

miserable like rut. Not even just like in those fields, in every field, like even in my field in warehousing and like people get mad at me cuz I'm like a positive person like and that doesn't mean that I'm not like like mad so. Everybody has a bad day. But I'm always like when people ask me like, how are you? I'm like, good, always good. Like, I'm always good. And like, they're like, oh, I used to say like, it'll be all right. Like it'll be all right. Like there's. Oh man. You.

You've got like 50 pumps. We need to pack. We only got. It'll be all right. Like to me. I'm not going to stress over something I can't control like that. Doesn't make sense to me, but. People also don't like, to me, I think they're lame, like I think they don't have anything else in their lives. So they put so much into this, like drama at work and I'm like, man, just go get like a hobby or like. You're you're. Going to make it worse? You're going to make it worse?

Yeah. You have nothing else because you're you're especially people that are in a miserable relationship, whether it's like married or boyfriend, girlfriend, and then you're at a job you ate. It's like you have no in between. It's a double. You know, you're like, I guess taking a shower or using the restroom is your only piece, if anything. And I'm like, man, you got to get out of that. But you are right. People are so fearful of change. I see it constantly like.

Like right now my company is closing. I don't know. Well, I haven't signed any contracts because they said I couldn't. I'm not talking bad about them, right? No, but it's stuff is changing. Right. No, they're closing. Right. And like, to me, I'm like, I don't care, man. I've been there five years. I'm just like, it is what it is. I'm trying to get out as much money out of it as I can at this moment. But my boss, on the other hand, he's been there 17 years, He's freaking out.

He's like, oh man, like he's so mad. Like, I can't believe that because he saw today, they emailed and they were like, oh, Karen, da da da like I don't. Somebody's somebody's retiring and she's there for 25 years and they're having a party for her and he's like, nobody's having a party for me. And like he wants them to like like he's just so mad about it. And I'm just like, who cares, man? Like I don't care like. If you want to party, throw your own party.

Yeah, I was like, man, I'm trying to like, hopefully, like get this because they're giving us a little severance package, which is nothing because it's like we have to work for it. Like we literally have to move the whole warehouse to get the money, but. It is what it is. I'm like, I'm trying to find it so I can like, hey, this might be a great thing. Maybe I don't have to go back to work after this and I just continuously just do podcasting.

That would have no yeah cuz it pushes you against in a corner where you're like whoop you gotta sink or swim, you know what I mean? Yep, that's. You gotta well, there you. Have that mentality. There's nothing like you said if you can't do anything about it. Like my dad used to say things to me, like I used to think he was a real jerk, like, but now I know that and he's passed and now I know he was like one of the smartest people I ever knew. His favorite thing was it is what it is.

The other part was he would say, well, you'll either either get over it or you won't because it's all about your mental. You know you can choose to let this bother you all day, like you said at work. Or for the next however long you have at that place. Or you can be proactive. Maybe you're going to get a better job. Maybe you're going to have a better, you know, whatever you. Have no clue. That's why you say that, cuz like, that's what I showed my boss today.

I don't know if you know this Navy SEAL dude, Jocko Jocko. He has a podcast. I don't know if you've ever seen this podcast. Well, he has this little segment. He's been on like Joe Rogan and stuff. He's like a Navy SEAL from SEAL Team Three, I think. And he's really motivational like and he was just saying like. That one of his, like, you know, like guys under him was always coming up with problems and he'd be like, aw, man, you know, car broke down. He'd be like, good.

And then he was like, tell me nothing and he'd be like, good. And then he would be like, he came again with another big problem. And he's like, how did he even want to tell you? And he's like, why? He's like, because I already know what you're going to say. He's like, what am I going to say? He's going to say it's good. Why is it good? He said, you know, the mission got postponed. Good. Gives me more, gives me more time to prepare. Hey, we didn't get this tactical shit. OK, good.

Now I can go focus on this. You're looking at the negative aspect of it of like, oh, now I can't go here, but you're not

able to see. With hindsight it's easier to see, but it's driving you into a direction and through time in your experience we should learn like when we're in our 20s and our teenage, like I get it like everything's end of the world like, but now that once we get some experience like we're like, OK. Let me try to change for that And then that's part of the problem too is people are not learning from their their lessons in life and they're

focusing on the negativity. They have to really be like it's going to get better. That doesn't mean that you losing your job like the next day you're going to get the your dream job. No, but it could go somewhere into that direction. You're you're going to find this and find that and is if you're looking for it and you're looking in that negative way of like oh, I'm never going to get anything. You're not. You're you're going to get back into a miserable hole and it's

going to suck you down there. It just got to be positive, like, and I get it like, it's not easy. Like I don't wake up and be like, oh, I love my job. I I don't like. I mean, but I don't hate it either though. I'm just like, it's a place I go to get money. It's not like where I want to do. It's not your. It's not your dream, yeah. Yeah, not at all. It's not my end point. And then you got to establish in your mind of where you're like, this is just the place I get

money. I am not loyal to this company. This is not my company. My company is me, Sean. That's it. So as they can choose to fire me anytime I can. Also choose to leave. At anytime, you know, just people get stuck in this oldfashioned way and that's why I think it's part of the propaganda and we pass it down through time where they're like, you got to give your two weeks notice, you know, don't job hop, you know, you got to stay with no, you don't like go where the

money's. At I don't even think that matters anymore because now. Nowadays they don't even look at that stuff like, I mean, like you would think they would, but they don't. And I mean, I think that people have to start seeing, see, this is all part of what they want us to feel trapped. And they want us to feel hopeless and they want us to feel like anxious. And all this all the time. So then what does it do? It creates suicidal patterns. It creates anxiety patterns.

It creates misery patterns. It. And then the same person that won't leave their bad job, won't leave their bad wife or girlfriend. And I'm not saying you should just do that like on a drop of a hat, but I mean, if you really have been at something, like, say you've been with somebody a good three years and it is miserable and not getting better. It's not going to get better. Like unless you go to therapy or do something and see a real change and set a goal.

Like by this day, if crap is not done and different, not perfect, but different, then we're we're stagnant. What are you doing? Like you're sitting your wills. If you're going and they're not growing with you, it's impossible for you guys to have a fulfilled relationship because. And you don't hate the person. That's the thing too is there's people still resentment of like look I don't I'm not hateful for anybody That because I know I've done my part. I'm not an Angel.

I've done plenty of stuff like, you know it goes back and forth. We all have our like moments of being mad. They're being mad. Yeah it takes 2. But you also have to recognize OK that's cool. But this person taught me this. Hey this showed me there's three qualities in this person that I'd wanted somebody else and then there's five. I would never wanted somebody there. Each person is giving you some

more data to put in your. Well, everybody wants to find love and they're like, I love my soul mate. And I'm not saying that there isn't no such thing as soul mate. I have no idea but what I'm. Saying is, well, sometimes soul mates are toxic, Sometimes you can love everything about the person and they are slowly killing you. Or fast depends. But you can step apart from it and say OK, I am ride or die for this human being. I'm everything to this human

being. And sometimes there's just not. Sometimes, well, it's also the not only that you're not growing together, but the timing, right? So they're timing. They're time for them to hit these certain plateaus. You're already ahead of them, and it's hard to, it's hard to mix together because then they're resentful for you. It's for being either ahead of them or behind them. Each person is getting resentful. And then what? It's people have terrible

communication. And some of the stuff that's. Huge. That's you have to be able to be. Good at communicating. And I any of us can be like, but if you consciously make sure like, hey, I need to communicate whether they like to hear it or not, you gotta be like, hey, set up your boundaries, you know? Hey, I don't like when people do this. I don't like this. I like to be. Set all your boundaries, do your things. And just like, stop taking it so personal.

It's not personal. We get so full with emotions where we're like, oh, they're hurting me. It's not that it's not that deep even. It's even. If it is, even if it is that deep, here's the thing, People oftentimes deal with it passive aggressively because we especially men here. This is for men. I'm not a man, but I I am a psychology nurse and have been for six years now. Most of my career has been in medical, like trauma, all that stuff. But, but the last six years I've

been psych. So I see people say okay, well, you're unhappy in this, this and this. Did you tell them? Well, no. Well, why not? I'm afraid they'll leave me, or I'm afraid of this, or I'm afraid of that. Or they're passive aggressive, which is worse because then you're literally making the other person wonder what's really happening, and then they're unsure of themselves, and it leads to infidelity. It leads to lies, and not every time because some people are truly loyal, which is great,

because they should. Be yeah. But it could lead to domestic violence. It could lead to and in situations that people would never be in. Right. Because it it's a ticking time bomb and and I agree that a lot of men and I've been one of those people that were like you'll put up with stuff so you're like what happens is. Is you're putting up with certain things, right. Little things, right? Like, oh man, I hate when they put the toothbrush over here, but I'm not going to say

anything. And then and then you you have all these little things stack up and then they come to you like they're telling you they're but you haven't told them your boundaries. But then they go, hey, I don't like when you put the toothpaste over here and you're like and then you're in your head like, really, man, I've been putting. Aside this whole. Time all the crap that you've been doing right instead of openly having the conversation

and being like, well, this. This kind of bothers me even though. Like now I'm really like I'm. It's not a favor. It's not a favor to them. Like, if people only understood, like in their heart they're thinking, look, I did this as a favor to you. I didn't say anything. Well, you just sabotaged your own self. Because if that really bothered you and I didn't know for four years, that's stupid. That's literally stupid. If it is something you. Really. Yeah, because how can?

You adjust. If you can't, how can you? Somebody adjust to things of that nature, but I think also to men. And feel like if they say stuff, they're weak like, oh, I have to like just let the woman do this. There's there's this unwritten rule of where men are supposed to be like, hey, like, you know, you have happy wife, happy life. You know what I mean? Like that's. So I think people get too much into that And just like, no, let's communicate, hey, stop doing this.

And sometimes could it be a little bit of aggressive like as they get take a person, we take and then we go, hey. Let's stop. Let's chill. We'll come back to this like, obviously like and and and not get into heated moments. But to me, that's all with experience and learning. Like, I get it. When you're if you're 17 and you're 20 years old, you're probably gonna encounter some of that stuff, unfortunately. Like, unless you've already done the work.

Because if you haven't done work for yourself, you have to look within yourself. Because the problem is, maybe that stuff bothers me, right? I It bothers me. I have to fix it. I have to figure what, like that's what's wrong with society right now is they're like, oh, that triggers me. Then you need to work on your triggers. That's not my job to figure out your triggers. You have to figure out why triggers you and what you could do to stop it.

And they use that word far too much, because a true trigger, like a true like a PTSD trigger, you cannot control. So it's different. You couldn't say to them. That triggers me, because you've already. Gone into you're weird. I work with people that have come out of the military or are in the military actively, and I myself have actual real PTSD. When that happens to you, there's no warning. You don't get to warn somebody like you triggered me. It's already done. Sign. Totally.

You know. Because. Yeah, I'm like bipolarish or less diagnosed like, but I don't know if that's, it's really hard to figure out diagnosis, but I do know that I have like times where I can. Just like as and I don't know that it's coming exactly. Well you can start seeing a little bit if you train yourself at over time of like, hey, I think I don't know what's coming but something's weird like once you start hey, something's off.

Once you get into that mindset of like, hey something, I'm off right now. And I've been like. Yeah, I've been way more conscious of myself in the last probably like 5-6 years where I'm like, OK, wait a second, what are you doing? Why are you doing that? Hey, you're kind of leaning this way. What? What's going on like? I'm having conversations with myself because I'm looking at myself and be like, hey man, at the end of the. Day I have to we need. To yeah, we need to all do that.

And then there's rules like you said about boundaries like with me and my husband says I do have that PTSD that can trigger, but it's rare triggers are not as off unless you're just fairly out of combat or something. But like, I'll tell him hey. You can say whatever you want to me. You can yell at me, do it from this far away. Because if you get in my face to the point where I feel threatened, that's where we're going to have a problem, you know, because I'm a child of abuse.

So you can't do that to me because then I go into fight or flight mode and and you don't know what's going to unleash. So let's not do that like. You. Well, that's you think. Yeah, that's like it. Yeah, he used to think. Oh well, you just. Can say whatever you want and I can't. I'm like, no, no, no, no, no. You can say as crappy because I I'm the queen of shit talk when I'm mad. So I'm like, you can say it from over there and be as just as

negative, whatever. But also like you have to make it feel safe, you know, like and then I'm fine, then I'm fine. Like, yeah, I'm still going to be mad, but I'm not like crazy like PTSD trigger crazy like. You don't want to see that me, you know that's. I've worked, see, I used to be like that big time, like literally like to a point where I would black out and be like like who knows what's going to happen. But been working like I had, I had like worked on it for a lot in the last.

Like 10, even 15 years. But like it was going good and then like probably about seven years ago, like I had like kind of close to that and then that's when you I had to reevaluate and be like, OK, what am I now? I'm just more conscious. And I'm trying to like not stay down. Like the problem is too is that people stay down too long. You'd be like, hey, yeah and what would it give me? So now I analyze and it was cool and. Communicate it. Communicate. It's why I. Communicated.

Like I tell them, yeah, I'm like, hey this, if you spit on me, we're gonna have a problem. You know, like even. Yeah, I can't. I can't. And then if you. Because I was raised in a physically mentally abusive home, and he was raised like Beaver Cleaver, and nobody ever even called each other a bad name. So, like what? My idea of bat bad. Is very different from his idea

of bad. So like you have to put that that into it because, like, I didn't understand that because I'm like, So what if I called you name? I'll make up 10 new names. I don't care. And like I was called out seven times before I was 4. You know, like, to me it's irrelevant, but to him it isn't. And so I still have to make that in my mind like, oh, that, that. Yeah, but you you will change it and then like where you go, OK, my bad. I, I And then there's going to.

Times that you're still going to like, you might go great and not say and you're conscious of it, and then you might do it again. But then that's when you step back and be like, hey, that is my fault and in a true sincere apology. And there is a we have to account for emotions. It happens like and that's why it's a work in progress. Like no marriage or any relationship is not just going to last. You have to work at it. You have to. Both parties have to. Actively. Work to try.

To make it happen or it's going to win. One lacks off. That's what happens. Like that's why it falls apart or with because when one's like I'm over it, then the other one's going crazy, like why are they, what's going on with it? What are they doing it? And then, you know, they have their different ways of like maybe they're out more or maybe they're just like not, you know, like whatever, Like, you know. Or locked up like in their. In their room? Yeah, like.

Which some of us that's like a trigger for me, like if I don't know what's wrong and I'm like. Okay, cuz cuz when you come from unpredictable background, you wanna know what's up. Like I don't wanna hear like you're mad at me and we'll talk in four days. Like that's gonna kill me, you know? But you have to also that's their boundary. Then you have to like accept that and but you know then you mean in the middle like, right. You were like yeah, that really drives me crazy.

Can we. So then you go, maybe we don't wait four days, but can we wait 24 hours a day, 12. Hours or something? You know what I mean? Like, whatever. Let's cool down. We need a cool down period, but then you go, I need a cool down period. But then we won't make it 4 days, right? We'll be like, hey, we'll make it in a day or whatever. That works for us. It's just a work in progress. And I think too many people want this instant gratification, so it's with everything.

So much because of social media, because what do we get? It's a dopamine release. You get that, like, you get that share, you get that this, you get that that. And even though here we are as podcasters, I mean on social media, I use it now mainly for networking. Like I'm not all about like, oh, I got. 14 likes and I feel so special. Like now I'm trying to get a message out. I hope people get it. I'm trying to spread love, you know, understanding.

I'm trying to talk about what happened to me or whatever to help and why not. Not for myself. I totally just want to help people. That's like my whole thing is like okay. All these bad things have happened in my life. Like you said, how can you learn from it? How can you change it? How can you help it? And one of the biggest catalysts for my changes was getting out of a really horrible, cultish religion and then also the death of some family members of mine that were just so bad.

And then I almost died myself. So I think when you and I don't know if you've almost died, because you seem like you maybe might have. Because I have people, I get that. People, people that have done that, gotten close to the like death, have some kind or it was some earth shattering thing. They change mentally. They're completely different afterward, I feel. Because you get to that point where you're like really at that day when I had radiation, like none of this other stuff

mattered. Facebook. All this other crap like friends, like, I just wanted to live, you know? Or when I got sick last year and I almost died again. I'm I'm really ineffective at dying, but I've almost died a lot. And I'm alright, right? I'm like, OK, I'm OK. But like even when it's happening, I'm like, OK, I'm kind of like you, like everybody last year was like, this is really serious and I had a PICC line in, I had an infection go. I had back surgery that was pretty.

Like routine back surgery and it and it didn't go good. And I got actually an infection inside my spinal cord, which is like I got osteomyelitis in my in my spine. And so I had over like 1200 Cc's of infection drained from inside my spinal cord. And so it was bad. Really scary, really scary and everybody was freaking out. I mean, I get it. But I was like one day I just had enough and I just looked at both of them and low key, I wrote notes to everyone because I was like maybe I'm going to

talk, you know. But I was like I was like, listen, until it's for sure, we're just going to wake up every day and do our best that day because there's nothing else we can do. Like everything we can do is happening and and we can't do anything more. So just stop. Like you guys are stressing me out and I don't need that right now. You know, like if you're yeah, if you're already sick and.

Stuff like that's the last thing you need to hear is like, oh, by the way, you might die like, yeah, I I fucking like, excuse my language, I know, you know? That that is that is like detrimental because like I've said it before, but like my. One of my old good friends growing up, his dad had Ms. and he was fighting and he was doing great. And then they were like, man, you got a week to live. He literally died the next day because they broke his.

It broke his will because he was doing everything to like fight it and then like they broke his will. Now there's other people though. Like I had another friend, Joe Jose, he passed away and like I was in there, but I heard about it. He like, was he had. What's it called? Like stomach cancer. It's like one of the worst. Like he was already staged like 4. Like when he found out he died. He died at home. They said that like it took him like 3 days to die. They're like he would, like they

thought he was dead. No pose, he'd come back. Still fight? Yeah, he's such a stuff. Like knowing him, he's one of the most stubborn people. Like he's just like that. And he's it's funny because he's like, he's like she was short but like really stocky and he's just like a bull, like a bull strong. Yeah, he's just a strong guy, but. I think, like, I don't necessarily think that me being close to death, but I've been around death my whole life. I've seen from like from the early age.

My my sister died when I was like 11. My dad died when I was 12. Like I had like uncles, aunts, friends. Like before I was probably 21, I had already been to over 20 few. So you you've been through it and that's what it it's like that change in you that.

I mean, after you go through something earth shattering like that, like it really does make you, I think, easier to forgive because you don't want to, you don't want to hold on to things that, you know, maybe this person won't be here tomorrow. Like, I don't want to have these kind of feelings, you know, or or maybe this or maybe that. And it changed the way I thought mentally. Like, I think after my brother died, it really hit me because. And so we'll talk about that.

My brother died of an accidental overdose. I wanted to share this story and actually it was related to Ssri's funny enough because he actually was an addict. And then he was an addict because he hurt his knees and had been going to the VA and all the things that they gave him plenty of medication. Well then they cut him off because he went to work loaded and they were like and they they reported it. So okay, they cut him cold Turkey, which is not a good idea.

They didn't sub him off, they didn't send him anywhere, all this stuff. So like they he was doing Okish. He would get things from people, but it was never his drug of choice because it was Oxy that was his drug of choice. However, Oxys are freaking expensive if you don't have a prescription. And so he was having to, you know, reach for whatever he could get his hands on. Which led him into a I feel I am really passionate about this. I I feel like. OK, the narcotics get a bad rap.

Because here's the thing, even when he was doing 430, smashed up his nose at a time, he was pretty safe. Like I never seen him, not off. I never seen him weird. I never seen him any of that until the benzos got involved. And as soon as the benzos got involved because they are cheap, then things started getting weird. You know, and he was doing the nods and all the weird stuff.

And here's the problem, the ambulances, now, I don't know about where you're from, but here where I'm at, they don't carry the reversal agent for the benzos, which is called Romazecon. Everybody knows about Narcan. It's been pushed like nobody's business. You can go to a pharmacy and get some right now and it's no big deal. But the Romazecon is extremely expensive. And they don't routinely carry it on EMS unless they've changed it in the last six years.

So they found him down at home, gave him Narcan. Of course, that didn't work because he had other things in his system now. He didn't even die of his drug of choice. He went to the hospital and they gave him some Remeron for sleep. And it's actually an antidepressant and it's not a very good one. And they quit using it for that years ago, but they use it for sleep now. And it's not so good, just like the Benzos because it builds up in your system.

So the Benzos, you could take a Xanax today, and if you took one four days ago, it can hit you a lot different than it did that first time. So you can have a completely different experience and seem like completely out of it, even though you were fine the last time you took it. So it just has that cumulative effect. So he took that and he took the pill to go to sleep. And then I bet he could. Now I'm guessing here, but it wasn't enough to kill him. Like he didn't take a bottle.

He took two. They counted them, you know, because they have to do an investigation because he was young, he was 37. And so they checked it all out. And not nothing in his system would have killed him, but all of it together killed him. And then on, yeah. And then on top of it, he only took two. But then he had a pulmonary valve defect that he didn't know about. He was a heavy smoker, and he had COPD, so he went to sleep and never woke up.

You know, Which I'm not saying is a horrible way to die, but it was sure bad for all of us. You. Know of course, yeah, that's the the hardest part like is the people afterwards, because obviously like. In retrospect, you could be like, yeah, well, they we're going through a lot. Or, you know, when people are

sick and they're like pain. I think what some of the worst, the hardest deaths are like car accidents just because they're so or heart attacks even sometimes because they're so sudden and you're like, wait, what? Like when someone's sick, like even that, for instance, you weren't expecting it, right? Like when someone's sick and they're like, man, like unfortunately. They're at the hospital. We knew he had an issue. You knew what, There was a possibility.

But again, it's not the same as someone in bed rest where you're like, hey, it's in any minute, two months, three months, four months from now, it's going to happen right at yours. You still have like a lean of hope, like maybe not, you know, hey, maybe you could turn it around any second. You could turn because it's just as easy as we could turn bad, we could turn it around. So yes, I think that. But my dad died of a sudden heart attack, like what you're saying. And he was sick.

Ish. He was young, though. He was only 62. And but he was diabetic his whole life and since he was like 8 years old. But even though I knew he was like it, ill, he, I mean, he functioned, you know, and that heart attack hit me so hard. Like, I mean, one night he was there and I missed his phone call, and the next day he was just dead, You know, that was terrible. And I mean, it just messes with

you mentally, to the point. And then actually my dad, my brother, we had a whole bunch of people die that year, kind of like what you said. So And then my exhusband and me are pretty tight and cool. His wife died very suddenly. She was sick, but she had a muscle disorder and they were like working on it and no big deal.

I mean it was like they knew she was sick but not like dying, you know, And they did a tap of her muscle and then she drove home and I think the amount of time it just she threw a clot because she didn't even call for 911. He went to work that day and came home and she was dead like on the cat, like. And no, no, I mean that's completely that was so hard. Even though she wasn't close to me, she was my friend. But my children really loved her. And they called. Yeah, it was.

And then my brother died 2 weeks later. And so and then it was just a cascade. And that's one thing that I don't think people always realize with like his wasn't a suicide, but like it, it really messes people up. Because then see what happens is he and you don't think about this when you're using, you don't think about this when you're suicidal. Here's the thing that happened. His daughter found him. She was 12 then. That messed her up.

Then she had to go live with her mom, who she didn't even know. Her mom hadn't been in her life since she was 10, and she's 12, So she gets ripped away from her whole family. She has to go back there. Well, that puts pressure on the mom. And she already had like psychiatric stuff. And she felt guilty about my brother because they didn't make it work in their marriage or

whatever. And she kills herself within a year, you know, So, like this pain gets passed down from person, whether it's purposeful or not, Death is, is something that goes throughout more than one person. You're going to hurt somebody for sure and suicide though. It's kind of you got to. But you got to remember like I always try because I have friends like you know they have commit. Suicide and the other friends are like. Man, they were so selfish.

They were. So I'm like, yeah, but you got to remember, like suicide is. Like that it's a split. Thought like it's. Not it's not like if you had us more time to think about it, you wouldn't do it. But at that moment, like if you put a gun to your head, if you take this certain amount of pills or you get you drive it to, it's it's a split decision. You made it and it's over and over. Like you don't get a chance to like cuz you're like feeling whatever sadness or whatever.

Like if I do this this solves my problem and you just do it. You you didn't give yourself. You're not thinking. About it, well, you're already mentally and not a good place. So I always tell people, like, it's not necessarily selfish, but I always tell people remember this because my uncle passed away. It was either suicide. They they either had a fight over the gun or it was suicide. I'm saying from the trajectory of the gun, because my uncle was a Sundowner. Do you know what that is?

So he was like a Hell's Angel. Yeah. And he was like a top top. So when I watched Sons of Anarchy, I'm like that. That really happens. You know, and so he was at the top, top for a long time and so he wouldn't have missed, is what I'm saying. If he was going to shoot himself, he wouldn't know how,

you know. So I think they were arguing and the gun went off, in my opinion, you know, whatever they ruled it, however they ruled it. But then, you know, shortly after that his exwife dies of an overdose because she's sad because she's still kind of probably loved him and some. They had a child together and everything. And then after that his, his current wife dies of a drug overdose within another year after that.

And then here's his children left to hold all the pain, all the stuff, and they did not deal with it well. Addiction comes into play, all these things come into play and then they have kids and same thing. So I'm like, you really have to get through to people. It's not about the split decision. We have to educate beforehand that hey, This is why we care. You may not care, but This is why.

The one thing that people don't, so everybody's like, hey, we got to watch and make sure that they're OK and and not people feeling sad. But the one thing I think is that it's impulse control, because it's an impulse. It's not like you're not thinking this out, You're just going there and like, boom, it's over. So like, it's more working on impulse control. And they don't teach that kind of stuff. They're just like, hey man, take some pills or hey, you're sad,

Don't be sad, be happy. You got to figure out what's making you upset and why you're like that. But if you have poor impulse control of that, yeah. There you go. Control. You're going to probably be more susceptible to be in that kind of situation because you're going to feel bad. You're going to feel bad at times and and you're right, like sometimes that can't help maybe to with the impulse because I

was very impulsive, but like. Especially like see for me it was different because a lot of this happened when I was younger. So right I I didn't not. I have now the the, the appearance of like Oh yeah, you know I have the experience I learned. But I had to go a long messed up problem because. It was not even like to the point where like I told people, like I was at a point where I didn't even kept like you know how people are like, oh, I'm atheist.

I don't believe it. I wasn't even like that. I was like, I hated God. Like, I don't feel like I would pray just to cuss them out. Like, oh, just don't think that I had something to say you. Know what I mean? Because I feel you're going to listen today. Yeah, I felt like everything was intentional. Like, oh, you must hate me. Like just just like. Just out of like. Pure. Like, not just sadness, but like, aggravation and anxiety.

Yeah. Not knowing like, one of the, for me personally, one of the craziest things I did say in one of my songs before, but the craziest thing to me is imagine being 12 years old. And like my dad, he had hepatitis C so he was sick for a while. Like it was in the hospital. Like, you know, it was going back and forth and he, he finally like was like kind of like probably a few weeks before it passed or something. I go in to visit him. He doesn't even know who I am.

He's like, who's that? Like telling my mom like, hey, who's that like? And then you're just like, what? Like, even though obviously, like in my respect, like I'm like. But. I I mean, of course, like, I would not want, like all those people that I cared about to go. But I understand that I wouldn't be the person I am today if these things didn't happen. Even like relationships I had. Like, like I said, like, I really have no hate for any of those people because.

They didn't really do anything to me, like, right. It was really me doing it because at any point I could have talked. I could have spoke up or I could have said I don't like this or I could have left right? Or I could. It's because I was. So for me that I learned, is that like because so many people died when I was young. Relationships. It was like detrimental, like if you're gonna leave because I'm like, I can't have another abandonment.

Cuz I'm like, it's one thing if you die because then there's nothing we could do, but you're just gonna leave. And sometimes I wouldn't. And the weird thing to me that I learned over the years is like. It's not even necessary that I would want to continue this relation. It's just like, I couldn't have them leave. It's just like a weird thing. And I think it was just all psychological. And then you grow through it,

right? You go through the growing pain because I'm like, I need this person because I know I'm nothing if I don't have this person. And then you realize, well, I need to do that for myself. I need to think about those and like how I think of those people, but also think of myself like that. And and that's part of the problem that I had was that I didn't have a lot of like love for myself, which I had to Start learning how to do like because then.

I'm just chasing it, right? Like I'm just like, well, hopefully they could love me enough and I'm good, right? They'll fix it like I don't have to do anything else. They'll love me and I and I don't have to worry about it. But as you get older, you start realizing like nothing you can have. You might meet somebody at 18 and be with them forever, but if you don't love yourself, I don't think that you can have a sustained.

I believe that my relationships didn't last because I was unable to love myself with would hinder the relationship. You didn't process your trauma so anytime. So me and my brother, we both went through the same things our our mid teenage. Well I guess he was younger than that but so we both grew up in this abusive horrible family that his dad was the real dad. So he did have it a little less

than me on that part. And he slept downstairs, which was like a blessing for him because it a lot happened upstairs because their bedroom was upstairs. But so we both go through that and they say your siblings are the one person that know exactly how you feel about your childhood because unless you're raised different homes, you were raised together by the same people, even if you have a different thought process about the raising, they still know and

can relate. So he goes into the well. We both end up getting taken away from our mother by the time I'm 12 and he's like 9 and he ends up having to go to the abuser, OK? That's how bad the current situation was and he never got really much better. I think he just quit doing those things cuz of the law. Not because he was a better person, but he still had all the problems that the drinking, the drugs, the violence, all of it.

So he went to that and I went to my grandparents who were pretty good, but really indoctrinating and religion. And if you didn't do certain things, they didn't love you. And I was like you. I was like, I have to be the best because then they won't love me and then I won't have a home and then I don't know what I'll do. So I look at our paths in life and like one time I told this therapist at my job, I said just like four or five things,

nothing major K about my life. And he said how are you here and not here like in the psych facility. And I said, well, because I decided I wasn't going to do that. Like my brother kind of fell into the same patterns. He started drinking too much. He started doing drugs. He well, and he didn't want to process it, so he went into the military and he did great and with all that structure and control, 100% amazing. But he still wasn't processing anything.

I went into nursing, which helped me inadvertently process it because they teach you things and you're like, oh, oh, that's why that I do or whatever. And then I went to therapy and had some different things happen. So we went to different paths. And I was never into, like, being very LDS at that time. I didn't drink. I didn't smoke, I didn't do drugs, like nothing, you know? So I didn't do any of that. In fact, I never even tried one puff of marijuana until I was 25.

Like, at all. Period. I never did anything. Else your brain was fully developed. Yeah, I was scared and it makes me crazy, so makes me have bad PTSD. So I just stay away from that. But either way, he gets out of the military and starts just just hanking because he has this more freedom to choose these other paths. And I'm like, I'm the type of person that I'm like, what is wrong with you? You know, why are you doing this? And then he'd want it out of all

the things he'd been through. He was in the Navy. He was in the Gulf War. He was in the burn pits at the Gulf War. Like, that was some freaking gnarly, like, horrid stuff that they did OK with women, children. My brother was like, actually, I always joke like, I should have gone in the military and he shouldn't have because he was soft and I was not soft. I've always been like a hard ass kind of, you know, And so I I was always worried about him, but he never processed it.

And even when we drink or hang out and he'd get too much, the first thing he'd bring up wasn't that wasn't the Army or Navy, wasn't any of that stuff. It was our parents. And I'm like, bro, this is like so long ago and I really can't discuss this with you because this is separate trauma. And I would like explain to him like you need to go to somebody, you know, you can vent to me, but I'm not going to like, discuss my part with it because it's not healthy for you, you

know? And he didn't understand that. And in retrospect, I guess I should have been less hard headed because he wasn't going to go get help and that's just how it was, you know. But because he's a man and and the person that raised us had that weird, you got to be a man. And he wasn't like that. He was actually like a sweet teddy bear. And my son reminds me of him, like my son plays hockey, but he also crochets, OK?

So like he he's more soft hearted, you know whereas some of my girls are like my one girl's a welter and she could probably go to war, you know, like I mean she she's tough and but it's just your personality. It really isn't about what sex you are but men get put it in their head like you can't be soft, you can't be this, you can't be that. I mean it's a little different nowadays, but it's still, you know they don't go and get help they that's why they have such a

high rate. Yeah, I I only, I think I would tell like a psychiatrist like once. And I was like bro like. I can't be. I can't be telling you. Like, how to do this? Like, you know what I mean? Like, right, I can't be like, better at this than you. But I think that everybody's different and obviously I'm totally different.

Like to me what helped me is because I could revert to my childhood and that I could be like, So what I the way I process like my dad's death is I was like, you know what? Cuz I used to get mad like people would be like oh man, my dad died. I'm like, man, shit he was. Alive, but you had him. So you were like 30 or like, you know, I'll be like, what are you crying about, man? Like that. But then I was like, when you see it through a different perspective and you're like I

had 12 years. Of a better dad than people have had nine months of, like, you know what I'm saying? Like someone could never even have seen their dad or met their dad. Like my parents installed a lot of good things and good values, and they were able to teach us about empathy. And we're like all empathetic. Like we're loving others but still being tough and like, not allowing people to walk all over. So there was a lot of good things that I learned.

And when you get to see like, OK, maybe it's because. That 12 years was way more than like most people would ever have like because you would think that that wouldn't have an impact. But from being born to seven is the biggest impact is when you're being built the character of who you are so. When I got, I think what helped me and why, like maybe I would be in that booth, like I was partying, drinking, do whatever I want, not caring.

But I think what drew me like what was helped me to be able to get back is because I already had stuff implanted. Like there was already this. You had a good. Deep rooted, Yeah. My foundation was there. It's just that it was foggy and murky from all the things that went through and then this slowly, like trying to realize like what you're doing, like, you know, like and process your process. I'm still processing a lot of it

like an understanding. I have come to understanding of some things, but then there's other things I don't have understanding and I'm getting there. And now that I'm telling people my boundaries, whether friends or, you know, significant other, you go, hey, these are my boundaries. Hey, now I speak up.

But I mean, there's still situations because I've always spoke up, but I also kind of like know when and where to speak up. Like, one thing I tell people was like my boss right now he's like my test, like him working with him. He's not a bad person, but he's constantly like this mopey and Moody and like. I'm always like he. He comes for me. With problems, yeah. And he, but he also stabs me in the back and like, makes himself look better.

And I've been able to go through it and like, I just kind of tell him, but like without it helped me learn how to tell somebody off without cussing them out. Like, you know what I'm saying? Like, yeah, no get your point across and without like just like hey you stupid like I'll be like hey look man. Do you want me to help you like I have sometimes it's weird because he's he's 52 and I'm 40 and I have to talk to like a child. I'm like, hey, yeah, I'm like,

hey man what are you doing? Like or now I know how to approach him. I just like now I'm embracing everything that has a lesson as something to to make me better and it's not easy like I'm I, I I have a lot of empathy for people. I hate when people are like, oh man he's just a drug addict. I'm like, what? You don't know why, man? Or just like, oh, he's home. You don't know why. Like you're you're judging. You're judging. We should never will.

The problem no with the problem with society too, is you think you've got it figured out. But actually you don't. And here's the thing. What maybe drives one person to homelessness is completely different or whatever it is than another person. Like my brother had the best heart, the best everything. And when somebody starts talking about drug addicts, like, I get pissed. And that's why I work a lot of times with drug addicts. And you know what? They could be the worst come

down. They can be the hardest patient. And with the exception of probably 2 patients in my full six years where I've been working in this, they they relate to me because they know I'm not there to point my finger at them because I've had that happen to me and I don't like it, You know, I don't like when people do that. And so I always try and put myself in that position and say.

OK And even sometimes they'll tell you go F you right to your face, you know and and it's hard to not get mad, but at the same time you have to say he's in a different place than I am. Like you and your boss, it doesn't matter how old he is, you you're ahead mentally. And this has happened with husband, so husbands and exwives for me.

So the first one was named almost the same name with the exception of one letter as the one now okay and and it was like the same situation, like we got married and within a year and I was 17, he was 25 and I didn't know how to be a wife, let alone a mother. But within a year, that little girl came to live with us and I had to step that crap up and she was like 5, you know? And so I I was nice to her mom and I I was taught. I think I was tolerant is the

better word. But in my heart, I still held her accountable for what she wasn't doing. I was very finger pointy. I was very should, should, should in my brain, not to her. And so in my mind, I had all these feelings against her. And it wasn't helpful to the little girl, because no matter if your parent is the worst human on earth, a killer, like serious kids still want the love of their parent. And so with the second one, well, that one, when when I found out I was getting

divorced, I just let it rip. One day she caught me on a bad day and I lit into her like you wouldn't even believe. And she was shook because she was going through some hard times of her own, like she had a stroke, like she was sick, you know, and I shouldn't have done that. And and in retrospect, I I felt so justified because I was right and she was wrong and blah blah blah. And I was, you know what I was? But at the end of the day, who

did I hurt? A that little girl, but she was like 14 at that point and BI never saw her again because she ended up going back to her mom and all the years I spent bonding with that little girl where I thought she would be in my life forever. She's in her 30s and I never seen her again. And then so the next one comes and we do the same thing. We're battling. She's got almost the same name and I don't want to say the name, you know, but so we're battling over children,

differences of opinion. And she was my person, like your boss is your person. And I was like, this person drives me crazy. Like she thinks completely different than me. But honestly, some of it was detrimental and needed to be fixed. But some of it wasn't. Some of it was just like me being a jerk, you know, me being like, well, my favorite color is blue and so everybody should like blue. And you know, it was just stupid. Not really, but you get what I'm saying.

So as a mom, I was super judgmental and I and then I stopped when I when I started going through all these problems with my daughter who is estranged from me. She's 27 now and this happened four years ago. So she was my best friend for for everything and she was my idol. Actually. I made her an idol in my life and we can cuz that.

You're kind of, yeah. Well, that's a little different, but you shouldn't do it, cuz I'll tell you why, cuz it made my husband less than, it made my other children less than and it wasn't healthy behavior. And so when she ended up going to go get married, this guy that she picked, he, I mean, I he's probably a narcissist. OKI can't guarantee that. But some of the behaviors that he has exhibited are very strange. So I go into panic mode full on,

and I'm, like, freaking out. And what happens? She just full on cuts me off, like, of everything. I'm all of a sudden toxic member. We're best friends, like now I'm toxic bad person, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. So OK, I'm. I'm shook, you know, I'm at home crying like every day for a year, you know, wanting to almost die, not kill myself but like die, you know? And she calls me and she this exwife and she says I wanted to know if you were okay and okay.

So we had already had C, PS:. Involved and gone through a whole thing about taking the kids and everything. And yes, we were right legally, everything. We were right okay. But it wasn't right. And here's the thing, it could have been handled better. It could have been handled different. We it just wasn't. It wasn't good for the kids.

It scarred them for life, like. And so at the end of the day, instead of making that same mistake twice, and I even told her, you should probably tell me to go F myself and laugh because now my kids gone, you know, like what happened? And so she said to me, what kind of Christian would I be? That is so humbling, bro. I was like, oh, my gosh. Like, at first I thought, like, there's no way this is real, you know? So we became really good friends

after that. And we forgave each other and we forgave each other together with my husband and her exhusband and the other her husband at the time. And the kids got to see it all. And those kids, we're so happy and so blessed from that. Even though I can disagree with some of the things she does, I had to learn that I could love someone even though they really pissed me off.

You know? Like, like you can love them and don't like what they do. You can love them and don't agree with what they do. You can like them and think that they're wrong. And and sometimes she wasn't wrong. Sometimes it was just a difference of motherly opinion, you know? And everybody thinks that they're right when it comes to kids. Like, oh, we got to do this for the kids, the kids, the kids. But sometimes it's not what they need. Sometimes they need that little

bit of a different perspective. And we weren't, like, allowing that kind of like. And later when I stepped away from it, all I could think of was the story of King David, how OK, he had a nickname for him. God called King David his beloved. OK, but King David was a murderer. He was a blasphemer. He was a torturer. He was an adulterer.

He had so many wives. And no matter how many times God came to me, he messed it up so many times like he would just, like, mess it up again, you know, It was like it was like on and on. And yet he still called him his beloved. And that taught me unconditional love. Now she's not a King, David. Well, that's what I was going to tell you. That's like what my. Like my mom taught me right.

Like, and that's what I the same approach that I use with my daughter like because it makes it a lot easier and obviously it's different circumstances. So like my daughter was able to retain the information a lot faster than I was able to. But it's because no matter what I did no matter going in trouble going to jail. No matter getting in trouble like not coming home for months. I no matter what, like people could be like. I I one of my friends was like

telling me how her mom is like. Like just toxic and horrible and like going off. And then there's this movie called Due Date. I don't. Know if you've ever seen it with Zach Galifianafius. And Robert Downey Jr. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, there's a scene where he's like, Robert Downey Jr. is like breaking down. And he's like, my dad asked me to wake him up early and my dad never talked to me really like that. So I was all excited. I got all ready and I woke him up.

And then he saw, thanks buddy. And then he left and he never came back. And then Zach, let's start laughing. So my dad would never do that. So I would tell her that because I'm fortunate that. So that's where I had to like. So when we, I look at my appreciation like I have a brother, I have a mom, a sister, like my family. It's not a huge family. Like, I don't really talk to my aunts, uncles, and like my extended family, but my my daughter, like my certain

friends, my circle. There, I I couldn't ask for anything better. Like a supporting cat said, Like, no matter what, like, they're not going to steal from me. They're not going to do me wrong. If I if I'm down and out, they're going to help pick me up. So once I was able to realize that and appreciate it, that was able to turn for me. So like, and for me, obviously, like, my daughter was a big impact on me too. Like, because I'll be like, OK, I got to do this.

I mean, she seen she visit me in jail. Like, you know what I'm saying? Like, I felt bad. That's not that's that's not a bad. I mean, I know this sounds terrible, but my dad went to prison when I was young, Yeah, And my mom kept me from him because she felt like it was better. And actually, it really hurt me. So I oh, I. Mean. I think it's good. I know that's bad. And that wasn't him.

For a long time. I wasn't like counting Joe and stuff, but like, she was just worried about and then she saw me. She's like, all right, you're good. Like she just thought. Like you're safe, she. Felt good. Yeah, like he's ain't gonna go nowhere. But that's one thing I do tell a lot of my girlfriends, my friends that, like all my women friends, I go. I understand that you're scorned by your ex or you have some kind of resentment towards them. I was like, but if they want to

be in the kids life, let them. I don't care if they're not paying your child support now, should they pay your child support? Is it expensive to raise a kid? Yes. But don't vote if you are doing fine though, like, right, like there's some some of my women friends, they're doing great. Like they're very successful and they're able to. Sustain everything. But they get angry. Like, why am I paying for all the medical bills? Why am I paying for all her

clothes if they're trying? The relationship with the father and the and the kid is more important than the little petty war of hey, they didn't pay this. If they're trying, give them a break. And I get it that they should be doing more. But the relationship. So money. Yeah, the. Money thing. The money thing is important, but I will tell you I begged. So my first husband, he took off.

He got on meth and he was crazy and stuff and he moved back far away from me to the Midwest. Excuse me, my ass was kicking my butts tonight but but he moved far away and I would beg him please just call them like he was such a twerp about paying or anything and he would be like please, you know, please don't go after me and some at some point I just had to turn it over. Not because I wanted to, because I needed help from the state and they force it. And to this day, he tells PEOPLE.

Like, she came after me. I'm like, I ain't come after nothing. I just needed food stamps, bro. Like I just had to have. Some, yeah. I also tell my friends, my guy friends, I'm like, hey, also stop nitpicking what they're doing with the money Like, oh, they just got new shoes or they yeah, well, this if now if that's happening and your kid doesn't have clothes and they're not eating, OK, you have some ground stand on it.

But if they have. All the food they need, they have a house being paid for rent, whatever it is, They got clothes on their back and they're getting to school every day. Then you have no argument of where that money's going well because it's like 20 something dollars a day when you break it down at like 700 and something. Dollars more, man. Yeah, it's like $23 a day. Yeah, at 750 a month, I think I broke it down and don't quote me on the map, but this was a while ago.

It was like $23 a day and like you're going to feed them three times or even 2, but. Well, that's where I it was lucky. Yeah. My my daughter doesn't eat. She's easy. I could just now she eats a little bit more, but back then I could just give her like a bag of Doritos and she's good. You would. It's so weird, too, because like me, I gotta eat. Like, like, I gotta eat three meals. Like when we go, because she's going to come out here because I live in Michigan now.

We're originally from, I'm from California, but she's still in California. She's coming out here because we're going to watch a Raider game in next month. And like when we do go cuz we try to go and see, like cuz she'll turn. She turns 21 this year. She'll turn 21 in October next month to go. And what can I ask you? What day my I have a daughter in. October 15th. Oh my gosh. Like the 16th. Oh, really? Not the same age? They're close. She's. Yeah, she's gonna be 20. Yeah, she'll be.

She'll turn 21 too 24. Gotcha. Yeah, and she when we go places I'll be like. Oh man, she's like, you got to eat again. I'm like, yeah, you got to eat. I got to eat three times a day, man. I'm just going to eat one time a day. And you're good with that, Like, Oh my. Gosh. I do think that unconditional love, but also men. It's it's this balance. It's not just women's fault, It's not just men's fault. It's a communicate lack of communication or upbringing sometimes, or bad influences.

Like I go in a lot on. I know a lot of people. There's this water. Yeah, there's anger. Oh, anger. But like I'm saying like even just bad influences. Like there's this page called, I think it's called The Milk Bar on Twitter and they did a real great expose on on Andrew Tate. So people are falling in line to people like this guy Tate where they are saying some things that are true, right? Like there is some.

Ignorant women out there, they're like, man, I need a man that makes 500 K like good luck, like good luck. Like all of you, you think all of you are going to find millionaires. Like, OK, good luck, But that's also saturated. Like a lot of these things are not fabricated, but when people have a camera in front of them, they're more likely to be more braggadocious. Or they're or. Exactly. They want to be. They want to be something. And depending on what? Just being asked like for

instance. Well, I know I see a lot of people that were like when the whole abortion, Roe V Wade thing like that. Don't even get me started on that, because people get that. To me, it's another Do you want to have it solved? Do you want to know my do you want to know my opinion on it? Actually, this is pretty, pretty funny as a woman. So if you actually know the law, it should have never been a federal decision. The laws are always made by the state for family law, federal.

And people will say, well, what about guns? No, no, no, no, no. Guns are not a state law. Guns are federally protected by the Constitution. So that's the difference. And people get it twisted. Do I, am I against or for? I wouldn't do it personally, but I'm not going to say I'm against because I don't want to see women in the ER having bad situations because they were trying to do something at home, you know? Well, there's also like an aspect like.

But I'm saying this is that's a problem that we've been fighting about for like 60 / 60 years, but they're fighting about something that should have never happened. It should. Never Benefedral. I understand that point. Yeah, of course, Like the States are supposed to. My point is that, like, it's meant to be a argument that's forever. That's why the left The left is like, hey, you should be able to kill the baby when it's like 2 years old. Right. And then the right is like.

Any kind of. Any kind of abortion is murder, and they don't. They have the same talking points for over 60 years. The this is the kind of things that we fall into these traps. That's why the Andrew Tates of the world are able to get into the minds of the youth, because nobody's actually having critical, real conversations like I've I've gone up against a lot of people. A lot of people get mad at me because I'm like.

I I'm with you. I don't really have a stance necessarily, but I tell people arguments they can have. I'm like, if you're conservative, here's an argument that you can use that might go a lot better instead of calling somebody a murderer because you're insinuating that they're intentionally trying to kill somebody, which that's not the

situation. We all know that most people that are getting abortions are stuck in a weird spot, like whether it's like from infidelity or whether they're a really young age and their parents are going to be, they're out of fear. So they're. Already in fear. And then they're walking and these people are protesting and calling the murderers. They don't know what to do. And then the people inside are not even giving them the full scope of things.

I know plenty of women that have had abortions. The one thing that people don't talk about enough is the psychological thing that works in a woman's brain. When that happens, like it's it's detrimental. Like it doesn't go away. Like and I feel that like I had women have abortions with my kid and I was pissed like at them, but over time I was able to work through it because I obviously didn't have. An actual physical attachment to it, right? Right.

Because I did. The big was a born, but you still knew. And I think at the end of the day, like the argument isn't they do these things on purpose because they know the laws. They knew that that law should have never been federally protected. They knew when they put it into place that it was wrong and they knew and kept it in their back pocket for one day. They could stir the pot. That all, not even one day they leave it open-ended because it's an argument.

Because it has to do with life, right? They play on the strings of. Morality. People's emotions. So like the hardcore conservative people are like, you just have to have the baby. But then the left make a good point. They go, so are you, If we have all these babies, are you going to pay more taxes for welfare? Are you going to pay more taxes for foster care, things of that nature?

And then that's another thing. Is it a good thing for them to have the baby and then they get the baby up and it goes into foster care? When we know how the foster care system works, it's not an easy question, but what we should buy now because it's intentionally made to drag out forever. And I get it. Like, I I don't understand the whole state. Like, I'm with you. Like, I I don't think the federal government should run anything because, like, it goes by state.

That's the whole reason why we're a union. Like, you know what I mean? United States. It's not like, oh, we're a Republic of people can't hear me. HM now. Couldn't connect. Come on. There you go. Now I can hear you good. There we go. I don't know what happened but. It happens sometimes. That's what sometimes happens with zoom. But yeah, the argument is to continuously have this argument. It's not like I'm just going away from the whole state thing. The the problem is is because

they want to not find solutions. The solution should cause division. There there should be a solution. Even my mom, who is hardcore conservative, that's super against the death penalty, super against abortion. She even understands that at some point she goes, OK, where? Let's work, let's work it out. Where's the Where's the deal? Is where's the cutoff? Is it two months? Three months? That's where we should be arguing right now.

But instead, we're at the same point that we were sixty years ago. And even if it becomes back to state law, I still feel it should be universal across the board. Because too many people playing games. Like you get the conservative states that are doing this and that, and then you get the, you know, Democratic states that are, like you said at 2 years old. It needs to be universal. It's. I mean, I. Exaggerate a little bit, but it is. You get what what I'm saying it can be almost at.

Birth well in Portland they had they in Portland they have a 10. Like a 10. Day wars or like it was like I forgot something weird. Like it was wild and that that can't happen. But they should be universal and it shouldn't have never been federal. But they they prey on our feelings. So anything that has to do with race or morality, they're going to constantly make an issue constant because they can, because they know what they fight about it.

Yeah, that goes back to what we're talking about, the beginning. They did the same thing with the Patriot, like with patriotism. They play on the strings of people in the like, World War 2, for example. Now we could go all the way. Like, I don't know what happened with I I think that a lot of the stuff is real. There's some people that may think that some of that stuff was fake. I don't know but.

In general, the way that we got, they got us into the war was through propaganda, through cartoons, telling us we're the hero, we need to save them. That's how we got into involved in all these things. Why did we get involved in Vietnam besides the Gulf of Tonkin? Because we needed to help. Communism is going to take us over and it's this endless cycle. So that's why I find it funny when now conservatives are coming out and they're like, man, all these kids are

indoctrinated. You think that we haven't been indoctrinated. Did Rockefellers just start putting the education syllabus together and 20 years ago? No, it's been for a long time. And they don't want to admit that stuff that they've been brainwashed. People don't want to make understand that they've slipped me fortunate for me. I didn't go to school. So like, I was like, I'm not going to school, man. I hate school. I think that was probably one of

the best choices. Only because I didn't get. I had no way of getting indoctrinated, which could have possibly happened because after 911, everybody like that week, man, I was like 18 years old and we're like. So go to the Marine. But they wouldn't accept me because I wasn't in. I didn't go to school for like you had to be in school from 10th to 11th grade, which I wasn't at all. I wasn't even never enrolled.

So they didn't accept me and I was like, I was all pissed, but probably the best thing that probably wouldn't. Ever be a good thing. Well, and I just think that anything like that, they're always going to use to divide us because they know if we all come together, they're in deep crap.

They know that if all of us like, work our problems out or stop making it the race card, or stop making it, you know, the morality card or the religion card or whatever card you want to play, if we all come together and we're a lot more alike than we are different. Then, and especially now, it's like men and women like they're they're trying to D masculate men and make women this big thing and and that's another

thing. So it's just always something that they want to push and it's because it keeps us apart. It doesn't keep us unified, yeah. And that's the breakdown of the family, which is like the whole Hegelian dialect. Like if you know anything about that, like you know for a fact that's what they're trying to do, you know it's it's to demoralize.

People don't even know what that means to divide the working class because like the working class, that's like my most passionate thing is I always tell people like, even like, for instance, right now I'm in Michigan and there's a strike. EU, the UAW is striking right now. The Chrysler buildings, now they want to have four day work weeks and they're asking us. But there's other people that are like, that's insane. They should. Why? Why?

When these people make a lot? Because they are like, we as the public are going to pay more. Look, why do we pay more? You don't even understand why we pay more for cars, do you? Because I worked in some car facilities. There's one plant that just makes bumpers and these these companies have no affiliation with Chrysler. They sell it to them. So since you're piercing it all around, it's going to cost more and it's more things that that they're they're not looking at the bigger picture.

They're looking at like, for instance, I always since I were talking about football earlier too. Yeah, I always see work like they don't consider football players working class people, right, because they make millions of dollars and they go, I can't believe he wants this contract. Well, you do realize that. And the average NFL player is like 5 years. A running back is like two to three years.

So why should they not maximize that small window that they have and you're going to come for a lifetime of work? Or you could be you, you could be damaged forever. You can bust blow out. Into the market well and the brain injuries. Like, yeah, the brain injuries. Yeah. Then you get into a point where you're like, oh man, I can't believe this guy's asking for 300 million, but you're not even considering the billions that

are being made by the owners. You don't even care because it's not something you're seeing every day and you're not thinking, hey, who's making all these news reports talking crap on the players? Oh, it's probably coming from the organization because the organization doesn't want to pay them. So they're making you, the fan base, turn on them so that they go, oh man, maybe they'll ask. They don't see the games they play. And that's why we're always divided.

Because people are so selfish. And. So leadable I I look at some things that I'm just like, no, I'm not going to do that. And if you stand up, even if it's a good friend, which I've had this happen this last week, we had a difference of opinion. And I really believed in what I said and she really believed in what she said. And instead of us just sitting down and talking about it, you know? It was trying to be like, you're going to do what I want or else I'm going to be angry and that's

all. And I'm like, that's not going to help anything, like at all because I'm never going to change my opinion and you're never going to change your opinion. So we can agree to disagree and still continue with our friendship and love, but but that's not how it goes. And you know that that's what causes division in things you know, and people can't. Well, for most people. We have different brains.

Yeah, for me, like, I like when people were like, man, I hear a lot of podcasters said this, I'd be like, man with the politics, like because people that were big on Trump, they're like, man, I lost family members through Covila. I personally didn't lose anybody because I've always been the same for such a long time that people know how I am and they got cut out. Or like, we separated a long time ago before any of this stuff, because I weeded people

out. And if you're going to lose a friendship, if you're going to lose a family member over something so trivial, that's crazy to me. Like people were like ending friendships because they're like, he's voting Biden or he's voting Trump. Like at the end of the day, they're both a uni party. But yes, that I'm like one step away from anarchy because it's all selected. It's all selected, not elected. And it's not that I don't care about our country.

When I say anarchy, people immediately think, oh, well, she doesn't love America. No, no, no. I'm all about the Ryan Christian. I don't know if you listened to the last American Vagabond He's oh, yeah, yeah. He's amazing and he does all of his throw and he has open. Sources James Corbett is also a good one. Too, yes, I would listen. And so when this all started, the thing from 2020 that will never go away, What I did as a nurse is educated myself and therefore started educating others.

And I was literally shut down by every healthcare professional because they're like, no, that's wrong. And I'm like, no, no, I'm not just telling you. This because it's my opinion. I'm going to show you some JAMA studies. I'm going to show you some math studies. I'm going to show you this stuff and they don't want to see it. And at some point you just banging your head against a wall, you know, it's so frustrating. Well, you got to find the right

people to breakdown evidence. So like, yeah, one thing that I like to point out in another podcast that I love a lot of people that followed me know is no agenda. No agenda is one of my favorite no agenda. And when they were breaking stuff down, like when they were showing exposing propaganda, so they remember they were saying the morgues are over flooded, they had to bring trucks in with ice bags to to preserve the bodies, which was true.

But the reason that that was happening is because people couldn't have funerals, so a more can only fit so many people. Like before we start burying things. Yeah, and if you're not burying them, then they. Have they have nowhere else to go. You're you're having people so it gave the illusion of these body stacking on body. So people are like, Oh my God, again with the mask, things like people would see studies and they'll be like, it doesn't

matter how much you showed. One of my favorite things was people. I would show people and even online it would happen. But like I would show people, I'll be like, well, how do we know that this PCR test is good? Because even Fauci said, if you were, if you have it so much cycles ramped up that it's dead. Carrie Mullis. Yeah. Like, yes. Well, that's what I would show. I would show them the Carrie Mullis video and then they would go, where'd you find that?

You and he hated invented it. He hated invented it. Yeah. And he got a Nobel Peace Prize for this. And you're telling me, oh, he's just some guy on YouTube? I'm like, no, he's the inventor. No, it's not like he just don't smoke like me like is. It was just me saying it, OK, I get it. But he said, if you ramped it up, he said we all have molecules of all of these viruses and different diseases if you. Wrapped it up, you can find anything. Yep, he said.

You can find anything and anything. And so and then he went off about Fauci. And there's this podcast, and it's tiny and it's mostly about surfing, but it's called the Surfers Path. And he has an episode on this because he was a big surfer. And so I watched it and I thought, Oh my gosh. And like, you would show it to people. But what it is, is clips of him speaking himself.

Him himself speaking and some of the funniest stuff is on there because he's like I told him, Fauci, I'd debate him anytime and he won't debate me. And I said. Right now. He's an idiot, you know? And I was like, well, I got that. I sampled that for one of my songs. So he goes, and I was saying to his face. And I'm just, I'm just like why is everybody so negative about this like you try to say anything and and before this all

happened. Before everything kicked off, every nurse knew that if you wear a mask in surgery, because they always bring up surgery and you touch it, once it's contaminated, that's it, it's done. How contaminated were these things? And they didn't bring up the studies where the children were getting worms and I'm talking about parasites in their bum because they wouldn't wash their hands at school because their kids and go to the bathroom and touch their mask and.

Touch everything and and then, you know, put it back on and reuse the same one every day. And I'm like, that is disgusting. Literally the the thing that like I found interesting because I listen to, like because what I'm going to do is if I am not aware of a situation, I'm going to go talk, listen to other people that know in that field. Well, what I've heard a lot of, a lot of nurses were saying really the whole point of a surgical mask is not necessarily

to protect from a virus. It's so I don't spit or like let. My actual, like, fluids get all over the patient and go into their open room. Like, you know what I mean? I'm cutting somebody open. It's not about they lost the whole thing, yeah. Unless she said that they. An N95 and even then the problem is with an N95 and most people don't know this, but the guy that did the OSHA for masks came out and spoke out about this because of the schools. He was so upset because they

were doing this to children. He said even if you wore an N 95, the particulate is too small for the N 95 because it's so much smaller than tuberculosis and it barely filters that. So he's like, unless you have the crazy, my husband works in a mine. Unless you have those kind of fitted with the crazy like things in the front, it's not. Going to work? Yeah. And the second you touch it now it's dirty and you'd have to change it 100 times a day like it's not going to happen.

And they're just dirty and gross. And I mean, I was so naughty, but at work I just, I just would pull it in and cons because they were going to fire us, you know, and save. I mean try and be a nurse and go through that. Year. And I luckily luckily me trying to die all my life save my ass. Because I have such bad allergies and asthma. They were like, she might die if if we give her this. Yeah, I got the only note. My doctor told me too.

He's like, you are the only patient I have wrote a letter for because you might actually die. And I'm like, cool. Like, I didn't care why. I was like, cool. I don't care. Like, that's awesome. Like he really. Believes in it, yeah. Another nurse was talking about the N95 mask and this is like during the whole thing, she said yeah, she said when we get one, first of all like to test it, they would put like a box over their head and spray Lysol and she goes, I would go through like 5-6.

I would go through 5-6 until we found the one because you would have to keep putting it on until I didn't smell Lysol and she was like it could be 5610 and then I finally find one. It's just people want these, like, reassurances. And again, they played off the fear in the beginning. They showed that what seemed to be bodies falling everywhere in China. So people were like, Oh my God. It scared me at first. I was scared as a nurse. Bet your butt. I was scared.

I was like, I'm going to work in this, you know? But here's the thing. I also knew the science. I knew like, okay, even if I wear this mask for you, for you, I'm breathing out. It's not helping you. And even if you get that injection.

It doesn't matter. You're not not going to spread it like and then the whole super spreader talk and all this stuff and I'm like okay you guys and that's why I finally started doing what you did looking For more information because I was like none of this makes nursing sense in my brain. None. And everybody else is just like, yeah, let Cheek to the wolves. You know I I wasn't down like.

I I I mean, I stand by what I said then I I'll stand by it again if it's coming on up because it's always planned. They're planned by each election year. There's a plan demick. A plan demick and it and it's completely bold. I think like there is possibilities of all that. But I also think of like the Henry Kissinger. I think sometimes these things come along that they're not. It's don't let a good crisis. Use it. Yeah, don't let a good crisis go to waste. I think that's the mentality of

a lot of people I don't know. This one was created, I think, yeah, well, we know that there's bio weapons and things like that, but we don't know the the full story of what they're trying to do. But at the end of the day, it's like, well, what can I worry about? And you can only tell people, like I told a lot of people, you guys, Catalyst, I used to tell him, because we did a lot of podcasts together and he would be like. Oh man, they're sheep. They're sheep, I said.

Man, you got to show them compassion, bro. Like they're people just like me and you. And you know what happens when you start yelling at them or telling them that they're idiots? Right away you're reinforcing what the media is saying about people like me and you that are not disagreeing with the socalled science. It has to just be like a presentation. And like, here's one or two facts. You can't just bomb them either. No, it has to be like, you don't even have to tell them anything.

I'm talking about. You show like what I would tell them was. Like, show them facts. I would. No, not even like, I'm talking about just like you're going to the gas station, you're going to the liquor store and someone's wearing masks. I'm gonna hold the door for them. Just like I was hoping to. Yeah. Yeah. But you would see. That's what I'm saying. I go talk to them. I'm not talking to them because usually you're not going to change their mind unless you know them.

If I know them. But no, no, but you're misunderstanding what I'm trying to say. I'm not talking about tell. I'm not going to go tell them that hey, you shouldn't be wearing a mask. I'm saying don't do that. Talk to them like a normal human being. Be like hey how? Would you do that? Yeah, that's when you when you

have these conversations. What I noticed through me being just, hey, what's going on, blah blah blah, Not even remember, like not even thinking about their masks, not even care, not talking about COVID, whatever. You know what would happen? They would end up taking off the mask because I would make them feel so comfortable that they're not even thinking and and and unconsciously they're taking it down like oh like hey, no, you know what I meant is blah blah because I'm making them feel and

I'm not like bashing them. I have no idea. And when people did bring in like I had ups drivers come and I go. Look bro, if that's what you if that makes you feel better. I'm not. I'm not. It's not up to me. I'm not going to argue with you because I'm not going to wear one, but I'm not going to. I'm not going. To I don't think we should ever force like if they want to do it, they can do it if we if. But I never treated anybody

worse or anything. And even recently, because at the grocery store as of late, I'm seeing them pop all up all over again and I'm like, uh oh, so I finally haven't read them out here. Really. Oh, it's so bad already. Like, and I, I said to one girl because it seemed to be all the employees. And I just said, can I ask you a question? And she said, yeah, I said, are they making you do that? Are you choosing to do that? She said no, no, I just don't

feel the best today. And I said I I don't mean any to disrespect to you. I was just curious, you know, if it was like a new mandate because I'm concerned for me as a nurse And she was like, Oh yeah, blah, blah, blah. But you know, I don't know. But what you got to understand too, is that the first message. So say someone's accused of something, right? They're falsely accused of murder. It's everywhere. It's on every every newspaper, every magazine, every news

station. Turns out it's phony charges. You're not going to see that same blasted out. And that's the same thing that happened with this. So it was blasted. I wear a mask, say, be, say, man, be like, you know, don't kill grandma. So like, even there's nobody really challenging Now we'll say CNN did recently half out you on, they did challenge him on mask. They go, well, what about this study? What about that study?

I think that to me like whether it's Illuminati, fallen angels, Freemason, whatever, it it doesn't matter. It doesn't matter. Like at the end of the day, if you believe in God or you don't believe in God, if you believe in yourself, if you believe in the mother, the nature or the earth being, whatever you believe in. All that matters is do you be a better you try your best to not challenge it. Because we need these people. They're on our team, and in the end, us fighting with them does

us no good. So do your best to be like, OK, if you have an opportunity and they're willing to talk about it and they would like some information, give it to them. If not, just treat them like with compassion. Be like, hey man, I got nothing below for you, man. I hope everything's good with you. That's what is going to be way more effective than us yelling at them and be like you hate. Yes, you're you're making us all like because they're not doing it to hurt us.

Well, it makes their fear. Crazy and too, because then we look like what they say. We are like, oh, they're crazy and they're not doing this because they're crazy and look at the crazy people and then we act crazy. And I don't do that. I just try to little by little say things if it's appropriate, but if it isn't, I don't. You know, I'm not gonna bring it up out of the blue. I'm not gonna be mean or disrespectful.

I'm just gonna do what I would normally do, you know, like the great philosopher Jackie Moon from the Flint tropics would say. Everybody love everybody. Yeah, yeah, exactly. Because at the end of the day. At the end of the day, we're all going to be in this literally together, just like they said. So at the end of the day, we all have to choose how we're in it, how we act, how we respond.

And that's all goes back to that whole what you were saying about controlling your emotion and not being just reactive, reactive, reactive. And I'm a very reactive person. Or maybe I used to be more and now I'm just like hey. You know, and somebody even said to me, I'm going to give this to God. And still they were mad at me. And I said, well, me too, because I'm not God and I don't have the answers, you know, And I didn't and I don't.

And so at the end of the day, sometimes that's really all you can do, you know, is give it up to whatever you said, like power, God. For some people, whatever that is, sometimes you're never going to get the answer, maybe not even when you die. Like, we don't know. We don't even know so but if you I. Mean. I believe we do, but you know, that's a different subject. Yeah, that's our own little, our own little world of it. But I I totally agree.

And I just think that's how we move forward, man. Like compassion, empathy and understanding and communicating proper. Cure because it's coming. With each other and whether we like it or not, something's up. Because something's changing. And so we all need to be better prepared this time to not be like that, not to be the 2020 horrible. We, I saw some really horrible things come out in people during that year. And I just, I don't think that's a good way.

You know, I think we need to, like you said, be more compassionate, be less reactive. Even if you're extremely like, believe in something, that's your belief. That doesn't have to be my belief, but don't come at me at it now. If somebody comes at me, though, if you come for me, I'm I'm going to tell you why I choose what I choose. Not in a mean way. I'm just going to tell you This is why.

And you can't force me either. You know, well, don't I know everybody thinks that, like, it's going to be COVID and it's going to be these viruses all the time. There's going to be a little play of all that stuff. That's not what's next. What's coming up next is we've seen it for down the pipeline for. Project Bluebeam is coming and climate no I. Like we can see all that. You don't think they're climate change? Climate change?

Climate already is the real fear that they could cuz look the alien thing that's like all fun. Like we we talk about it a lot like like Joel my cohost. He he's like all about nephalem. Like he's like he's your nephalem expert. He's like, he's all about Nephalem and we talk about it and he's always saying like, I think the Blue Beam crap, all the people talking about Blue beam, I think it's a bunch of

bogus bullcrap. Because what's going to happen is people are going to think it's this fake invasion, but it's not a fake invasion. It's really fallen angels that are coming down and like so and then he will. Get the truthers used to it. Nobody. He's saying that like, what's going to happen is like, so all the people that critically think and that push against a lot of stuff are now so focused. Blue beam, Blue beam. Blue beam, blue beam that when they see that they're going, ah,

that's fake that's the hologram. But maybe it is a hologram but maybe there's a a fallen Angel in there. Maybe it is something. But again that's not to me. I think that's more farfetched. Right. Like there's there's possibilities of it. I leave it open for all kinds of possibilities because I don't know but what can we see right now we can see right now climate change has been huge like they got the sunrise movements back

and active. They're they they got people in fear of like, hey, we're going to die. We only have 10 more years. Even though they keep saying that like every 10 years, that's what. We have to like, and back in the 80s it was we're all going to freeze to death. Remember it. Was the Ice Age the 70s with Leonard Nimoy and? They kept saying oh it's going to it's going to be another Ice Age and now they're like oh we're going to burn to death.

And I'm not really as concerned, but the problem with climate change is, is it's on, it's non like the carbon. And all the stuff they're talking about is they can't unprove it. It's like so it's such. It's like a virus. It's like a. Virus. Yeah, because they can virus you. Keep it forever because like, also like, that's why COVID extended. And this is the same reason how they'll get some of the climate change. Like, so COVID, right. People were like, oh man, I think I got COVID.

Oh, you can't go to work for two weeks. I remember the FedEx driver was. Like, yeah, I had COVID, man. I was out for two weeks. He's telling me that. Almost like you're out for two weeks, huh? They had a temperature of 100 and 506 for a week. You're dead, bro. Like. Dead like that's, but because they would use that because they were, they were talking to their bosses, they don't want to go to work. I got COVID. I was super. Sick, but it depends on the person. I had to go to work still.

Like I was pretty sick. I still had to go to work because nobody was there to work. My boss was on vacation. I got COVID from someone that got my buddy that took the jab. He went to New York, came back, got a so sick and I don't know because I didn't take the test, but my brother took a test and he took a test. They both came back positive. COVID. And I had to take a test because I'm a nurse and I got sick. And so then I got, I got sick at work because everybody was

getting, you know, the shot. And then I got sick because I didn't. I think because they they, they're so funny. People are so gullible that they believe, oh, that can't happen. It can't spread from person to person. Yes, it can, because they have a rabies shot that spreads from dog to dog and they've had it for a long time. They shed it off and the other dog get some immunity from it. So don't tell me they don't have the you know. Capability.

Yeah, that's why like. No, the back, the shot. Yeah, that's shocking about this sneezing. Yeah, you still sneeze it out. It still comes through. You're like, it's your daytoday stuff, like you shed it like Dr. McCullough talked about it a lot. He was talking about like, yeah, I like Doctor McCullough and I thought he said it could because a lot of people get into the panic mode. He goes to me, if you took the VAX after a year, it's out of your system. The problem? Quit reading.

The reason we're yes, the reason we're seeing so much monocarditis and stuff of that nature is because you keep boosting every six months. Now you're increasing the chances of. Something bad to happen, It's just how it goes. Well, and it seems to me that if people really understood about viruses. If you believe in them, some people don't with your in theory

I get that. But if you are a believer in the regular way, okay everyone knows that as a virus, when it first comes out it's the worst it's going to be. That's why the plague was so bad at 1st. And then what happens? It gets more transmissible, but it's not as serious okay. So every year it should be less serious, more contagious, which is like the cold, the common cold. But now they're trying to ramp it up that all these, oh, it mutated.

I'm like, every virus mutates. What are you talking about? Like this happens. This is normal. This is normal. And they act like it's not normal. That was my first clue that something was up, because I was. Most people don't know that, though. That's The thing is you're you're talking to people. It's a foreign language to people that don't ever deal with anything like that. Nurses. These were nurses. Being killed and I'm like, dude. You know better, like you know,

or doctors even. And I would tell them like you, you know, and they were like, no, no, that's not gotta. Cover it all and do the things and I'm like, that doesn't even make any sense. And I kind of got into it one time and he's like, you send me the information with the doctor and I was like, I was like on the button to send it. And then I was like, do you like your job? I. Was like. Maybe I shouldn't send that. You know better Shut up. Yeah. I mean.

Yeah, sometimes I I did still tell him what I what I wanted to tell him. I just didn't want to send it, like in writing my butt in trouble, you know? But yeah, we can't control this world. Nobody can control this world. Not even the people that think they control this world, can't control this world. So we have a fight in this game. We're not down unless we don't stick together. That's the thing.

I think that's the biggest message that it should should have given to people is that if you're such a fool that you think that those people that are at the high elite are going to take care of you, you think the government cares about you, That's hilarious to me. They don't, you know, or they would change a lot of things, but they don't do that. And so why don't they give up for insulin? Why don't they do other things? You know? No. They don't care.

They don't care about you. And so the quicker you figure that out, and especially baby boomers, they really trust the government. And I mean. I looked at no man, you people just. Kind of trust them. Pretty great, man. Yeah, it's wild to me. It is pretty. Crazy. I'm like, I'm Gen. X, so I'm like, uh, uh, we hate everything. We're like, no, I also, I got a bona pick with a lot of Gen. Xers because they always try to, they try to get a pass on everything. They're like, man, we didn't do

anything. The world spoke and I'm like, man, are you telling me, man, I was like, you guys raise kids too, man. Like, don't I be like blaming it on them? I'm just like take. Everybody's involved. Everybody, We're all complices in this. It is what it is. But but we can all change it. How we react the next time. I understand the fear, but we all saw that everybody around you didn't die. There were some.

There were some. And I don't know, I have some weird little coincidence, just coincidences, like it hits certain races different. And I'm sorry, as a nurse, I recognize that that scares me. That terrifies me to know like that because my family's all mixed. So I'm like, you know what? That scares me, you know? But we just have to go from here on out because they're never, you're never going to be able to prove this. Never. Never, never, never, never,

never. It's going to be just like Tuskegee and it's going to be shoved under a rug and you don't trust the government. That's when people try to talk to me about trust the government. I'm like go read about the Tuskegee whole situation and and other it's that's not alone. You know if you're a Native American and you took that, you're insane. You're insane. Like, do you know what they did to your people? Like, do you have any idea like you're going to trust the government?

Like I'm not trusting anybody except for people I know. You know, that's for sure. You're close knit people and eventually if there were anything that happened serious, those people are going to branch out into little communities and you'll, you'll figure out who your people are just like we do in podcasting. And I've noticed it. I'm like immediately they know who's BS and. Who's not, Who's truthful, Who's not?

Who's real, who's not. And I've watched it happen, you know, and and eventually you see it. And so those people will band together. But if they think we're gonna lay down and let them roll over on us, it ain't gonna happen. No, not just not Rob. Well, not. There's always gonna be some of us that are going to stand up against stuff and people will see overtime. Like, well, I mean in general of the world, yeah, like them trying to take guns or them

trying to do this. And that's the thing that everybody wants America to fall because we have guns and guns when they disarm a population. You can look this up and we won't go into because we're long right now, but guns give people power. They just do. And I'm not talking about using them irresponsibly or any of that, but just the fact that they know that they're accessible or that maybe your grandpa had one or whatever. They know you're not just gonna roll over.

You know Texas ain't rolling nowhere. Yeah, you look at Australia, man. Like Australia, they're easy to take over. They have no guns. And the reason why Japan never invaded America, they say it. They said because if we invade America, there will be a barrel behind every blade of grass. Because we are a well armed Sicilian civilians, not just the military, which the military is that. And Sicilians are well armed as well.

But yeah, I agree. Like it's it's got to become a point where we all like if the crap really did hit the fan and we all had to have more of a nomadic society or whatever, you're gonna. I don't want to be able to find those people without driving people away because you have like you, it goes back to that communication and it goes back to not scaring people. It goes back to just treating that person that had to wear it for that job.

And, you know, maybe they didn't have to, but maybe they literally would be on the street. I don't know. You know, it's all about you inside. Some people would say that's enough and I'll go for that. And that's okay too. You know, I support. I support both so. If you feel like you can't do that, then that's you. And if you feel like you should do that, I mean, I was going to quit, you know, and that's me. But you can't make people do anything, you know, I totally. Agree.

Yeah, we all just have to work on ourselves. I think that you mentioned that quite a bit. That's usually my my main, my main key is just like work on yourself, make yourself better. And then you will in turn make the world better because you will put more of that energy out there and it will spread to people. Just like negative energy spreads, a positive energy will spread. And that's how we slowly but surely fix the world, little by little.

Yes I agree 100% and try and be that person that is there for others that might be struggling because at the end of the day. You know, that's sometimes what little tiny thing a person needs, you know, that maybe might change their their whole thing, like if they were suicidal or whatever that day. I mean, we can't just say Oh well, they're degenerate of society or oh, they don't matter or oh, that's a deadbeat dad or

whatever. You don't know, you don't know what they went through, etcetera. Like we don't have to know to be human. Get back to being human, you know? Stop and stop with this whole male bashing and drives me insane. Like, that really gets to me because men are supposed to be men and they're not supposed to think like us, but they're not sorry. They don't understand us either. Well, I'm kind of a guy.

Most guys do understand me. In my brain, I'm like, yeah, I get it. But like, I get that there's other people that are different. So that's my soapbox on that. Definitely let them be part of their children's life. That hurts everybody. Whether mom or dad, doesn't matter. Don't hurt your kids. So that's all me. I don't know any other last words for you. Just like I said, ELE everyone love everyone. Yes, let's be. That let's be the change. Be the change.

All right. Well, this has been wonderful. Thank you so much for talking to me tonight. I think that's when a good way. I think that's when. Where it was supposed to come. Yeah, I love it. All right, well, I won't take up your whole night and I know it's probably getting late where you are, so we'll cut off there and then tell the next time and want to plug all your things, all your socials, all your good stuff so they know where to find you? Kill the mockingbirds.com, you

can find everything. All our socials, our podcast, we have a disinformation section where we actually put up material, different papers, studies, things that we think are important for people to read on to. Go check out the Birch. And don't forget to check out the music. Sean, Chris SEANCHRIS on all music streaming platforms. Awesome. Definitely. I follow those, so I can attest. Go check them out. You're going to like it. And I really appreciate you coming on tonight.

Thank you again. All right. Thanks so much.

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