Chilluminati Podcast - Midweek Mini: A Fae Encounter in Australia
Episode Date: April 29, 2026This Minisode was originally uploaded with Episode 333: Mathas vs. The Warrens Part 1 - some of the topics discussed might be outdated. Subscribe to our Patreon to listen and watch the Minisodes as th...ey release every week! http://patreon.com/CHILLUMINATIPODMike Martin - http://www.youtube.com/@themoleculemindset Jesse Cox - http://www.youtube.com/jessecox Alex Faciane - https://www.youtube.com/@StarWarsOldCanonBookClub/Editor: DeanCutty Producer: Hilde @ https://bsky.app/profile/heksen.bsky.social Show Art: Studio Melectro @ http://www.instagram.com/studio_melectro Logo Design: Shawn JPB @ https://twitter.com/JetpackBragginLINKSAlex: https://www.reddit.com/r/ChilluminatiPod/comments/1q6jk4i/a_fae_encounter_in_small_town_australia_listener/Just Around the Corner: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IhMb-7ev8_g&list=PL-fUHABWqfXET67eNXy-JdzpIXuPx51M8Jesse: https://www.unexplained-mysteries.com/news/393656/serviceman-claimed-he-received-code-from-rendlesham-forest-ufohttps://www.therendleshamforestincident.com/2023/01/how-rendlesham-binary-code-message.html
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Every time I grocery shop, I end up spending more and getting less.
And it's not just groceries.
Everything costs more.
It adds up and soak in the debt.
So that's why I reached out to the Credit Counseling Society.
After my first call, I felt the weight lifting.
I bet they can help you too.
Don't wait.
The sooner you call, the more options you'll have.
And the weight, leave that for the grocery bags.
The Credit Counseling Society.
When debt's got you, you've got us.
Notice. Notice. This midweek mini was recorded several months ago and may not be up to date with current events.
For fresh minisode uploads with every episode, head to patreon.com slash Chaluminati pod.
My little Joluminawiton welcome.
Don't like it? Can't say I like it.
It's less creepy and more of like the noises you hear in the back.
of a horror movie.
And like someone goes in like a weird underground tomb.
Oh yeah.
Oh yeah.
Yeah, it's weird.
Human denied.
Oh, yeah.
I can't wait until it becomes so garbled that someone plays it backwards and it says
something.
I, if it is saying something, it's like,
send me in a barrico ham leg.
They're very expensive.
Very expensive and hard to import.
What do you have for us today, boys?
I have a listener story that is very good that I want to read.
I don't usually do these during minisodes, but I had such a, it was such a colorful one.
Like an uncommon topic that I wanted to read it.
Okay.
This is from Key Condition on our subreddit.
And it's called a Fay encounter in small town.
Australia.
Sup, fuckers.
I'm a long time listener
who's just decided to post my
very own listener's story.
Of course, y'all are welcome to read it on the pod.
In fact, I'd likely squeal
like an excited schoolgirl if you did.
As is tradition,
I'll preface this by saying that out of the
archetypal holy trinity,
I define, I definitely
align most closely with
the teachings of the book of Fasiani.
I don't believe in the supernatural,
but I am very much along for the ride.
Okay, okay, a little Tony Shalub action there. Anywho, when I was a kid, we lived in a semi-rural outer
suburb in Western Australia. Our house sat on one side of the road and the opposite side was
completely undeveloped, just a batch of totally wild Australian bush. To the right of our house,
the road and the bush continued away before becoming a little more populous. On the left,
a few doors down and ended in a T intersection backing onto more bush. Left at the intersection led to
town right quickly turned into a dirt road that curved away into the trees and which we never
went down one evening i was watching a tv i was watching tv in our living room whose windows looked out
to the road when my mom came in looked out the window and said hey look the fairies are dancing
i peered out into the twilight and at first saw nothing until my eyes fell on some shapes
flickering in and out of view through the trees across the road they were far enough away to be only about
a centimeter tall. That's about half an inch for y'all. And resched humans made of fire,
glowing white, hot, and they were indeed prancing back and forth between the trees. I was transfixed,
afraid to break eye contact. If they spotted me and decided to come and snatch me away,
I didn't want to be caught off guard. After a while of not being spotted by them,
I decided it was safe to resume watching TV and only glanced over them occasionally until
eventually I noticed that they were gone. But after that, I would always check for them in the
evenings and occasionally did spot them out there prancing around over the following years.
So that's my story of the fairies I saw as a child.
However, it doesn't completely end there because several years later, my brother and I were
entrusted with a very important task, selling chocolates to raise funds for a school excursion.
I know this vibe well, by the way.
That's very 90s, SoCal, suburban.
Yes.
We started at the more populous end of our street and worked our way down to the opposite end
and still had a number of delicious caramel-filled chocolate koalas left in our box,
hilariously on point for Australian chocolate sale.
So we decided to venture down that curving dirt road.
Turned out it was a driveway,
leading to a very nice house occupied by a very kind elderly couple
who bought a lot of chocolate for their grandkids.
They invited us in while they found their money,
and I noticed that in their backyard was a tennis court,
complete with overhead floodlights.
Their house and tennis court were set well back from the street,
far enough that a person might look to be, oh, say, a centimeter tall.
So that's the Jesse explanation that goes along with my tail.
The couple or their kids or grandkids were playing tennis under the floods,
presumably wearing white or light colors,
and in the evening light viewed only in glimpses between the trees and from a distance,
they look to my child brain to be iridescent people dancing amongst the trees.
I've been thinking of posting this here for a while, but never gotten around to it.
I decided to do it now as I've been catching up with episodes
that I've missed and during Cornerfest 2026,
Alex has mentioned a few times
that the way that culture affects
the way that we interpret experiences.
This is something that I thought a lot about
with regard to this story.
Why were they fairies?
Have my mother been religious?
They might have been angels.
Had she been Mathis following a course of HRT
in a month in Bangkok,
they might have been aliens.
But I was raised by a couple of white hippies in the bush.
So I got fairies.
I've always had a soft spot in my heart for Tales of the Fame.
My favorite RPG ever is Changeling the Lost.
Oh my gosh.
Mathis and by extension
Shuluminati from listening to
Oh my God, you listen to
Just Around the Corner
My favorite
Oh my God, one of my favorite
six episode mini series
I've ever done I made so good
Go listen to that.
Called what was up
Before the Briar Wolves
Even made an appearance
Dude, hell yes.
And I'm sure that comes
And I'm sure that that comes
At least in part from this experience
Anywho,
I hope you guys managed to enjoy
My Tale through all the rambling.
Loved your work and can't wait to see
where things go over 2026.
Here's the three more series.
seasons in a movie. Hopefully none of us in this version of the story ends up being the Chevy Chase of the show. I think three seasons in a movie originally is from community, right? Six seasons in movie. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. And so, yeah, there you go. An interesting story, right? I love that show. I like the explanation. It's like almost like Wes Anderson like in its description. The idea of it happening in real life is so surreal.
to me that I don't even believe it's necessarily true.
It's fascinating.
Really good story.
That's, dude, and tangentially, and I relate to this often, but like, that's the same
way I look back at a lot of my UFO sightings in the sky.
When I look back at the moment, my brain immediate is like, I don't know if that's what
you think you saw.
Like, I don't know.
It tries to, like, immediately logic it away.
And I have to, like, remind myself of, like, the actual, actual things I saw when I saw
them.
Jesse, what are you?
gentlemen i want to talk about we have done the very infamous rendelstrom force UFO
and i i saw a thing and i don't know if we talked about this and if we did i clearly forgot
but i wanted to bring it up to you because it read is weird to me um an article from january
ninth of this year talks about how uh one of the guys
allegedly received a telepathic message.
And this message drops a bunch of information.
So we have a little episode about it.
We don't have to get too deep into what was happening.
But U.S. guys were stationed at an R.A.F. base.
And they got like a UFO'd.
A bunch of them saw something in the woods.
And one of them, a guy named Sergeant James Peniston.
No.
yes you guys forgot so much
yeah i remember penis town
so
apparently
he received a message
telepathically
yep with the code
yes yep i remember this
i don't remember this part at all
but i just want to like
send this to you in chat
yep
this is what it said apparently
and i don't understand
clearly I don't remember this part.
And I was like, what, what does this mean?
Can you refresh my memory on what the hell any of this is?
I don't think we have a meaning.
I don't think there was a meeting for any of this.
That's, that's the part of it.
It's like, I don't think there is an explanation.
It's, it's like, what are the coordinates?
I don't know.
It's coordinates and then it's words like continuous for planetary at van and then
coordinates and then fourth
coordinate continue out
UQS
before
listening several coordinates and then it's just like
coordinates like it's just
gibberish I don't know what it's for
what it is
yeah I if I pull this up
in Google Maps right let me let me
let me do that right
because North and West
I'm trying to do I'm trying to see if I can figure out
that should be enough right
because it's like
Yeah, one of them is origin and it literally gives you.
That's the Caracol National Monument Reservation is the first one.
Right.
So right on top of it.
Remember two.
This came later in his career.
And this is this,
what we're reading is a breakdown of his binary code sequence that was put into
his mind.
He wrote it down and the binary code translated to this.
That's a Belizeon.
That's a, that's from Belize.
and it is a, what is it?
Wait.
He didn't reveal that this code existed until 30 years after the incident.
Remember that.
Like this, like one of them, the last code is literally in the middle of the ocean off the coast of Ireland.
It's like Caracol, Belize, Sedona, Arizona, great pyramids of Egypt, the Nazca Lines, Peru, Mount Tai China, and Portara, Temple of Apollo, and Nexus, Greece.
Actually, if you go to this Reddit post.
there is a actual map,
which we can toss into the show notes if you want.
That is a dot array of all the different points.
Most of them are on land somewhere, you know,
and they make sort of like a like a sort of.
But the one listed origin I love is just in the water.
Yeah, it covers it.
But that origin, right,
that's like kind of like maybe
that's where the underwater spaceship is, maybe.
It's like a solid setup for like a good sci-fi movie.
I'll be honest.
It's similar to a lot of the other stuff that we've seen,
except it's from Randall Shum,
which was what, like the 90s?
What year was that?
80?
80s. 80s, yeah.
And so it's a little earlier than, you know,
the stuff that we've been into on the show
that has that similar mythology.
But it's kind of interesting because it's like,
even though it's supposedly real stories,
they they like repeat the same like mythological shapes and forms the same way that like
Captain America does over the years or like the X men do over the years where the X men always
make a homeland that gets destroyed like it's the same thing with the aliens where they
they have like they they go from one thing and then they they have the sort of Roswell like
moment and then they go under the ocean and then like there's like this whole thing about the ocean
with like a base and then they send out drones from the ocean and those things like go away
And they come back.
I don't know.
Kind of interesting.
Yeah, it's weird.
I'm going to wrap this thing up with a follow up on last week's minisode.
So just to recap real quick for Jesse.
So last week, Jesse, for a minisode because you were at MagFest.
There's an article I brought where they showed that some mathematical stuff that
string theory physicists are doing actually apply and explain why the brain's neurons
are the length that they are, why the brain folds like.
like it does, that their mathematical equations for that apply to mapping of the brain in some way.
And I couldn't handle the fact to that string theory.
I'm going to read a follow up comment.
Yeah.
Yeah, from Ian here on Patreon, who breaks down like a little bit what this all means.
So he goes, okay, I usually don't leave comments like this, but since Mathis specifically asked for this, Alex, I think you're misunderstanding what the application of string theory formula to neuron connections.
means. It's not that something inherent to string theory is also inherent to the structure of
the brain, but that a method of calculation that the theorists happen to come up with earlier
also happen to be applicable to this specific mathematical problem in biology. That is to say,
they're both somewhat specific and similar geometric problems that happen to therefore have a
similar formula for working on a solution. Just because you can mathematically describe a caco demon
from doom as a sphere and can therefore derive the shape of the sun using the same formula
doesn't speak to the validity of the existence of the caco demon.
It's like the formula can work for both, but one is real, the sun and one isn't, you know,
the thing.
It's like if you were constructing a railroad and came up to a mountain that you had to tunnel
through, you have never tunneled before, so you would have to figure out how to do it
before you could continue your work.
Oh, but look, over there are some prospectors who are convinced there's gold in them their hills,
and they seem quite adept at mining.
You ask them how long they've been mining for, they say 50 years, and they haven't had one cave,
they haven't had one cave in decades because of how good they are at tunneling.
So you borrow their method to dig out a train tunnel so you can finish your line.
Now, there may or may not have been any gold in that entire mountain range,
but it doesn't matter because what you were after was the method they were used.
using not the product they were seeking.
Yeah.
I mean, does that make sense?
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
But I, but I, but I, but I still find it quite interesting.
Like the, like if, if a drill that was made for drilling into physics was made for,
was used for drilling into the brain, I would find that remarkable regardless of the origin.
You know what I mean?
For Jesse is a little lost.
Here's the, I'm just going to link the original article, Jesse.
This is string theory helped solve.
a mystery of the brain's architecture.
This is January 7th a week ago.
I just find it interesting that string theory is applicable at all.
Not necessarily because it's emergent from nature, though.
I admit to sort of running in that direction with it, for sure.
But I do think just the notion that you could use string theory as a tool to solve this
problem does sort of legitimize string theory a little bit, though, doesn't it?
Yeah, the scientist even says he goes, we're not saying that string theory in the brain are similar, but they have to minimize surfaces.
And we have to minimize surfaces.
So the mathematical solution is basically identical because they're both trying to do the same thing.
Minimize surface space.
That's still cool.
I find that cool still, even though the notion is more mundane.
But even he even goes on to say the biggest surprise is the very existence.
of this relationship between the string theory field and the surface minimization problem
and how it solves an almost 80 year old mystery.
Yeah, that's fucking, to me that that means something, right?
Like to me, that feels that there's some, there's something interesting about it being
string theory.
I mean, I don't really like, I don't really like, again, I don't even really understand
string theory, right?
Yeah, me, I mean, either, waves or vibrations or something.
Yeah.
But it's, but it's, it's interesting to see.
systems recur, like, just reflecting in, in other ways.
Like, as above, so to blow kind of thing.
Yeah.
The fact, the fact that you can drill on Earth and then the answer is you can actually also
drill on the moon is cool, even though it just is because they're both rocks.
Like, sure.
Yeah, I know what you're saying.
Like, it's still trippy.
I don't know.
It's still trippy that there's over there and over here.
I'm with you.
No, I do appreciate you.
And I do too, because I was, I know that was weirdly, I know that was pointed at Alex,
but I also was equally confused and needed a little bit of an explanation.
Yeah, I stand by the fact that I think it's fascinating as fuck, but I do.
What do you think, Jesse, now that you're seeing the article, any thoughts before we?
I think the one big takeaway I consistently have is the more we learn, the less I understand.
And I'll be real.
It would take me someone much smarter than I am to explain this to me in a way that makes sense.
Yeah, that's fair.
well on that thank you all so much for supporting us here patreon.com slash jilluminati pod
where we try to educate ourselves to the best of our capability to varying degrees of success
we'll be back next week with a brand new minisode for you right here appreciate you we love you
goodbye
bye
